I planned to go to Chad to take the Orgonite there by next week. I had ptepared a lot of Orgonite to take there and I was already prepared for the journey. Due to the rising demand over there, I definitely have to get prepared with a lot of Orgonite. In history of my Orgonite distribution in Africa, the place where I do see the demand rising at an alarming rate s this country where I had taken Orgonite for quite a longer time.
Because of the greater demand, some of my customers called me yesterday to go and pick them from the bus station, informing me that they had planned to ambush me and come without me getting me informed. I met them and now they are already in my house. They have come to take the Orgonite to their country. They claim that they feared that they could not get enough Orgonite if I could go by myself to Chad because the number of the people who want the Orgonite is quite very high and I do tend to be fair in distributing the same. They have saved me of the burden of going in person to Chad, and am very sure that this action is likely to improve my earnings.
Here in Ethiopia, those who already know the use of Orgonite develop their interest in the same day by day. Farmers so much like Mbolea and now our new friend in Ethiopia called Hibrahim has a lot of work to do. Many people give him a lot of work of gifting and distributing Orgonite.
In Chad people really like Orgonite. When they came, I gave them the ones I had and they tol;d me that they like it that much because they use it for fishing. I am going to Chad next week to see how they put them. They also use them for farming purposes in their farms.
Christine
Christine and I have been coordinating efforts to enable Hibrahim to post his own reports on EW. I encouraged him to post in Kiswahili for the benefit of our East African readers and he has sent me emails in good English after getting some translation help from a friend, as Fatumah in Somalia has also done.
Benedict has committed to translating as many reports into English as possible, also English into Kiswahili and I wonder how one man can possibly do all that he’s been doing but he truly is.
Another obstacle we’ve had to overcome has been the incessant hacking of emails between Hibrahim and myself. We finally broke through that barrier with Christine’s help; we simply CC to Christine, each time, and she then forwards the email to the intended recipient. I’ve always found this to be an efficient way to tear through the CIA, NSA and MI6 hacker barriers, so be sure to use this method if these degraded $#!+birds are interfering with your email! There’s been more hacking of email to Westerners from courageous Africans than from anyone else on the planet. Let’s see how it will be with the Chinese nationals who finally start corresponding with us, though [Image Can Not Be Found] (not that anyone needs us in order to succeed with this work!)
Christine sent me another update about the situation with her contacts in Chad that was quite uplifting and I’ve asked her to post about that. She’s incredibly busy, of course, and I haven’t even yet posted about our cross-country gifting excursion in September, yet.
~Don