Australia is facing an unprecedented agricultural crisis as a plague of genetically superior mice ravages crops and rural communities. Sources confirm these are no ordinary rodents: they exhibit problem-solving skills that have outsmarted standard traps and poisons. Uncovered documents from biosecurity labs suggest the mice may have developed resistance after exposure to experimental pest controls.
The infestation has caused billions in damage, with farmers reporting coordinated attacks on grain silos and irrigation systems. The government has declared a state of emergency in New South Wales and Queensland, but officials are staying tight-lipped about the origin of these ‘super mice’. One source close to the investigation said: ‘This isn’t nature.
Someone, somewhere, has been cutting corners.’ The question is: who profits from a plague?








