“The present is theirs; the future, for which I really worked, is mine.”
― Nikola Tesla
July 11, 2019 - Michigan - Osprey’s Southern Michigan Comeback a Team Effort
April 8, 2020 - Maryland - Endangered salamanders benefit from wetland restoration
In both of the headlines immediately above, the ruse is played that local efforts were responsible for an only-incremental improvement in the species in just that geographic area, to cover up the broader trend I’m elucidating here. Namely that osprey everywhere are doing great. And salamanders everywhere are doing great. And “local efforts” have little if anything to do with it.
It’s October 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 began writing this series of articles, entitled “Positive Changes That Are Occurring”, in July of 2013.
These historically-unprecedented positive changes are being driven by many hundreds of thousands, if not millions of simple, inexpensive Orgonite devices. The American Don Croft first fabricated simple, inexpensive tactical Orgonite in 2000, building upon the previous groundbreaking work of Wilhelm Reich and Karl Hans Welz, both Austrians.
Over the last twenty years, Orgonite’s widespread, ongoing and ever-increasing distribution has been unknitting 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 the great positive changes that is occurring at this time is that rainfall levels are at their highest levels in history, regardless of geography. That’s because rainfall levels vary directly with the health of the ether.
A story below from 2017 from China is headlined " Dried-up waterfall comes ‘back to life’ after 60 years ."
The author of the story relates that "According to local reports, it dried up in the 1950s after a dam was built to conserve water. "
Essay: Explain how a dam built to conserve water dried up the river that it was built upon.
Unless you are a practicing Coincidence Theorist, “The dam was built to conserve water” is exactly the opposite of the truth, which is “the dam was built to destroy the river’s ecosystem and dry up the river.”
The author’s brazen lie that “the dam was built to conserve water” is an example of the use of conscious deception with the firmness of purpose that goes with complete honesty.
The folks in charge are not your friends, and are lying to you about basically everything, including why they built the dams.
The reason the waterfall “came back to life” is that rainfall in that part of China has been so heavy that the folks who built the dam to dry up the river and kill all the fish in the river were forced to let all the extra water run around it, or have the dam be blown.
The same thing happened in the U.S. with the Colorado River in 2014, when the water flowing to the gulf of Cortez for the first time in decades was announced as a “joint rescue mission” by the U.S. and Mexico. They claimed they decided to do it, as a lark, vs. the truth, which was that they simply had to let all that excess water past the dams, or face the destruction of the infrastructure.
They’re taking down dams like the Elwha in Washington State not because “they don’t make money”, or, more ludicrously, still, “their owners have had an environmental epiphany”, but rather because they know that the Great Artificial Drought has been broken, and that the dams’ primary purpose of drying up and destroying the riverine ecosystem simply cannot be accomplished in this new environment. There’s so much water coming down the rivers that they have to send it over the spillways or lose the dams.
A story below from June 2020 from Maine is headlined " ‘One Of The Best Nature Shows’: A River Transformed After Dams Come Down ".
Trying to make an honest face, the author says “In a growing trend , dozens of aging dams are removed from U.S. rivers every year.”
Propaganda Film Narrator: (wrings hands) “All the dams are all old, so old, we just can’t fix them.” (cut to documentary on the Big Dig under Boston, then follow with another on the construction of the Channel Tunnel)
Just like in the U.S. and China, the folks in charge in Iran built a dam on the Hamand river to destroy that river’s ecosystem and dry up the river. A story on the subject from 2019 is headlined “After deluge Helmand River springs back to life”.
It reads " Dam construction, depriving the river from its water right , coupled with climate change have resulted in the dryness of the river over past years contributing to biodiversity loss, and sand and dust storms."
Where “depriving the river from its water right” is specific, and factual. And where “climate change” is general, and false.
As you may recall, generality is a hallmark of propaganda.
After 18 straight years of desertifying the region, the rainfall level in Iran reached a point where they had to let the excess water volume around the spillways, or lose the dam.
But don’t try showing many successive examples intentional, dam-based river destruction to a practicing Coincidence Theorist as proof that there’s Some Big Conspiracy.
All of the rivers are coming back, not just the ones with dams on them. Another story below, from the U.K., from 2015 is headlined "Heavy rains bring stunning UK waterfall back to life for first time in centuries ".
Another story below from Thailand from July 2020 is headlined “Kaeng Song Waterfall roars back to life as tourists descend on the area”.
“The waterfall is one of the most popular tourist attractions and with continuous rain it has roared back to life .”
The world has permanently transformed back to the better, and will continue to do so.
How long do you think I’ll be the only person writing about it? We’re in year seven, currently.
Jeff Miller, Brooklyn, New York, October 4, 2020
December 7, 2015 - Heavy rains bring stunning UK waterfall back to life for first time in centuries
January 22, 2016 - Waterbirds Make Dramatic Comeback to Cambodia Wetlands
May 18, 2017 - Footage has emerged from China of a waterfall that apparently came “back to life” after being dried up for more than half a century.
The video, filmed in Taizhou, Zhejiang Province on May 18, shows water gushing down the 285-metre-high cliff face.
According to local reports, it dried up in the 1950s after a dam was built to conserve water.
July 11, 2019 - Osprey’s Southern Michigan Comeback a Team Effort
April 8, 2020 - Endangered salamanders benefit from wetland restoration
April 30, 2020 - Cranes Make Comeback in Britain’s Wetlands
The graceful crane – the tallest bird in the UK – is making a comeback into Britain’s wetlands thanks to re-introduction and habitat restoration.
July 7, 2020 - Thailand - Kaeng Song Waterfall roars back to life as tourists descend on the area
The waterfall is one of the most popular tourist attractions and with continuous rain it has roared back to life.
August 10, 2020 - One of world’s most famous falls rumbles back to life
Iguazu Falls, located on the border of Argentina and Brazil, is one of the widest waterfalls in the world, at more than a mile and a half wide.
After an abnormally dry rainy season , South America’s world-renowned Iguazu Falls, a World Heritage site, is rumbling with life once more. The flow of the 275 waterfalls dramatically slowed at a time when it typically reaches its peak.
(Can you see how they omitted mention of the torrential rain that revided the falls? - ed)
If you’d like to be added to this free mailing list, please send me a note at [email protected].
You can access these articles online at https://forum.orgones.co.uk/c/positive-changes-that-are-occurring/