A video circulating on MSN and social media platforms features a supposed โtime travelerโ who allegedly predicted a U.S. civil war, nuclear conflict, and societal collapse.
Rating: FALSE
The Claim
A video shared on MSN titled โThis was the time traveler who warned of civil war and collapseโ revives the story of John Titor, an anonymous internet user who claimed to be a soldier from the year 2036.
The video suggests that Titor foresaw a U.S. civil war beginning in the midโ2000s, followed by a global nuclear conflict and the breakdown of modern society.
The resurfaced clip has been reposted on social media, with some users implying that Titorโs warnings are โcoming true.โ
The Facts
1. John Titorโs predictions did not happen
Between 1998 and 2001, a person using the name John Titor posted on online forums claiming to be a time traveler.
He predicted a U.S. civil war starting in 2004โ2005; aย global nuclear war in 2015; the collapse of centralized governments; and a return to agrarian, rural communities.
None of these events occurred. The United States did not enter a civil war in the midโ2000s, nor did a global nuclear conflict erupt in 2015.
2. Investigations point to a hoax
A 2009 investigation by private researchers traced the Titor story to Larry Haber, a Florida entertainment lawyer, and his brother, a computer specialist.
The evidence suggested the entire narrative was a coordinated online hoax designed for entertainment.
No credible evidence has ever surfaced to support Titorโs identity or his claims.
3. The video provides no new information
The MSN page hosts a short video summarizing the Titor story but does not present new documents, evidence, or verification.
It simply repackages a longโdebunked internet myth.
4. Similar โtime travelerโ claims are common online
The Titor narrative has inspired newer viral figuresโsuch as โElvis Thompson,โ who claims to be from 2027 and warns of alien contact and global unrest.
These stories follow the same pattern: dramatic predictions, no evidence, and heavy reliance on social media virality.
Why This Matters
Doomsday predictions and fabricated โtime travelerโ stories often go viral during periods of political tension or uncertainty. While they may seem harmless, they can fuel misinformation, anxiety, and conspiracy thinkingโespecially when framed as credible warnings.
Daily Sun Chronicle has repeatedly flagged similar claims that exploit fear and uncertainty for clicks and engagement.
The Bottom Line
The claim that a time traveler warned of an impending U.S. civil war and global collapse is false.
John Titorโs predictions failed, and investigations show the story was likely fabricated. The MSN video simply recycles a debunked internet hoax.



