We’re watching a hantavirus nightmare unfold on a cruise ship with rare human-to-human spread, and out of nowhere, this ghost account from 2022 resurfaces like a bad omen that just won’t quit.



Picture this. Four years ago, in a single random week in 2022, an account named @iamasoothsayer — bio literally “reads the future” — fires off just four tweets. Nothing before. Nothing after. Total radio silence ever since.



One of them? A simple, ice-cold line: “2023: Corona ended 2026: Hantavirus.”



That’s it. No explanation. No thread. Just two dates and two viruses.



Fast-forward to right now. We’re in 2026. Corona is long gone from the headlines. And the exact virus they named is exploding — the Andes strain, the one that actually jumps between people, ripping through the MV Hondius right after it left Ushuaia, Argentina. Three dead already. Seven confirmed. Human transmission confirmed. The wife, who never stepped on rodent-infested land, caught it from her husband in their cabin.



Grok double-checked the original post. No edits. No backdating. It’s been sitting there untouched since 2022.



People are freaking out because the timeline is almost comically perfect. The account didn’t ramble about a dozen diseases — it nailed the exact sequel. And it did it years before anyone was talking about this specific hantavirus variant leaving South America on a luxury ship.



Coincidence? Lucky guess? Or did someone — or something — just casually drop the script four years early?



Whatever the hell this is, it feels way too clean. Way too precise. And way too perfectly timed with the one virus that breaks every rule we thought we knew.



The internet isn’t just watching a pandemic anymore. It’s watching the preview come true in real time. And that’s the part that should keep you up at night.

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