“One may outwit another, but not all the others.”

“One may outwit another, but not all the others.”

― François de La Rochefoucauld






It's August 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 those changes is aquatic life growing to sizes never seen previously.

A Toledo Blade article from August 29, 2008 is headlined "Bowfishermen put hook-and-liners to shame".

Where, under the false guise of familiarity, the author has omitted any indication of the location, to make the subject virtually unsearchable.

The author has used the classic technique of putting a bunch of fish records into one article, to make all of them drastically less searchable. 

The article continues:

"Now comes Jake Kerstetter, of Springboro, with another bow-and-arrow record - a longnose gar - and a tale of two bowfishing records. Kerstetter took a 14.72-pound longnose that stretched 50 1/2 inches from the Little Miami River east of Cincinnati on July 11 to 'replace' a 14.57-pounder taken in 2001 from Ohio Brush Creek, also in deep southwest Ohio."

Where the terse, neutral "replace" is used to obfuscate the magnitude of the margins between the records. So, I had to do the math.

The Ohio bowfishing state record longnose gar from 2001 weighed 14.57 pounds, and was 1% larger than the previous 14.57-pound record holder from 2001. That's an example of such a record being broken by a tiny margin after standing for almost a decade. Organisms grow in progressively smaller increments as they approach their maximum possible size.

A Toledo Blade article from July 15, 2011 is headlined "'Akron' bowman takes 'record' longnose gar".

Where, under the false guise of familiairity,  the headline omits the word "state", and the name of the state, to make the subject as general and unsearchable as possible. They used the word "bowman" instead of "bowfisherman" so they could avoid using the word "fish".
 
The author, a Steve Pollick, continues:

"An Ohio record longnose gar taken by bowfishing has been certified by the Outdoor Writers of Ohio, the state's official keeper of fish records.

The fish, which looks like a cross between a northern pike and an alligator, weighed 19.21 pounds, more than four pounds above the old record. It was shot by Zachary Jared, of Akron, at Turkeyfoot Lake in Summit County on May 12 while he was bowfishing at night. The record gar is 53.1 inches long with a 20.47-inch girth. The catch 'replaces' a longnose gar that was shot in the Little Miami River by Jake Kerstetter in 2008. It weighed 14.72 pounds and measured 50 1/2 inches long."

Where the terse, general "replaces" is used as a hedge to keep you from discerning the margin between the old record and the new. So, I had to do the math. 




The current Ohio state record longnose gar taken by bowfishing, from 2011, weighed 19.2 pounds, and was 31% larger than the previous record holder. That's a third larger. 
The date of the previous record was omitted by the author.

Such records are usually broken by tiny margins, as organisms grow in progressively smaller increments as they approach their maximum possible size.

There's obviously been some great positive change in the environment of the longnose gar in Ohio.

That change is energetic, Etheric.

The growth rate of the longnose gar in Ohio is increasing exponentially, going forward in time. The reason for the serial obfuscation of previous records is that even cursory investigation into fish records reveals that the size, fertility and longevity of any organism varies directly with the health of its Etheric environment.

They're desperate to keep you from realizing that the size, fertility and longevity of any organism varies directly with the health of its Etheric environment.



Jeff Miller, Brooklyn, New York, August 26, 2020




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