What specific prophecies by Julie Green have been documented as false, and what sources verify their timelines?
Executive summary
Julie Green has publicly issued a series of high‑profile, time‑bound political prophecies that multiple independent outlets and commentators report did not come to pass — most notably her “Year of Death 2022” claims about “deep state” figures, predictions about members of the British royal family, and more recent courtroom and election forecasts; mainstream reporting and devoted critics alike document those failures and the timelines on which they were supposed to occur [1] [2] [3] [4]. Defenders in sympathetic forums argue some prophecies are conditional or vague, but the record assembled in the available reporting demonstrates concrete, named predictions tied to specific windows that failed to materialize [5] [6].
1. “Year of Death 2022” — high‑profile targets who did not die in 2022
Green’s “Year of Death 2022” prophecies, circulated widely in MAGA and QAnon circles, specifically targeted prominent “deep state” figures including Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton; reporting about her rise and the content of those prophecies frames them as time‑bound claims tied to 2022 and notes that they were not fulfilled in that year [1].
2. The British royal predictions — Charles would not be crowned; Prince Charles would murder the Queen
Multiple reports and comment threads cite Green asserting that King Charles would never don the crown and, more extremely, that Prince Charles would murder Queen Elizabeth — claims which were contradicted when Charles was crowned, and which Rolling Stone singled out as emblematic of her more sensational royal prophecies [2] [4].
3. Joe Biden “is dead / body double” claims — persistent and publicly circulated
Green has been reported to assert that the “real Joe Biden is dead” and that public appearances use a double — a claim picked up in longform reporting on her messages and repeated in social posts and podcasts that catalog her false‑alarm style predictions; those assertions are documented in the reporting as part of a pattern of literal, falsifiable claims that have not been substantiated [2] [7].
4. The Nancy Pelosi and Prince Charles death predictions — claimed deadlines tied to elections and midterms
Critics and religious commentators point to predictions that Nancy Pelosi would die before the midterm elections and to other death‑focused forecasts; religious‑commentary pieces and forum threads identify those specific timeline claims as failed prophecies when the named events (midterms, coronations, etc.) passed without the predicted deaths [8] [7].
5. Political outcome misses: Herschel Walker and Trump verdicts
Green publicly predicted certain political victories — for example that Herschel Walker would win his race — and she predicted a “not guilty” verdict for Donald Trump in his Manhattan trial; reporting documents Walker’s loss and, in June 2024, records her false prediction after a jury found Trump guilty on criminal counts, framing the verdict as a concrete falsification of her forecast [4] [3].
6. How the record is assembled and contested: supporters, critics, and circulation
Across forums, podcasts, conservative outlets and longform pieces, the same set of failed, specific predictions are repeatedly cited: death prophecies with years attached, crown/coronation claims, election and legal outcome forecasts [1] [2] [3] [7] [4]. Defenders in sympathetic spaces argue some of Green’s prophecies are conditional, metaphorical, or have later‑coming fulfillment and point to smaller “confirmable” hits; critics counter that many of her most public, time‑bound claims were plainly falsified by observable events [5] [6] [9].
7. Limits of the available reporting and what remains unverified
The reporting collected documents a recurring list of named, dateable prophecies that failed to occur, but it does not provide a comprehensive catalog with every original utterance, exact timestamp, or full video archive for every claim; therefore, this analysis relies on published accounts that single out the most prominent failed predictions and the public events that disconfirmed them [1] [2] [3] [4].
Conclusion
The publicly documented false prophecies attributed to Julie Green — including the “Year of Death 2022” claims about Obama and Clinton, royal‑family death/coronation predictions, claims that Biden is dead, forecasts about Nancy Pelosi’s death before the midterms, a Herschel Walker victory, and a “not guilty” verdict for Trump — are corroborated in the reporting and commentary cited above as explicit, time‑bound assertions that did not come to pass [1] [8] [2] [3] [7] [4]; supporters dispute the criteria for falsification, arguing conditionality or later fulfillment, but the documented timeline failures remain the basis for the most pointed critiques [5] [6].