The 2022 Post That Predicted huanta-virus 2026?

“Coronavirus ends in 2023. Hantavirus begins in 2026.”

Somewhere deep in the endless digital graveyard of the internet sits an X account called “Soothsayer.”

No blue checkmark. No massive following. No media appearances. No podcast circuit. No endless stream of conspiracy memes.

In fact, the account only has four posts total.

And one of them, dated June 11th, 2022, simply stated:

“Coronavirus ends in 2023. Hantavirus begins in 2026.”

That’s it.

No explanation. No context. Just a cold little sentence dropped into cyberspace like a message in a bottle floating through a dark ocean.

Now fast forward to 2026.

Suddenly headlines are beginning to circulate involving hantavirus exposure linked to cruise ship passengers, international health monitoring, and growing media attention surrounding rodent-borne illnesses.

Coincidence?

Probably.

But at 1:37 in the morning, when the house is quiet, the glow of your phone lights up the room, and the rain taps against the window… your brain starts asking questions anyway.

Who was this person?

Why only four posts?

Why disappear?

And why did one of those posts happen to mention a virus now suddenly appearing in global headlines four years later?

The internet is filled with millions of predictions every day, most of them wrong. Eventually somebody somewhere is bound to accidentally hit a bullseye.

Still… there’s something eerie about abandoned accounts. Especially the ones that whisper strange things into the void and then vanish forever.

It’s the kind of thing old late-night radio shows used to thrive on. The kind of mystery that makes you lean a little closer to the speaker while driving alone down a dark highway somewhere between midnight and dawn.

Maybe it means nothing.

Or maybe somebody knew something.

Either way… welcome to 2026.