“A murderer is less loathsome to us than a spy. The murderer may have acted on a sudden mad impulse; he may be penitent and amend; but a spy is always a spy, night and day, in bed, at table, as he walks abroad; his vileness pervades every moment of his life”
― Honore de Balzac
It’s June 2020, and great positive changes are underway at every level of our reality. They began in earnest in 2012, and have been increasing in speed and magnitude. I’ve been writing articles on the subject since 2013.
These changes are being driven by the collective influence of untold thousands of inexpensive Orgonite devices based on Wilhelm Reich’s work.
Since Don Croft first fabricated tactical Orgonite in 2000, its widespread, ongoing and ever-increasing distribution has been collectively unknitting and transforming the ancient Death energy matrix built and expanded by our dark masters, well, all the way back to Babylon and before. And, as a result, the Ether is returning to its natural state of health and vitality.
One of these changes is bird populations booming and burgeoning to a level not seen in my lifetime.
For example, an article below from January of this year is headlined " Plenty of birds sighted in area counts."
Did you notice how, under the false guise of familiarity, the location is obscured? It’s from Minnesota. And any individual bird names are also omitted. All of this to make the subject drastically less searchable, and all of it invisible to a populace for the most part bereft of the ability to critically read and think.
" Plenty of birds " is general. As you may recall, generality is a hallmark of propaganda. The article reads:
"The low finch counts came despite exceptionally mild weather , that made it easy for counters to spend extra time in the field during the various counts.
…an abundant seed and berry crop in central Canada appears to have kept many of the region’s normal winter visitors north of the border."
It’s an article about more birds than anyone’s ever seen in their lives, but the author began it by nattering on about low finch numbers, which were occurring because of seed and berry crops booming and burgeoning to a level not seen in the finches’ lifetimes.
Where " exceptionally mild weather " is a " global warming " nod. Where " made it easy for counters to spend extra time in the field " is the " Increased awareness " ruse, played in each and every last article on this subject.
The article continues:
"Counters in Isabella tallied a total of 157 blue jays, shattering the previous record high of 130.
‘It seemed the woods were alive with blue jays,’ said Wilson. He was also pleased by a sizable rebound in gray jay numbers, with 74 counted, well above the count’s long-term average of 43.
‘That was a nice rebound,” said Wilson, who has previously made note of recent low gray jay numbers on the count .’
Where " sizeable rebound" and " shattering " are both general hedges against the far more impactful statistic, which I was forced to do the math to learn. The new blue jay record is 20% above the old. Gray jay numbers are 72% above the long-term average. The generational Satanist bird counter said that the most jays ever seen in all history was merely “a nice rebound”, and where " was " is past tense.
Here’s Steve’s picture:
[image]
I’ve included it so you could get a better idea of what a generational Satanist in a position of marginal influence looks like.
Now, not all Ornithologists are generational Satanists, but every one that’s quoted in a mainstream news article is. It’s how the few control the many.
They’re in every city, town and village on Earth, hiding in plain sight, unless you count their “secret” hand signs and their codified propaganda language.
They’re all linked by bloodline, down through the ages, all the way back to Babylon, and before.
The “increased awareness” ruse is played again in an article from last month, headlined " Amid the pandemic , people are paying more attention to tweets . And not the Twitter kind."
Can you see how the headline omitted the word “birds”, so the subject would be drastically less searchable? They replaced it with the word " tweets ", under the false guise that they were being editorially inventive, and witty.
In journalistic parlance, they’ve “buried” it in the subhead below:
“A reduction in street noise has created a stage for song birds .”
Ah, the government-engineered bat virus, is there anything it can’t do? Here, it’s being used as a bullshit plausible-deniability excuse, to explain away songbirds booming and burgeoning to a level not seen in my lifetime. The article continues:
"Across the country, scientists who study birds say they’re besieged by family members and friends asking the same question: Is the bird population exploding ?
“I’m hearing from a lot of people saying, wow, there are so many birds ,” said T. Scott Sillett, a wildlife biologist who heads the Smithsonian’s Migratory Bird Center, which runs the national Neighborhood Nestwatch — a kind of bird census conducted by volunteers. Sillett shakes his head.
“For one, we’re hearing more birds because there’s less human noise, fewer tires humming and horns,” he said. “We’re less conspicuous in our houses, and the birds are coming down to see. People are saying, wow, this bird is nesting right here under my window.”
Here’s Scott’s picture:
Head of the Smithsonian Migratory Bird Center Scott Sillett.
I’ve included it so you could get a better idea of what a generational Satanist in a position of marginal influence looks like.
Now, not every wildlife biologist is a generational Satanist. But every one quoted in a mainstream news article is. It’s how a relatively few con artists control the wholly-credulous-rube many.
The article continues:
“The scientists, or bird nerds as they’re called, say it would take more than a year of research before they could answer whether more robins, meadowlarks, blue jays, orioles, cardinals and sparrows are out because people are in. But they’re sure about one thing: More people are paying attention .”
Where " more than a year " is an example of a propaganda tactic called “slow-playing.” Then they threw on the " increased awareness " ruse on the end one more time to hammer it into your subconscious. They’re confident that, as wholly-credulous rube, you’ll never notice.
There’s clearly been some exponential change for the better in the environment in Colorado and Minnesota.
That unmentioned positive change is Etheric, energetic.
There’s an international news blackout in place on the subject. Because you’re not supposed to know that the primary driver of the size and longevity of any organism is the health of its Etheric environment.
Jeff Miller, Brooklyn, New York, June 22, 2020
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January 8, 2020 - Plenty of birds sighted in area counts
Despite lack of northern finches , other species kept things interesting for area birders during Christmas surveys.
Recent Christmas bird counts around the area confirmed that the winter of 2019-20 will be remembered as an unusual season for the lack of some birds and the abundance of others.
Perhaps the biggest bird story of the year here in the North Country is the near-total absence of pine grosbeaks, those spectacular wine-colored finches that normally brighten up winter feeders across the region every winter. Of all the area counts, including ones in Cook, Ely, Isabella, and Aurora, only a single counter— Mary Shedd, of Tower— spotted six pine grosbeaks during the Isabella count. And that was still a record low in Isabella, well below the previous low count of 20 in the 38 years of the Isabella count.
Other northern finches were in limited supply as well, as an abundant seed and berry crop in central Canada appears to have kept many of the region’s normal winter visitors north of the border.
(Nature booming and burgeoning, yet the article positions it as if the finches were doing poorly. - ed)
“The whole finch scene was pretty pathetic,” said Steve Wilson, who organizes and compiles the Isabella count. It was a similar story in the Cook area, where compiler Julie Grahn reported no pine grosbeaks, pine siskins, or redpolls, birds that are normally found in good numbers in the area this time of year. The low finch counts came despite exceptionally mild weather, that made it easy for counters to spend extra time in the field during the various counts.
(The “increased participation” or “increased observation” ruse, used in each and every article on this subject. - ed)
Just as some northern birds have yet to venture out of central Canada, some birds that normally leave the North Country this time of year appeared to be hanging on as well. All of the area counts reported significant numbers of goldfinches, which are usually scarce during most winters in northeastern Minnesota.
(No goldfinch numbers are provided, only the general " significant numbers." - ed)
Nine cedar waxwings, which are normally replaced here in winter by their slightly hardier and more colorful cousins, the Bohemian waxwings, were spotted during the Isabella count for only the second time. A tree sparrow and a mourning dove were both spotted during the Cook count, while counters in Ely spotted a dark-eyed junco.
Meanwhile, counters found jays, particularly blue jays, in record or near-record numbers.
Counters in Isabella tallied a total of 157 blue jays, shattering the previous record high of 130. “It seemed the woods were alive with blue jays,” said Wilson. He was also pleased by a sizable rebound in gray jay numbers, with 74 counted, well above the count’s long-term average of 43. “That was a nice rebound,” said Wilson, who has previously made note of recent low gray jay numbers on the count.
(Where " shattering " is a lurid-but-general hedge against the far more impactful statistic, which I was forced to do the math to learn. The new record is 20% above the old . Gray jay numbers are 72% above the long-term average . The generational Satanist bird counter said “that was a nice rebound”, where “was” is past tense, and “nice” is flat and neutral. - ed.
Raven numbers were also above average, with 153 tallied on the Ely count and 98 at Isabella.
(There’s no mention as to how far above average they are. More hedging. - ed)
It was also a strong year for red-breasted nuthatches, with 180 tallied in Ely and 123 in Isabella.
(More hedging. The general “strong” obscures any real information on the trend. - ed)
Other highlights included two hawk owls on the Cook count, along with six black-billed magpies, and 18 bald eagles.
(More hedging. Nothing to compare the numbers to. - ed)
Counters in Isabella counted 11 spruce grouse, well above the long-term average of two, although Wilson noted that four of those birds were tallied as roadkill along Lake County Hwy. 2, which passes through an area with a relatively high density of spruce grouse. The birds, often known as “fool hens” tend to lack wariness around both vehicles and humans. The species is believed to be on the decline in Minnesota, so Wilson said he’d like to explore options for alerting drivers on Hwy. 2 about the frequent presence of spruce grouse on the road. Like many birds, spruce grouse are attracted to roadsides in winter to access the grit they need to assist in the digestion of their food.
(It’s 450% above the long-term average, and that’s generally and misleadingly referred to as “well above.” - ed)
May 22, 2020 - Amid the pandemic, people are paying more attention to tweets . And not the Twitter kind.
A reduction in street noise has created a stage for songbirds
In a strange new world where the volume was suddenly turned down — empty sidewalks, less traffic and fewer early-morning leaf blowers — people stuck in their homes are tuning their ears to a sweet natural sound they’ve long taken for granted: bird songs.
Across the country, scientists who study birds say they’re besieged by family members and friends asking the same question: Is the bird population exploding?
“I’m hearing from a lot of people saying, wow, there are so many birds ,” said T. Scott Sillett, a wildlife biologist who heads the Smithsonian’s Migratory Bird Center, which runs the national Neighborhood Nestwatch — a kind of bird census conducted by volunteers. Sillett shakes his head.
“For one, we’re hearing more birds because there’s less human noise, fewer tires humming and horns,” he said. “We’re less conspicuous in our houses, and the birds are coming down to see. People are saying, wow, this bird is nesting right here under my window.”
The bird was probably there all along.
“There’s a surge in interest in birdwatching right now ,” said Mike Parr, president of the American Bird Conservancy. “People are in their houses and running out of Netflix and Zoom meetings and wondering what to do and they’re realizing there are birds in their backyards .”
The scientists, or bird nerds as they’re called, say it would take more than a year of research before they could answer whether more robins, meadowlarks, blue jays, orioles, cardinals and sparrows are out because people are in. But they’re sure about one thing: More people are paying attention .