Krzysztof Jackowski - Polish Clairvoyant

Drama is already played. Some arę An actors somę arę just an audience. Most importan is what you can learn and maybe you can play better than Last time. Fun to learn. Jackowski is good at reading people. It is not predicting future. He see what CS told already.
 
In America, Canada, and Europe, a process of managing people has begun. The initial process is brutal, a process of managing masses of people. In the initial phase, it is insidious and brutal, but later it becomes relatively humane. But part of the world, Asia, has not recognized this. In those countries that have recognized it, the process has already taken place and is already implemented. Not all the people who do this to us are fully human.
Hello,

This chunk is of interest to me: I would like to ask you, if you know of more inputs about this specific subject, By K.J., please?

Was your post a litteral translation of one of his video - or was it a sum-up? Thank you :-)
 
The earthquake in the Philippines is hardly one of the largest in history.
Nevertheless, there are already 70 dead in the Philippines - Землетрясение на Филиппинах не затронуло курортные зоны

For comparison, the recent powerful earthquake in Kamchatka, measuring 9.0 on the Richter scale (and hundreds of aftershocks measuring 5.0-6.0 on the Richter scale over two months), resulted in 0 deaths.

PS: Regarding the Philippines, back in January 2025, Russian astrologer Svetlana Dragan said that "the Philippines could cease to exist in March; the territory could be submerged." She was wrong about the timing, but this may not be the last major earthquake in the Philippines this year.
 
For comparison, the recent powerful earthquake in Kamchatka, measuring 9.0 on the Richter scale (and hundreds of aftershocks measuring 5.0-6.0 on the Richter scale over two months), resulted in 0 deaths.

You cannot compare Kamchatka with the Philippines. The Philippines has densely populated coastal areas and relatively vulnerable infrastructure. In contrast, the affected area in Kamchatka is remote or has a low population density, which reduces direct exposure. The Kamchatka earthquake was a megathrust earthquake, which usually has great destructive potential, but since it was offshore, part of the movement dissipated into the sea. In the Philippines, although of lesser magnitude, the earthquake was shallow near the inhabited area, causing strong shaking in vulnerable structures.

In any case, the 7.7 magnitude earthquake that struck Myanmar (Burma) on March 28, 2025, was more destructive, leaving at least 1,644 dead, and even Jackowski, who is more experienced in geopolitical matters, did not see it coming.​
 
You cannot compare Kamchatka with the Philippines. The Philippines has densely populated coastal areas and relatively vulnerable infrastructure. In contrast, the affected area in Kamchatka is remote or has a low population density, which reduces direct exposure. The Kamchatka earthquake was a megathrust earthquake, which usually has great destructive potential, but since it was offshore, part of the movement dissipated into the sea.
Bro, the Kamchatka earthquake on July 30, 2025, occurred near the most populated area in the region, home to over 160,000 people (and that's just Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky; there are other cities nearby).
1024px-2025-07-29_Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky%2C_Russia_M8.8_earthquake_shakemap_%28USGS%29.png
The only reason no one was injured is because the region is seismically active, and the Soviet Union initially built housing there that could withstand magnitude 9. And it held, there were no casualties.

I cited Kamchatka merely as an example of your remark that the Philippines, with its dozens of fatalities, wasn't a large enough earthquake, in your opinion. Many people died in the Philippines.
So what's a large earthquake? 100,000 fatalities or a 10 on the Richter scale? What are your criteria? Personal perception?
I see that in this thread, you constantly attack Krzysztof, trying to belittle him (either he's not accurate enough, or he's wrong, etc.). Why are you doing this? If you don't like Jackowski, you can just ignore this thread and not write anything.
I like this guy Krzysztof; even if he's wrong sometimes, he says things that could have happened in this reality (but happened in another reality). And I'm not criticizing, I'm just reading and listening. Sometimes it's just useful to read what he thinks, without questioning the accuracy of the forecast itself.
 
[..] occurred near the most populated area in the region, home to over 160,000 people
Kamchatka is a region with a very low population density (≈ 1.2 people per km²). The province of Cebu has a population of 3,325,385 inhabitants. Its population density is approximately 673 inhabitants per km² according to 2020 data. There is no comparison.

My opinion is that the earthquakes in the Philippines or Indonesia on September 30, 2025, are far from being the largest in Asian history or the world. Krzysztof's prediction has not yet come true and remains a possibility in the future.​
A powerful earthquake will strike in Asia, perhaps in Mongolia. It will be one of the largest earthquakes in history.

That's not attacking the clairvoyant, it's seeing things objectively. If we do not see it this way, any earthquake in Asia, or specifically in Mongolia, will fulfill Krzysztof Jackowski's prediction.

Although, to be honest, Krzysztof's prediction is so vague for a highly seismic region that it will surely come true, and fans will say, "See? He was right."

Don't take it personally either.

 
Hello,

This chunk is of interest to me: I would like to ask you, if you know of more inputs about this specific subject, By K.J., please?

Was your post a litteral translation of one of his video - or was it a sum-up? Thank you :-)
I'm trying to convey what Jackowski says as faithfully as possible, but this is a summary, not a literal translation. Apparently, you can enable subtitles on YouTube, but it doesn't seem to work for everyone. It probably depends on the country.
 
I'm trying to convey what Jackowski says as faithfully as possible, but this is a summary, not a literal translation. Apparently, you can enable subtitles on YouTube, but it doesn't seem to work for everyone. It probably depends on the country.
Hello, thank you. I used a "youtube to text" tool, then translated the Polish text into my native language.
(It does not say anything additional and you reported his exact words. Thank you any way!)
 
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