Smarty-pant in Facebook fools over 2 lakh denizens with his ‘soothsaying’

Image courtesy: http://www.smh.com.au/

Pablo Reyes is a Facebook user who predicted almost everything that took place in the US in the recent past. Yes, that includes the death of Muhammad Ali, pop legend Prince and off-course the Orlando shootout too!

And he has been taken the internet by a storm with his intriguing soothsayer skills. Well and that’s not all folks. He has also predicted the death of Donald J Trump, US presidential candidate of the republican party.

Apparently, he predicted all these in a Facebook post that appeared to have appeared in December last! Believe it or not. That’s technically a fact! 

Reyes and his post from December 2015 has gone viral.

“Call me crazy but in 2016 Hillary Clinton will be the first female president, the world will go crazy over the death of a gorilla, Prince will die, Muhammad Ali will die, Kimbo Slice will die, Donald Trump will die. The USA will experience the worst mass shooting .. I’m not trying to scare anyone, but you’ll remember my name,” reads his post from December 27, 2015.

The post has already got over 2 lakh shares  and 1.5 lakhs likes on Facebook. People are shocked at these mind-blowing predictions of Reyes.

Debunking the soothsaying…

What would you do if you happen to spot a typo in a recently updated Facebook post? Did ever the original time and date of the post too get updated?

I know right?

That’s exactly the bug which this smarty-pants took advantage of.

Funny, isn’t it?

Reyes was smart enough to dig up some status that he had updated in December 2015 and…….he just edited it.

Image courtesy: Facebook
Image courtesy: Facebook

And guess what? People even thought that it was all because of the illuminati

Image courtesy: logonoid.com
Image courtesy: logonoid.com

 

 

 

 

 

Oh by the way, lets hope that his ‘prediction’ about the very much alive trump doesn’t turn out hexed!

Also read:

Canadian PM Justin Trudeau’s EPIC tribute to Orlando will be etched in the annals of history