Record Harvests and Crop Yields

RECORD HARVESTS AND CROP YIELDS


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 based on Wilhelm Reich's work. 


Since Don Croft first fabricated tactical Orgonite in 2000, its widespread, ongoing and ever-increasing distribution has been 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 that record harvests and crop yields are taking place regardless of geography.


That’s because the size, fertility and longevity of any organism vary directly with the health of its etheric environment.


Delaware’s state corn yield record of 162 bushels per acre from 2000 was 11% higher than the previous record of 143 bushels per acre set in 1996.


The growth of rate trees in the Colville National Forest increased 1.6% per year from 1999 until 2015, when that rate suddenly increased tenfold for each of the next two years, then tripled again from 2017 to 2018.


The corn yield in Delaware decreased 10% in one year from 2000 to 2001, from 162 bushels to 146 bushels, as the Death energy technology came online.


The Delaware state corn yield record of 152 bushels in 2004 was 4% higher than the previous record of 146 acres, set in 2001.


From 2004 to 2005, the Delaware state corn yield record decreased from 152 bushels to 143 bushels, by 5.9%. 


The net annual increase in corn yield in Delaware from 1996 to 2005 was zero. In retrospect, we can see how Death energy-based technologies were doing what they were intended to do right up until roughly the time the storm steering and augmentation system stopped working in earnest. It has its swan song with Hurricane Katrina, which was pumped up, driven around like a bumper car and then straight into New Orleans in 2005.


Don Croft invented tactical Orgonite in 2000, and, after five years of ever-increasing distribution, the simple, inexpensive devices had already broken the back to the great Death energy network that was thousands of years in the making.


In 2012, in Wes Anderson’s “Moonrise Kingdom”:


NARRATOR - The Black Beacon storm was considered by the U.S. Department of Inclement Weather to be the region's most destructive meteorological event of the second half of the twentieth century.

                            

EXT. WIDE MEADOW. DAY - One year later. The sky is blue. Wildflowers grow in the tall grass. The narrator, now in shirtsleeves, concludes:

                         

NARRATOR - But harvest yields the following autumn far exceeded any previously recorded, and the quality of the crops was said to be extraordinary.


Where Wes boldly lies that simply putting more water on crops will create record yields. 


It is, of course, careful propaganda to rebut the great climactic change that started in 2012, and has accelerated to this moment. 


The 2014 Delaware state corn yield record of 200 bushels per acre was 32% higher than a previous record of 152 bushels per acre from 2004.


Hungary’s agricultural output increased 40% from 2011 to 2015.


The amount of corn harvested in Brazil increased 73% from 2011 to 2019.


Timber and fish production in Japan doubled from 2012 to 2019.


Ontario’s average soybean yield per acre increased 36% from 2015 to 2018.


2016’s cocoa crop was the largest in Ivory Coast’s history.


The 2017 corn crop was the largest in U.S. history.


South Africa’s corn crop doubled from 2016 to 2017, to the highest in history.


Peanut production in South Carolina increased 38% from 2016 to 2017, to the highest level in history.


Cotton production in South Carolina increased 92% from 2016 to 2017, to the highest level in history.


2017’s cotton crops were the largest in North Dakota’s history.


2017’s soy crop was the largest in Brazil’s history.


Soybean production in South Carolina increased 15% from 2016 to 2017.


Winter wheat yield increased 8.9% in Delaware from 2016 to 2017, to 73 bushels per acre, the highest level in history.


California’s 2018 almond crop was the largest in history.


Argentina’s 2018 corn corp was the second largest in history.


California’s 2018 strawberry harvest was the third record harvest in a row.


Belarus' rapeseed oil exports increased over 400% January-November 2018.


In December 2017, agfax.com said “SC farmers report record harvest for some fall crops”.


Where, under the false guise of familiarity, the headline used “SC” instead of “South Carolina”, to make the subject far less searchable. And, even though the article documents an almost-doubling of cotton production, a 38% increase in peanuts and a 15% increase in soybeans to the highest levels in history as “record for SOME fall CROPS”, where “some” and “crops” are both general. The omission of the crop names from the terse, general headline renders it virtually unsearchable. The author also used the technique because they know that sixty to seventy percent of readers only read the headlines. 


Those are all examples of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”.


The author doesn’t provide any suggestion as to what drove the sudden, quantum, historically-unprecedented increase in crop yields in South Carolina in 2017, nor do they note that it’s part of a larger, wider trend. 


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


In December 2017, Iowa State University said “2017 Harvest Outlook Shows Record Production”.


Where, under the false guise of familiarity, the headline omits the name of the state, along with any crop names, to make the subject virtually unsearchable. The harvest outlook only SHOWS record production, and record PRODUCTION implies that it was farming with greater assiduousness that led to the highest crop yields in all history. 


“Corn and soybean yields in 2017 were higher than expected, resulting in the largest grain surpluses in recent years. According to United States Department of Agriculture crop production estimates released on Nov. 9, national corn yields exceeded 2016 production.”


Where “higher”, “largest” and “exceeded” are all hedging generalities put forward in place of far more impactful statistics to blunt the readers awareness of the great positive change taking place. In RECENT years is a lie - they are the largest grain surpluses in history.


There’s also no mention as to what drove the record crop yields in Iowa. The author from Iowa State is desperate to keep you from recognizing that the size, fertility and longevity of any organism vary directly with the health of its etheric environment.


The average yield per acre for Sorghum in Illinois increased 34% from 2017 to 2018.


Early grain and leguminous crops in Ukraine increased 33% in volume and 23% in yield from 2018 to 2019, from threshed acres which increased by just two tenths of one percent.


Meat exports from Khazakhstan increased 200% from 2018 to 2019, while Barley exports increased 150%



Jeff Miller, Brooklyn, New York, December 19, 2020


If you'd like to be added to this free mailing list, or know someone who would be, please send me a note at [email protected]