Let’s get one thing straight right out the gate — the tortoise ain’t dead.

Jonathan, the oldest living land animal on this planet, clocking in at around 194 years old, is still alive, still kicking, and probably wondering why humans are so easy to fool.

But over the past couple days, the internet lit up with posts claiming he had passed on. Emotional tributes, “RIP” comments, people acting like they just lost a family member. Only problem? None of it was true.

The whole thing was a scam.

Somebody cooked up a fake story, tied it to cryptocurrency donations, and even went as far as impersonating Jonathan’s actual veterinarian to make it look legit. And just like that, people shared it, believed it, and ran with it like it was gospel.

Here’s where it gets worse — even some news outlets jumped on it before checking their facts. That’s not a small slip-up. That’s how misinformation spreads like wildfire.

Meanwhile, back in reality, Jonathan is still doing what he’s been doing longer than any of us have been alive. Eating, roaming, and outliving generation after generation of humans who somehow still fall for the same nonsense.

Think about that for a second.

This animal has lived through wars, presidents, inventions, and entire eras of human history. And the closest thing that came to taking him out wasn’t nature — it was a fake post online.

That’s the real story here.

It ain’t about a tortoise dying. It’s about how fast people believe something just because it pops up on their screen. No checking, no questioning, just click, share, react.

And scammers know it.

They count on people reacting first and thinking later. That’s how they make their money. That’s how this whole thing even got traction in the first place.

So no — Jonathan isn’t dead.

But common sense? That’s on life support if people don’t start slowing down and thinking before they hit that share button.