WW3 Predictions: Albert Pike’s Freemason Letter That Came True?
Sep 24, 2025, 01:33 AM
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Did Albert Pike really predict three world wars in 1871? This podcast-exclusive investigation examines the infamous letter attributed to Pike, its disputed origins, and why its alleged warnings feel unsettlingly relevant today.
This episode is produced exclusively for the Divergent Files Podcast.
August 15, 1871. Charleston, South Carolina.
According to one of the most controversial claims in modern conspiracy lore, Albert Pike wrote a letter outlining the future of global conflict with chilling precision. Addressed to Italian revolutionary Giuseppe Mazzini, the document allegedly described three world wars that would dismantle empires, reshape ideologies, and reorder the world itself.
The letter, often referred to as Pike’s World War Prophecy, claims:
• World War I would destroy monarchies and pave the way for communism
• World War II would ignite authoritarian regimes and reshape global power blocs
• World War III would trigger a catastrophic clash between the Islamic world and political Zionism, collapsing religion and ushering in a new global order
What makes the story so disturbing isn’t just the claims.
It’s how closely parts of it appear to echo real historical events.
But there’s a problem.
No verified copy of the letter exists.
In this episode, we trace the origins of the story, from 19th-century anti-Masonic hoaxes to the admitted fabrications of Léo Taxil, and later retellings popularized in books like Pawns in the Game. We examine why historians, archivists, and even the British Museum have rejected the letter’s authenticity—and why, despite that, the narrative refuses to disappear.
This investigation isn’t about declaring the prophecy true.
It’s about understanding why it resonates.
We explore whether Pike’s alleged letter functioned as a literal roadmap—or whether it simply reflects recurring patterns of power, ideology, and human conflict that make global chaos feel cyclical and inevitable.
Is this a genuine 19th-century warning?
A fabricated document retrofitted to history?
Or a mirror showing us how easily humanity repeats the same destructive behaviors?
And finally, we ask the question many are afraid to say out loud:
If the story feels like it’s entering Act Three…
Is that prophecy—or pattern recognition?
Stay curious. Stay grounded.
And remember… no matter what they tell you, the truth is still out there.
August 15, 1871. Charleston, South Carolina.
According to one of the most controversial claims in modern conspiracy lore, Albert Pike wrote a letter outlining the future of global conflict with chilling precision. Addressed to Italian revolutionary Giuseppe Mazzini, the document allegedly described three world wars that would dismantle empires, reshape ideologies, and reorder the world itself.
The letter, often referred to as Pike’s World War Prophecy, claims:
• World War I would destroy monarchies and pave the way for communism
• World War II would ignite authoritarian regimes and reshape global power blocs
• World War III would trigger a catastrophic clash between the Islamic world and political Zionism, collapsing religion and ushering in a new global order
What makes the story so disturbing isn’t just the claims.
It’s how closely parts of it appear to echo real historical events.
But there’s a problem.
No verified copy of the letter exists.
In this episode, we trace the origins of the story, from 19th-century anti-Masonic hoaxes to the admitted fabrications of Léo Taxil, and later retellings popularized in books like Pawns in the Game. We examine why historians, archivists, and even the British Museum have rejected the letter’s authenticity—and why, despite that, the narrative refuses to disappear.
This investigation isn’t about declaring the prophecy true.
It’s about understanding why it resonates.
We explore whether Pike’s alleged letter functioned as a literal roadmap—or whether it simply reflects recurring patterns of power, ideology, and human conflict that make global chaos feel cyclical and inevitable.
Is this a genuine 19th-century warning?
A fabricated document retrofitted to history?
Or a mirror showing us how easily humanity repeats the same destructive behaviors?
And finally, we ask the question many are afraid to say out loud:
If the story feels like it’s entering Act Three…
Is that prophecy—or pattern recognition?
Stay curious. Stay grounded.
And remember… no matter what they tell you, the truth is still out there.
