Hantavirus Vials Missing From Australian Bioweapons Lab During the 2020 Global PLANEDemic by Kevin Wikse
![]() |
| A hyper-realistic plague-rat Dr. Fauci hybrid emerging from a ruined cityscape, blending dystopian horror, pandemic symbolism, and grotesque dark fantasy aesthetics in artwork by Kevin Wikse. |
“In the end, Hantavirus may not be spread by the sewer rats nearly as efficiently as it is by the HUMAN ones.”- Kevin Wikse
Fear, Distraction, and Narrative Control
Back in 2021, while the world was trapped inside an expanding psyop of fear, mandates, lockdowns, and carefully scripted panic, a strange little story surfaced and then quietly dissolved beneath the noise.
Multiple vials of Hantavirus reportedly went “missing” from an Australian Bioweapons lab.
Keyword: Missing.
Not destroyed.
Not accounted for.
Missing.
This barely registered in the public mind. Subsumed by the propaganda and constant narrative reinforcement.
Strange, isn’t it?
The same civilization that can track your bank transactions, monitor your speech online, map your face through surveillance systems, and detect a copyrighted song playing through a muffled cellphone microphone from thirty feet away… suddenly becomes helpless when deadly viral materials disappear from a controlled research environment.
That should concern people far more than it does.
The Hantavirus Samples That Went Missing
Hantavirus is not some campfire ghost story. It is a very real rodent-borne illness capable of causing severe respiratory distress and internal damage in human beings. Historically, outbreaks have been associated with rat and mouse exposure, particularly in enclosed or contaminated environments. In severe cases, mortality rates can be significant.
And yet during the height of global biosecurity obsession, the disappearance of viral samples from a secured facility somehow became yesterday’s news before most people even heard about it.
That alone deserves heavy scrutiny.
Biosecurity During the Pandemic Era
Modern society has developed a strange reflex where institutional incompetence is treated as a comforting explanation. People would rather believe elite systems are clumsy than consider the possibility that information is strategically managed, minimized, redirected, or buried beneath larger emotional narratives.
I’ve seen this called “copeium,” a social sedative distilled and extracted from willful delusion. Self-medicating for its cognitive dissonance effects.
Why the Story Quickly Disappeared
The public is trained to move on quickly; its memory hole is particularly long, deep, and slippery.
New fear.
New crisis.
New distraction.
Repeat.
But memory matters.
Especially when laboratories handling dangerous pathogens experience “errors,” “misplacements,” or “containment failures.”
Institutional Trust and Public Memory
History shows us again and again that civilizations rarely collapse from one catastrophic mistake alone. They decay through normalization. Through repetition. Through the slow public acceptance of phrases that should trigger immediate alarm:
“Administrative oversight.”
“Lost samples.”
“Miscommunication.”
“No public threat detected.”
The Language of Modern Crisis Management
The language of modern crisis management always sounds strangely bloodless.
But somewhere beneath the polished press releases and sterile bureaucratic wording remains an uncomfortable truth:
If dangerous biological materials can vanish during the largest global health panic in modern history without sustained international outrage, then the systems claiming absolute control over public safety are nowhere near as stable as people have been taught to believe.
In this, we must come to a sobering conclusion.
Realization is the most contagious thing of all — and a virus far deadlier to the system than anything the system cooks up against us.
Posting from Hunter Biden's Laptop, and Reporting From the Edge of the Narrative Collapse,
— Kevin Wikse, The Reality Maverick & Gen-X Journalist, is an investigative political analyst, remote viewer, cultural critic, and commentator on political radicalization, media incentives, and algorithm-driven violence.
About the Author
Kevin Wikse is an investigative writer, remote viewer, and occult researcher specializing in suppressed history, systemic corruption, and high-strangeness phenomena. His work examines the convergence of government power, clandestine programs, ritual and symbolic systems, and human cost, with focused analysis on human trafficking networks, classified black projects, institutional secrecy, and the persistent patterns of silence surrounding historical abuses of power.
“I don’t dig up stories. I’m a fucking necromancer with a press pass. I resurrect what power thought was dead and buried."
— Kevin Wikse


Comments
Post a Comment