Theland, see my post 07:23 Fri and cross-check it by reading your biblical history. When he experienced his vision of the dry bones, Ezekiel, together with many other Jews, was in exile in Babylon (“We are cut off” – Ezekiel 37:1-11). His hallucinations (modern medicine considers he suffered from epilepsy) were far more likely to result from wishful thinking relating to his more immediate future rather than to a time thousands of years hence. Your preference for applying it to more recent times results from your wishful thinking.
https://www.epilepsy.org.uk/news/old-testament-prophet-showed-symptoms-epilepsy
Donkeys: gosh, the Apologetics Press has really got its knickers in a knot over donkeys. The fact is that, given the impetus, it’s eminently possible for writers to claim eventual fulfilment of a feasible prophecy – and the anonymous authors of the Gospels - and Jesus too (allegedly) - did just that. No straws here.