A man sacrificed himself to prove that witchcraft does not exist
TikTok user Ethan Kaiser contacted all the "witches" on the net and asked them to cast curses on him just to disprove their powers.
He even sent a sample of his hair to the witch to help her.
So far he has survived, but his followers suggest he be careful
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06/09/2022
Tuesday, September 6, 2022, 11:54 p.m
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A man sacrificed himself to prove that witchcraft does not exist (tiktok.com/@itsethankeiser)
Even those who do not believe in ghosts or witches will not dare to take the risk and mess with one of them.
TikToker Ethan Kaiser is brave - and he admits that he is willing to take any possible curse that will ruin his life or even kill him just to prove that there is no such thing as witchcraft and/or demons.
After last year he tried to mess with the spirits and become possessed - unsuccessfully, this year he goes against all those people on social media who claim to have witchcraft abilities.
In a viral Tiktok video - which received a variety of equally viral video updates - Kaiser encouraged all the witches and wizards wherever they were to cast curses on him, the hardest curses possible - just to prove them not real and disprove their "powers".
"Magic is not real," he says in a video that has garnered almost 200,000 views, "and I asked every witch on TikTok who claims to have powers to curse me."
He said that one of the witches replied to him and he mailed her a picture, a shirt, a sample of his hair and nails.
He said she performed the spell last week and said: "So far nothing bad has happened to me. A lot of people say I'm playing with fire. I'm sacrificing myself to show you all that it's nonsense because I don't want you to spend money on these people and cheat you. They are all You are being lied to. If you are afraid of these things, let me show you that there is no reason to be afraid."
Indeed, so far Kaiser has proved to his 1.2 million followers on TikTok that the spells thrown at him have done nothing.
If we refer to the witch he sent samples of his hair and nails to - she said the spell would start in three days to three weeks later.
Four weeks have passed since then and Kaiser informed that nothing has happened to him - yet.
Watch him deal with the dark forces:
@itsethankeiser Watch for yourself.
You will see that this is all nonsense!
#witchtok #science #greenscreen ♬ 28 Days Later - Main Theme - Geek Music
And his update two weeks later:
@itsethankeiser Update on my witchtok challenge!
Magic and witchcraft is not real.
I do not want you to be deceived!
#witchtok #science ♬ 28 Days Later - Main Theme - Geek Music
Witches, tarot readers and psychics have become popular on the TikTok app, with the hashtag #WitchTok gaining 30.7 billion views as of this writing.
The users in question usually hope that their prophetic videos will reach the right people on the app, but unfortunately - some of them have landed in Kaiser's feed that is not willing to make life easy for them.
In his original spell-casting request that garnered 1.6 million views, he claimed he would "risk his life" just to prove the social network's wizards were a scam.
In his subsequent videos, he made fun of the online witches who claimed that the spell they cast on him didn't work because he "expected it" or claimed that the spell cast on him skipped over him and would be passed on to future generations.
One user went so far as to claim that he had cast "protection spells" for Kaiser, which work against the witches' spell - which is apparently what has saved him so far.
His latest updates:
@itsethankeiser The only rational answer is im a wizard?
?♂️ This video is not bullying.
I have only shared the facts of the past two weeks and made no statement of my own.
#witchtok #science #greenscreen #greenscreenvideo ♬ 28 Days Later - Main Theme - Geek Music
@itsethankeiser They keep coming up with excuses.
??
#witchtok #science ♬ 28 Days Later - Main Theme - Geek Music
Reactions to Ethan Keyser's videos were mixed.
Magic skeptics jumped to his defense: "If they get their ghosts to pay my bills, maybe I'll believe," one scoffed, and another added: "I can't wait to hear their excuses when the spells don't work for them."
Another wrote: "Anyone who believes in supernatural things is a clown. Well done for the initiative."
Another claimed that witches are real - but they really aren't on social media.
Others worried for Kaiser's safety and argued that he had gone too far this time.
When he disappeared for a few days they really feared for his safety.
"My brother is playing with his life here," responded one user and another added: "His guardian angels are running a marathon."
Another wrote: "This is a very dangerous game. Don't mess with them bro."
The last update, as of this writing, was only a few hours ago so Ethan is still with us, alive and breathing.
We will continue to follow.
Spirit and horoscope
Tags
witches
Ghosts
spell