At first glance, this sounds like an apocalyptic prophecy from Mhoni Vidente — something cosmic, catastrophic, and immediate. The phrase “a new era is about to begin…” is deliberately unfinished. That’s the hook.
But once you push past the dramatic ALL-CAPS panic about “deadly ghosts,” “national danger,” and “maximum alert,” the pattern becomes clear: this is exaggerated satire wrapped in aggressive clickbait.
There is:
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❌ No verified supernatural event
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❌ No confirmed public health emergency
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❌ No documented “deadly ghost” affecting Mexicans
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❌ No official scientific report about an imminent apocalypse
Instead, the article spirals into absurd humor about kidneys “leaking proteins,” gastronomy wars, bathroom panic, and digital hysteria. The headline weaponizes fear, mixes it with astrology, then adds health anxiety for maximum emotional impact.
This follows a classic viral formula:
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Use a famous psychic or controversial figure.
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Suggest something ominous is “about to begin.”
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Add ellipses (“…”) to trigger imagination.
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Inflate everything with words like RED ALERT, WORLD EXCLUSIVE, MAXIMUM DANGER.
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Deliver chaos instead of confirmed facts.
The “deadly ghost” in this story isn’t paranormal — it’s the anxiety created by incomplete information and sensational framing.
Short version:
No real apocalypse.
No verified national health crisis.
Just emotional manipulation designed to generate clicks and social media engagement.
When you see “See more,” especially paired with prophecy or catastrophe, pause. Real emergencies are reported clearly, with sources — not hidden behind ellipses and dramatic typography.
Sensationalism spreads fast. Verification should spread faster.