Crop yields in Brazil increased 2.9% across the board from 2018 to 2019

“Put Neidermeyer on it. He’s a sneaky little shit just like you.”

Dean Vernon Wormer, from " Animal House ", by Harold Ramis, Douglas Kenney and Chris Miller, 1978

Image result for greg niedermeyer animal house

January 28, 2019 - Brazil sees deadly flooding after record-breaking 32 inches of rain in 27 days

April 9, 2019 - Brazil - Extreme rainfall: More than 2 months’ worth of rain in 9 hours

July 6, 2019 - São Paulo Registers Record Rainfall in 24 Hours for the Month of July

July 19, 2019 - USDA: Brazil on point for record corn production

August 8, 2019 - Insufficient rainfall forecasted as Brazil’s Amazon dry season end approaches

August 21, 2019 - Record 72,000 forest fires detected in Brazil this year

September 24, 2019 - Parched Coffee Farms in Brazil Undermine ‘Mega’ Crop

October 9, 2020 - Brazil’s Rainfall Remains Healthy

November 28, 2019 - Brazil to produce record coffee crop despite weather -Rabobank

As you can see from the set of quotes immediately above, the folks in charge are not your friends, and are lying to you about basically everything, including the health of Brazil’s coffee crop, the amount of rain falling in Brazil, and just exactly who is setting the record number of forest fires, there.

Those fires are being intentionally set by what we euphemistically call “secret agents”, to create a false picture of drought were none exists. They’re doing it at the behest of the barely-closeted Death worshippers they work for. They’re doing the same thing in all the nations…perhaps you’ve noticed Australia?

January 6, 2020 - 24 Australians arrested for deliberately setting fires this season

Can you see how they deliberately avoided saying " forest fires"? It hedges back a step.

But back to rain-soaked, yet forest fire-riddled Brazil.

It’s February 2020, and great, epochal positive changes are underway at every level of our reality. They began in earnest in 2012 and have been increasing in speed and magnitude since.

I’ve subjectively concluded that those changes are being driven by untold thousands of simple, inexpensive Orgonite devices based on Wilhelm Reich’s work. Those devices are collectively unknitting and transforming the ancient Death energy matrix that’s been patiently built and expanded by our about-to-be-former Dark masters, well, all the way back to Babylon and before. And the Ether is returning to its ages-long natural state of health and vitality.

One of those changes the breaking of the great artificial drought. And another is that Nature is booming and burgeoning to a level not seen in my lifetime.

Since that statement directly refutes our State Religion, which holds that " Poor Mother Gaia is Dying, Crushed by the Virus-Like Burden of Mankind ", I’ve appended numerous current news stories below to support it.

In one, we learn that the entirety of the Brazilian agricultural crop hit a record in 2019, 6.6% higher than 2018. There’s no mention of what caused that general increase, beyond " increased planted area ".Yet the harvested area only increased 3.7%.

I’ve just showed that crop yields in Brazil increased 2.9% across the board from 2018 to 2019, and that the person writing the article deliberately tried to draw your attention away from it.

Another article below is headlined "Brazil to produce record coffee crop despite weather "

In the article, we learn that "Rabobank’s coffee analyst Guilherme Morya told reporters during an agricultural outlook seminar in Sao Paulo that unfavorable weather in some parts of Brazil’s coffee belt, such as dry spells in September and October, would be offset by production from new areas .

They said " unfavorable weather in some parts of Brazil was offset" instead of " lower coffee production in some parts of Brazil was offset". That’s because coffee production is a checkable fact, and you can’t push these things too far.

Since they’re being general (" some parts of Brazil’s coffee belt", " new areas"), we can tell they are lying. The article is what is known as a “hit piece”. In this case, they’re trying to paint the picture of a climate in disorder in Brazil, when in fact the climate is so healthy and harmonious that it’s producing more coffee than in all history.

It takes coffee trees three to five years from planting to growing fruits. If it were true that Brazil’s drought-related coffee losses were offset by production from (unspecified) “new areas”, you’d read something like “X percent of Brazil’s coffee crop was lost to drought, offset by a Y% increase in production from the JKL district, where Z new acres were planted three to five years ago.”

That’s what real journalism looks and feels like.

First Morya faked that it was droughty in Brazil. But, since he still has the largest coffee crop in Brazil’s history on his hands to deal with, he makes a second false inference:

" Dryer-than-normal weather conditions were seen by Morya as one of the factors behind a recent recovery in arabica coffee prices in New York. Despite the large Brazilian crop expected for next year, he believes the price outlook will remain positive."

He’s mentioned " dryer-than-normal weather conditions" because it’s raining too hard everywhere to say " drought ". But it’s still just a general statement.

The article continues a moment later: “Production is likely to fall in other countries due to lower investment after a prolonged period of low coffee prices,” the analyst said, expecting arabica futures in New York to keep an upward trend, reaching a top of $1.22 per pound during 2020."

He’s said that other nations - which I beg the reader to note are general and unspecified - are producing less coffee (which is also general) because the farmers bailed and are bailing on coffee. Not because of drought, as he initially alleged, but rather because growing it was and is no longer profitable for them, given that coffee crops are booming and burgeoning to unprecedented levels in all the coffee producing nations, at once.

I forgot to mention how they provided the numbers of the old and new records, but hedged by omitting any specific mention of the difference.

So I had to do the math. The new record is 6% above the old. Such records are usually broken by tiny margins.

It maps exactly against the 6.6% overall. increase in agricultural production all over Brazil. Here, the author described the increase in the coffee crop with the terse, general hedge " surpassing ".

This is how propaganda works. I’m sure you can understand why they don’t teach you such things in school (that is unless you majored in in English and Journalism, like myself).

Rabobank’s coffee analyst Guilherme Morya and the article’s author are fellow conspirators , both using conscious deception with the firmness of purpose that goes with complete honesty.

Here’s Guilherme Morya’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.

Guilherme was handed his lines, and he read them smoothly, glossing right over the complete irrationality I’ve taken pains to document here.

Do you want to be ruled by sneaky little shits like Guilherme, who lie to you like it’s their job? Me, neither.

Don’t you think it’s time to step up and take back our world?

Jeff Miller, Brooklyn, New York, February 9, 2020

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January 28, 2019 - Brazil sees deadly flooding after record-breaking 32 inches of rain in 27 days

April 9, 2019 - Brazil - Extreme rainfall: More than 2 months’ worth of rain in 9 hours

Extremely heavy rain hit parts of Brazil on April 8, 2019

July 6, 2019 - São Paulo Registers Record Rainfall in 24 Hours for the Month of July

July 19, 2019 - USDA: Brazil on point for record corn production

September 24, 2019 - Parched Coffee Farms in Brazil Undermine ‘Mega’ Crop

October 9, 2020 - Brazil’s Rainfall Remains Healthy

November 28, 2019 - Brazil to produce record coffee crop despite weather -Rabobank

Brazilian farmers are expected to produce a record coffee crop in 2020, surpassing a previous all-time high reached in 2018, as output is seen reaching 66.7 million 60-kg bags, Dutch bank Rabobank projected on Thursday.

Rabobank’s coffee analyst Guilherme Morya told reporters during an agricultural outlook seminar in Sao Paulo that unfavorable weather in some parts of Brazil’s coffee belt, such as dry spells in September and October, would be offset by production from new areas .

Brazil produced 57.6 million bags in 2019 and the previous record was 62.6 million bags according to the bank.

Dryer -than-normal weather conditions were seen by Morya as one of the factors behind a recent recovery in arabica coffee prices in New York. Despite the large Brazilian crop expected for next year, he believes the price outlook will remain positive.

“Production is likely to fall in other countries due to lower investment after a prolonged period of low coffee prices,” the analyst said, expecting arabica futures in New York to keep an upward trend, reaching a top of $1.22 per pound during 2020.

He believes the low availability of export quality coffees, both in Brazil and in Central America, was another factor behind the recent upward move on coffee prices.

(Precipitation levels are so high that the best the propagandists could run with was " dryer- than-normal" and "dry spells ", versus the word “drought” that they’d so desperately love to use. - ed)

January 8, 2020 - Brazilian crop grows more than 6% and hits record in 2019, says IBGE | Agribusiness

Brazilian crop grows more than 6% and hits record in 2019, says IBGE | Agribusiness

The Brazilian agricultural crop hit a record in 2019 and reached 241.5 million tons, an increase of 6.6% compared to 2018, reported the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE) on Wednesday (8).

According to IBGE, the previous record was in 2017, when 238.4 million tons were produced.

The estimated harvested area for 2019 was 63.2 million hectares, up 3.7% from the harvested area in 2018 (+ 2.3 million hectares). Rice, corn and soy represented 92.8% of the estimated production and accounted for 87.0% of the harvested area.

January 9, 2020 - Brazil anticipates record 2019/20 oilseed and grains crop