Can one man with a whiteboard in Beijing see what the world's intelligence agencies miss?In early 2025, an independent analyst spent thousands of hours reviewing 131 lectures by Jiang Xueqin—a Chinese-Canadian geopolitical educator with a degree in English literature from Yale. The result? An 87% accuracy rate across 33 verified, testable predictions.This is not a book about prophecy. It is a book about method.How Jiang Xueqin Reads the Future reveals the analytical framework that predicted Donald Trump's return to the White House, the U.S.-Iran military conflict, Saudi Arabia's acceptance of Chinese yuan for oil, and the structural fracturing of NATO—months and years before they occurred.Inside this concise, precisely curated masterclass in structural thinking, you will discover:The Four Habits of Predictive History1. Climate vs. Weather – How to read the structural forces beneath daily chaos2. The Payoff Matrix – Why actors do what they do, not what they say they will do3. Historical Analogues – How the Athenian disaster in Sicily reveals the recurring trap of modern empires4. Structural Predictions – Why being directionally right is more powerful than being precisely wrongCase Studies That Prove the Method The Iran Trap: Why the world's dominant military power keeps walking into the same strategic dead end—and why it will happen again regardless of who occupies the Oval Office. The Hidden Architecture: How the petrodollar system built American dominance and why its decline is structurally inevitable—and what that means for your money, your community, and your future.Applied to Your Life The final chapters show you how to use Jiang's method to navigate institutional disruption, build genuinely resilient communities, and position yourself for a world undergoing its most significant geopolitical reorganization in seventy years.No crystal balls. No partisan cheering. Just a rigorous, teachable method for reading the scaffolding behind the headlines—and finishing the line before history writes it.For every reader who prefers clarity over comfort.