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Never Again: The Hantavirus Psyop Is Already Unraveling – And My Eyes Are Wide Open

  • Writer: saarahuhtasaari
    saarahuhtasaari
  • May 15
  • 3 min read

As a behavior scientist and body language expert with decades spent decoding micro-expressions, baseline behaviors, and the subtle tells that separate genuine human emotion from performance, I’ve seen enough scripted theater to spot it from a mile away. Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me. I didn’t play along with the COVID operation, and I am not about to play along with this hantavirus rerun. The script is too familiar. The staging is too sloppy.


Let’s start with the video that dropped from the boat – the one making the rounds as “evidence” of this terrifying new threat. One glance and the red flags stack up faster than official talking points.


First, the speaker’s eyes. They keep glancing slightly up and to the right. Not once. Not twice. Repeatedly. In my training, that pattern is textbook for someone accessing a memorized script or reading prepared text. Genuine fear, panic, or even spontaneous worry doesn’t require that mechanical eye shift. When people are truly afraid, their gaze darts erratically or locks onto the threat – it doesn’t loop in the same practiced direction like a news anchor feeding from an earpiece. Yes, some individuals visualize images by looking up-right, but context matters. This wasn’t storytelling from memory. This was recitation.


Now look at the forehead and eyebrows. In authentic expressions of fear, worry, or anxiety, the inner eyebrows activate. They rise and draw together, creating those telltale horizontal forehead wrinkles and the small “sad triangle” around the eyes. None of that is present here. The forehead stays suspiciously smooth. Is it Botox? Possible. Is it simply not genuine emotion? Even more likely. The overall impression is rehearsed. Controlled. Delivered. Not felt.


This isn’t nitpicking. This is pattern recognition. When fear is real, the face and body betray it involuntarily. When it’s manufactured, the body has to be coached – and the coaching always leaves traces.


Then there are the street-level videos that contradict the panic narrative in real time. We see hazmat-suited crews, full protective gear, the full apocalyptic cosplay. Yet right beside them? Bus drivers, security guards, and everyday workers going about their routes with zero protection. No masks. No suits. No distancing theater. Just business as usual. If this pathogen were the airborne nightmare they’re selling, the inconsistency would be lethal. Instead, it’s theatrical. Selective enforcement. Classic psyop optics: scare the public into compliance while the operational layer operates without the props.


And who’s directing this show? The World Health Organization. Heavily bankrolled by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and Big Pharma, the WHO’s “pandemic recommendations” have never been about open science or public health. They’re about patent protections, billion-dollar contracts, and a funding model that rewards fear. Every cycle follows the same choreography: emergency declaration, media amplification, restricted debate, then the miracle solution that just happens to require mass compliance and new medical products. The science gets sidelined. The billions flow. The public pays.


I’ve spent my career reading people – not headlines. And what I’m reading right now is the same baseline we saw in 2020: coordinated messaging, emotional manipulation through selective footage, and authority figures who can’t sell their own lines without the tells of rehearsal.


This is not about denying the existence of hantavirus as a real pathogen. It’s about refusing to let fear be weaponized again. I didn’t buy the last round of manufactured consensus, and I’m not buying this one. The body language doesn’t lie. The protective-gear double standard doesn’t lie. The WHO’s funding priorities don’t lie.


Never again.


Watch the eyes. Watch the inconsistencies. Watch who profits.

Stay sovereign. Stay skeptical. And keep reading people – it’s the one skill they can’t script away.

 
 
 

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