This article by Miles Mathis, first published on January 22, 2025, details his successful prediction of Solar Cycle 25. Mathis claims his predictions, derived from sine waves created with Steven Oostdijk based on Jovian planetary alignments with the Sun and Galactic Core, have been highly accurate. He highlights how his initial predictions accurately anticipated sunspot spikes, even prompting the mainstream scientific community to involve the Air Force in manipulating data to counter his findings. Mathis points to the recent dip in December 2024, which he predicted to be around 130 and was reported as 135, as further validation. He argues that the mainstream’s attempts to explain this dip by claiming the cycle has already peaked are flawed, as their timeline does not account for the gentle tailing off typical of solar cycles. Mathis also discusses the anomaly of a strange dip in the middle of the cycle, which he predicted in February 2020 despite its unlikelihood based on previous cycles. He credits his mechanical theory and Jovian alignments for this accurate prediction, contrasting it with the mainstream’s data-mining approach. Mathis criticizes McIntosh for not acknowledging his contributions and for attempting to steal his numbers while promoting his own theories. He emphasizes the necessity of predicting monthly values to prove the correlation between sunspot spikes and planetary alignments, which smoothed curves cannot achieve. Finally, Mathis mentions a forthcoming steep climb in the next two years and a second, larger peak, which he foresees due to the sine wave interactions he calculated. He expresses gratitude to Steven Oostdijk for his assistance in generating the sine waves, which were crucial for his theory.