“. . . and meanwhile take my assurance that the clouds are lifting and that I have every hope that the light of truth is breaking through”
― From " The Case-Book of Sherlock Holmes ", by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, 1927
October 5, 2016 - Maximum human lifespan has already been reached
December 22, 2016 - Life expectancy is still increasing
November 6, 2018 - Lifespan is increasing in people who live to 65
Analyzing the average age of death in people who lived to be over age 65 in developed countries showed that human lifespans are increasing by approximately three years every generation and that this trend is likely to continue, at least for a while.
The sudden turnabout in the What To Think answer to the limit of the human lifespan is a huge tell. They had to rewrite their “science” on the fly.
The latest article of the three above reads “Analyzing the average age of death in people who lived to be over age 65 in developed countries showed that human lifespans are increasing by approximately three years every generation and that this trend is likely to continue, at least for a while.”
Wait, “at least for a while ?” Unfortunately, that’s the kind of middle-ages statement that passes for science, these days.
They’re trying to cover up the fact that the primary driver of the size, health and longevity of any organism is the quality of its Etheric environment.
Since the early 2000’s, the ever-increasing distribution of Orgonite devices based on Wilhelm Reich’s work has been transforming the Ether back to its ages-long natural state of life and vitality.
One of the positive changes coming out of this improved energetic environment is increasing longevity. I’ve discussed it in these articles previously.
An example may be found in article below from April 2019 headlined " Recurrent evolution of extreme longevity in bats."
In it, we learn that " 50% of the bat longevity records are new or updated."
In the headline, they’ve used the bewildering ruse-meme " recurrent evolution ", to try to take your eye off the stunning change that the return to health of the Ether has produced. Just as of last year, 2019, half of all bat species were suddenly living longer than they ever had, in all history.
Another article below, from the U.K., from 2012, is headlined “Kent Common Gull sets new longevity record.”
In it, we learn “EK42603 was ringed as a first-winter bird at Sandwich Bay (Kent) on 12th January 1985, making it almost 28 years old. This is a new longevity record for a UK Common Gull, beating the previous record of 25 years of an Irish bird.”
Where the author has hedged by making no mention of when the previous record was set. The author provides the numbers, but hedges again by omitting the far more impactful percentage increase between them. So I had to do the math. It’s a 12% increase in longevity.
The author hedged yet again by using the terse " beating " to describe that 12%-increase crushing of the old record. That’s a see-the-needle moving increase in longevity.
In 2012, the age record for the Kent Common Gull increased by 12%.
2012 is the year the great positive changes that I’m documenting here got underway in earnest.
50% of the bat longevity records are new or updated as of 2019.
Mean-spirited Western rationalism assures its believers that “there’s no such thing as the Ether”. So every article on the subject of increasing longevity maintains that some mechanistic driver is responsible for the trend. General drivers like "improved nutrition ." As you may recall, generality is a hallmark of propaganda.
But the truth is that Orgonite devices have collectively driven a quantum improvement in the health of the Ether, and that’s led, in turn, to longevity increasing in humans, bats, and the Kent Common Gull, to name only three of many other examples that I’ve documented.
The primary driver of the health, size and longevity of any organism is the relative health of its Etheric environment.
Jeff Miller, Brooklyn, New York, May 9, 2020
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January 15, 2008 - USC Gerontologists Set Longevity Record
Led by gerontologist Valter Longo, the researchers bred a strain of yeast missing two genes, RAS2 and SCH9, that have been associated with yeast aging and human cancer. Then they put the knockout yeast on calorie-restricted diets. Caloric restriction is associated with longer life in every creature in which it’se been tested, from yeast to nematodes to monkeys. (Human testing is ongoing.)
August 19, 2009 - U.S. Life Expectancy at All-Time High
September 21, 2010 - Bird sets record as UK’s oldest Arctic tern
The previous UK age record for an Arctic tern was 29 years, 10 months and 11 days
A sea-bird has officially become the UK’s oldest recorded Arctic Tern.
It was ringed as a chick on the Farne Islands on 28 June, 1980, making it at least 30 years, two months and 23 days old. The birds typically live 13 years.
December 5, 2012 - U.K. - Kent Common Gull sets new longevity record
Derick Hiemstra and his 69-year-old father (below) are dedicated gull ringers in The Netherlands, ringing from their garage at Surhuisterveen. When they caught Common Gull EK42603 on 1st December, they noticed that the ring was rather worn, and as this was the first British-ringed Common Gull they’d caught, they were interested to know how old it was.
It turns out that EK42603 was ringed as a first-winter bird at Sandwich Bay (Kent) on 12th January 1985, making it almost 28 years old. This is a new longevity record for a UK Common Gull, beating the previous record of 25 years of an Irish bird.
(There’s no mention of when the previous record was set. The author provides the numbers, but hedges by omitting the far more impactful percentage increase between them. So I had to do the math. It’s a 12% increase in longevity. - ed)
February 10, 2014 - A new longevity record for the Bridled-Tern Sterna anaethetus
This bird, which had unwittingly flown into his mist net was an old great grandfather bird, a bird that had been around for at least 19 years! After finding this out we contacted the Seychelles Bird Records Committee and they confirmed that this was indeed the oldest on record for this species!
(There’s no mention of what the previous record was, or when it was set. - ed)
October 5, 2016 - Maximum human lifespan has already been reached
A new study suggests that it may not be possible to extend the human life span beyond the ages already attained by the oldest people on record.
December 22, 2016 - Life expectancy is still increasing
November 6, 2018 - Lifespan is increasing in people who live to 65
Analyzing the average age of death in people who lived to be over age 65 in developed countries showed that human lifespans are increasing by approximately three years every generation and that this trend is likely to continue, at least for a while.
January 22, 2019 - New longevity record for the Mediterranean Horseshoe Bat
April 10, 2019 - Recurrent evolution of extreme longevity in bats
In addition, 50% of the bat longevity records are new or updated.