On the first day of November, thick white fog suddenly blanketed the capital in broad daylight. Video Screenshot
[People News] On the first day of November, a strange scene unfolded in Beijing: thick white fog suddenly blanketed the capital in broad daylight. The mist hugged the ground, wrapping around buildings like ghostly smoke. Visibility dropped to less than 10 meters, and the city’s streets and towers appeared like a phantom realm. Mainland media dubbed it an “aerial city,” but none mentioned that the fog appeared exactly one month after the mysterious death of actor Yu Menglong began circulating online.
“Fog of Vengeful Spirits”
Beyond Beijing, this phenomenon extended across much of China.
According to the CCP’s official media, from October 26 to 31, 2025, heavy fog covered much of northern and central China—spanning the North China Plain, Huang-Huai region, and the Sichuan Basin. In many areas, visibility dropped below 500 meters, and in some places, under 200 meters. Monitoring data showed that this dense fog persisted for six days and was still ongoing. In Shijiazhuang, for instance, visibility below 2 kilometers lasted more than 60 hours.
On November 1, one netizen from Baoding posted a video:“I woke up and Baoding has turned into a ghostly celestial city!”
The footage showed the entire city shrouded in a milky fog, with skyscrapers barely visible—an eerie, otherworldly sight. Another user from Fuyang, Anhui filmed what he called an “epic advection fog” rolling like boiling clouds, resembling mystical scenes from Changbai Mountain’s Tianchi Lake.
Drivers across Shandong, Henan, and beyond reported near-zero visibility:“Driving feels like flying through clouds—you can’t see anything!”
Historical Parallels: Fog as an Omen of a Dynasty’s Fall
Chinese classical texts describe such white, all-encompassing fogs not as natural weather but as “vengeful spirit fogs”—omens of a dynasty’s collapse.
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During the Sui dynasty, after Wang Shichong massacred a city, “a white fog rose to the heavens and lingered for three days” (Taiping Guangji).
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The History of Ming records that after Zhang Xianzhong’s brutal slaughter in Sichuan, “white fog covered the sky for months, and cries filled the air.”
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In the Records of the Grand Historian (Shiji), during the Shang dynasty, when King Zhou executed loyal ministers Bi Gan and imprisoned Jizi, “a white fog rose from the capital and circled the palace for three days.” The royal historian warned, “These are vengeful spirits—our state will perish.” Three months later, King Wu conquered Shang.
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The Book of Han, Treatise on the Five Elements notes that during the Qin dynasty, after Emperor Hu Hai’s mass killings, “a dense white fog enveloped Xianyang thrice, with faint cries heard within.” Soon after, the Qin empire fell.
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Similarly, The Book of Sui records that after Emperor Yang’s disastrous campaigns against Goguryeo, “a white fog arose from Luoyang in broad daylight, obscuring faces within arm’s reach,” followed by his assassination and the dynasty’s collapse.
 
The article asserts: today’s massive fog is not natural, but the collective manifestation of 80 million souls killed by the CCP in its political campaigns—returning to demand retribution. The fog’s broad sweep, from northeast to southwest China, matches regions of the CCP’s bloodiest purges. “Heaven’s wrath, the wrath of ghosts, and the wrath of the people,” it says, “all foretell the CCP’s doom.”
“Halo of the Moon” Appears Over Hong Kong
After the mainland’s ghostly fog, another celestial omen reportedly appeared over Hong Kong.
At midnight on October 12, 2025, a glowing halo encircled the full moon above Fei Ngo Shan (Kowloon Peak). The Hong Kong Observatory posted about it as a rare phenomenon—“a bloom of light in the night sky.” Eight days earlier, on October 4, a seven-colored “stairway to heaven” rainbow stretched across the sky over Tsing Yi. Both events—occurring within eight days, both in Hong Kong, both radiant with seven colors—were interpreted by observers as divine signs of renewal and freedom.
Ancient texts say:“When the moon shines in five colors, great joy follows; when seven colors appear, evil is dispelled.” (Kaiyuan Prophecies)
They read these omens as foretelling the fall of the old order and the rise of a new one.
The “seven-colored stairway” on October 4 symbolized a bridge of hope after five years of Hong Kong’s struggle for freedom; the moon halo on October 12 represented the celestial prelude to victory. The commentary claims these heavenly signs bypassed the CCP’s smog-covered mainland, shining only above Hong Kong—signifying that Hong Kong is the spark of liberty, while the CCP is the pit of darkness.
“The CCP’s tyranny may destroy a city,” it concludes, “but it cannot extinguish the people’s yearning for freedom. The bell tolling the CCP’s final hour now echoes beneath the moonlight.”
Prophecy of a November Coup
Finally, the article connects these “omens” with a prediction by British psychic Ty Williams, who on October 28 allegedly foresaw:“November will be the month of China’s destiny—a thunderous coup by eight allied figures will topple the top leader.”
He described seeing “flocks of ravens circling the residence of China’s supreme leader” and declared that “the volcano of public anger” would soon erupt, heralding the rise of a just reformer—a fearless statesman “born for the people.”
Williams predicted that the long-buried Yu Menglong case would resurface with the political upheaval, revealing the truth and sparking a reckoning.
However, the piece itself ends with a disclaimer: “Do not take every prophecy literally. Some may come true, some may not—approach them with caution.”
It concludes with a call to action familiar to such reports: urging readers to publicly renounce their membership in the CCP, Communist Youth League, or Young Pioneers “to separate from the devilish regime and avoid sharing its fate.”
(Third Eye Channel)
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