Report from mareb bag

The first time that I heard about this river was when I first got a friend who was willing to try the Orgonite magic around this place. I gave an example of one for free so that he could go and try the same at that point. However, I did not get an immediate feedback.
Mareb river is a seasonal river that dries after sometimes, and is only filled up when the area is flooded. During such periods, it combines with another river called Atbarah.
By the time that I gave a trial Orgonite to the client, it was a dry season, and so you expect the area to totally lack water. The main intention of the use was to improve the condition of the soil, however dry, so that he could grow some vegetables which take the shortest time.
When he tried this, he encountered a problem in stead: Within two months, his vegetables were ready for harvesting and the peoples’ were not. During this time, a severe hunger had hit the region. What do the rest have to do? They went around at the time that the man was not around, so that they could steal from him. This led two thieves in the police custody for eleven days.
The matter was taken to the local tribunal where such petty cases are solved, and the result was that the bench agreed to help the two get access to Orgonite so that their vegetables could do faster as well. A few weeks later, I was contacted to go for the supply. I carried some few portions, and that is when I learned about the whole event.I have now made the best contact with hose people and now am arranging to go and give a talk about the product very soon. They seem to be my potential best market in the future, and I know that will help me make ends meet.
Christine.

That is amazing, that the Tribunal would help those two get access to Orgonite so they could grow their own food instead of having to steal it – I live in England, the idea of a Magistrates Court over here offering to aid anyone with Orgonite is extreme fantasy to put it mildly!

That’s a good point, Shaun, and I think that most of the courts on the planet are like the corporate ones in UK: simply bludgeons in the hidden hand of the corproate world order. Over here, the courts are used to create the biggest gulag archipelago in recorded history–literally slave labor for the corporations that own and operate the new prison system. I suppose the larcenous black-robed bandits in America don’t look quite as ludicrous as the UK ones in those gowns and fright wigs, at least

I hold a lot of hope for the new government of South Sudan in the future, based on this sort of activity that Christine reported.

Lest anyone fail to notice, too–this is the first time that a court has involved orgonite in the process of serving justice! It’s said that ‘Justice rests on two pillars: reward and retribution,’ and in this case the judge was profoundly insightful, in my opinion, and perhaps inspired. In my own savage alleged government, nearly all judges thirst for retribution, in addition to getting 30% of all fines that they’re capable of levying.

Shall I also draw more attention to the fact that a single piece of orgonite generated such astounding effects in an entire field of vegetables? This may indicate that the arid region is ripe for regular rainfall, now. Congratulations, Christine, and the two reports you’ve posted this week are each worthy of a book to be written about the significance of each. I’m still recovering from the enormity of these implications and am in awe that you are not world famous, already. Someday, perhaps soon, good and empowering news like yours will spread quickly.

Our readers might not remember that after one of the EW contributors in Australia (he rarely posts, so I don’t remember his name) distributed thousands of pieces of orgonite around three quarters of the continent’s coast, some years ago, it began raining in the interior desert and has been raining regularly, there, eer since. There are now rivers where there haven’t been any rivers in recorded history. Australia was in the worst drought, ever, at the time and nobody held any hope for an end to it. I see the same process happening in the desert and arid areas of East Africa, now.

Christine’s mshiriki kazini (coworker) in Ethiopia, Hibrahim, is now leading an effort to distribute orgonite along the Somali border with that country, now, by the way, so stay tuned for those results [Image Can Not Be Found]

We see, again and again, from the reports from around the world on this forum, that a single, ordinary person is capable of producing unimaginably grand results. I’m ordinary, so I don’t mind using the word for my coconspirators.

~Don

This should give you an idea about the croc problem in Africa:

That photo was taken on the Niger River on the other side of the continent and bear in mind that the people are a little distance behind the specimen
Thanks, Bruce, for sending me the photo!

Lest we forget, though, these animals are food. Carol and I visited a Hush Puppies restaurant franchise in Las Vegas, years ago, which serves alligator meat. The place was packed and we’d never seen as many human/reptilian hybrids in one place, by the way. I enjoyed watching the strange customers more than eating the meal but I do like Cajun food.

When I was in high school on the island of Guam in the middle 60s I sort of ran away, one summer, to the Palau Islands, where crocodiles are also a problem. The Japanese, who had those islands between 1919 (got them from teh Germans) and 1945, imported them from New Guinea, I think for meat and the skins, and some had escaped captivity and flourished in the lagoons of Koror. I did a lot of skin diving around there but never saw one but I knew local people who encountered them and while I was there an adult human was swallowed by one. I loved that place and always admired the Palauans (now call themselves the Republic of Belau), especially after they successfully kept Killer Kissinger and the MI6/CIA/SS from turning their little country into a military base in the 70s.

~Don

I was at the start studded opening o Ripley’s Believe it Or Not in London and the free nibbles were meat from various displays…

Eye to eye with an alligator – eating alligator.

M

It’s true that in our African lakes and rivers there are big and quite bigger alligators that at time made lives humdrum to some people and even domestic animals like cows goats etc for they do feed on them.Some times back in River Nile Congo and even in Kenya we have some rivers as River Kuja River Migori where alligators had been very much detrimental
Chris