Cloudbuster report from Jorge in Colombia

Hi Don, this is the first result. On Jan. 25 I finally put the device to my farm. The photos are in order, at first I want to show the efects of the drought, then we assembled the device and after 45 minutes showed a large cloud. It did not rain that day, but this month has fallen 10 small drizzle (one with 10 mm, two with 2 mm and 7 with 0 mm), on 7 occasions, drizzled for 15 to 20 minutes, the rain gauge did not score, but the pasture was wet. Is this possible?

For ten years I’ve found it hard-to-impossible to post photos or even send photos through email on account of sleepless NSA and other terrorist organizations’ hackers. I think that asking Nora, my daughter, to post this stuff for me was a good move. Fortunately for me, the terrorists are mandated not to show their hand very directly so I think this tactic is going to keep working for me. Thanks, Nora! She intends to non-join the Air Irregulars (Etheric Air Corps) this year after some flying lessons.

Jorge’s success probably indicates that the weather weaponry in his part of Colombia is not very extensive. Dr Reich showed, in the spring of 1953, that grass began growing in the desert near his cloudbusters before it actually started raining. I don’t remember if he offered a theory for this but I think the same thing is happening on Jorge’s farm.

In the summer of 2002, after we’d been in this region for a year, the very long artificially created drought had ended and we saw flowers growing in the nearby desert all summer long. We were living on the narrow strip of prairie, known as the Palouse, whjich separates the desert to the west from the forested Bitteroot Mountains to the east. We overheard a farmer complaining that the grass was still too green to cut for hay in early July, by which time farmers had counted on the grass to be yellow for lack of rain. He also said that the ground in his hayfield was wet to a depth of three feet, which was also unheard of in the region. He said it was normally only wet a few inches deep. Orgonite cloudbusters evidently electrically/magnetically cause the water in the atmosphere to be ‘wetter’ so more able to soak into the ground. This may also explain why flashfloods are unheard of in the vicinity of an orgonite cloudbuster.

That summer, some farmers on the edge of the Palouse by the desert had begun planting crops in non-irrigated fields for the first time. That area was mainly for grazing, before–very sparse vegetation before the cloudbusters arrived. Since then, non-irrigated crops have increased and many irrigated fields have stopped using that expensive irrigation equipment in the region.

I wanted to get Jorge’s report posted because this is the first news I’ve gotten from someone in Colombia, also was eager to post it so that our orgonite compadres in Chile will feel encouraged after a very discouraging, failed attempt to get a truckload of their HAARP-busting orgonite east of the Andes. Alejandro told me that the Chilean border officials offered a lot of consolation, after that, and even offered to draw up some helpful paperwork for another attemptwith Argentina Customs . One of the Chilean Customs guys was wearing an orgonite pendant. Is America the only country left where there most of the cops are just violence-prone terrorists? I’m so damn sick of the nazi-style New Patriotism here.

Some of the gifters in Argentina have been experimenting with orgonite on farms for years and I occasionally get updates from one of them. I’m not aware that any of them have committed to busting up the coastal weather weaponry and/or the weaponry that Ale, Javi and Kelly saw, all along the eastern foothills of the Andes but when those hundreds of arrays are gifted I"m sure there will be abundant rain all across those latitudes, as happened in Southern Africa, six years ago.

I don’t think there are any deserts north of Southern Peru, so Jorge is probably going to find it easier to bing abundant rain to his region of Colombia if he’ll just bust a few weather weaponry arrays, perhaps.

~Don

Hanh Don & Jorge. The rains you got are what we call “female” rains up here in my People’s part of Turtle Island. They come in response to requests for gentle rains & are what you are likely to prefer if you have had an extended drought, as they soak in & so open up Unchi Maka (our Grandmother the Earth)'s surface so subsequent rains go in, rather than run off. So in that sense, you are lucky that you did not get “male” or worse, “warrior” rains when you set up the equipment. To me it’s obvious, but in case it isn’t to someone who reads this, “male” rains are hard rains, & “warrior” rains have a lot of thunder, lightning, & wind associated with them in addition to being hard rains. They usually cause a lot more damage than they do aid to crops. Warrior rains can have hail with them, too.

My thoughts on the female rains you got are that haste (or impatience) makes waste & it isn’t that watched pots ‘never’ boil; but rather than humans’ attention spans are short & it is only an appearance that watched pots don’t ever boil. They do, & in the same amount of time as any time they aren’t watched. So it is unwise to be impatient / unhappy that you only got moistening rains rather than a lot of rain in the beginning. I’d rather have the land in good condition than to have it pounded & washed out… It can’t grow a decent crop then, either.

Also, there’s a time or season for everything. If you work too hard to get the response you want rather than one that’s wiser, you might really torque the seasons so that you get way too much rain when your crops don’t want it & maybe even more when it’s ‘the rainy season’.

In my People’s Way, we feed the spirits & thank them for responding at all, & then pray them to continue the good response. Those few millimeters add up in the long run & you will have good crops & land in good shape too. Mitakuye oiasin / All, my relatives.