The WHO’s Hantavirus: A Dress Rehearsal for the Next Plandemic Fear Machine!

The speed with which the World Health Organization and major media outlets jumped on the recent Hantavirus cases on a cruise ship should raise serious questions. Within days of reports of illness aboard the MV Hondius, we were already hearing the familiar language about "potential global risk" and the need for international coordination. It feels very familiar.

Hantavirus itself is not new. It has been known for decades and is almost entirely a rodent-borne virus, spread mainly through contact with urine, droppings or saliva. Human-to-human transmission is extremely rare and has only ever been documented with one specific strain in South America. In most of the world, including the United States, it does not spread easily between people. Yet suddenly we are seeing headlines suggesting this could become the next big global crisis.

The PCR testing problems that defined the COVID era have not gone away. High cycle thresholds can pick up dead viral fragments long after any real infectious risk has passed. If the same loose protocols are rolled out again, we could quickly see inflated "case" numbers that have little to do with actual illness or contagiousness.

The timing is also remarkably convenient. Just as public memory of the last pandemic is fading and trust in health authorities is still low, a new story appears that lets the same institutions dust off the old playbook: generate fear, demand compliance, and prepare the ground for countermeasures.

None of this is to dismiss the real suffering of those affected on the ship. The deaths are tragic. But transforming a contained outbreak on a single cruise ship into the early stages of a potential worldwide emergency demands far more scrutiny and far less panic. We have seen this script before.

Past experience shows how quickly these narratives can be used to justify sweeping measures. Whether this particular outbreak turns into anything significant remains to be seen, but the rapid amplification and familiar rhetoric should put everyone on guard.

https://www.vigilantfox.com/p/new-satellite-evidence-raises-questions