She-Man Agent Brumfield

“Tricks and treachery are the practice of fools, that don’t have brains enough to be honest.”

Benjamin Franklin

It’s June 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 these changes is bird populations booming and burgeoning to a level never seen previously, regardless of geography.

For example, a current news article below, from Cleveland, Ohio, is headlined "June 3, 2020 - " Texas bird among record-setting number of migrants spotted at Wendy Par ".

In journalistic parlance, the author has “buried” the name of the bird, and the name of the state, in the subhead below:

"Welcome to Ohio , Scissor-tailed Flycatcher "

They omitted those items from the headline to make the subject less searchable. The word " spotted " alludes that " more assiduous bird-watching " led to the record number.

In the article, the author sets the scene with:

'Nature and bird-watching enthusiasts were unsure what to expect when May started off with unwelcoming cold."

" Unsure " is a variant of " mystery ", " baffled " and " puzzled ", meme words which are used whenever anyone in the wholly-controlled-and-coopted Political, Academic, Scientific and Media establishments wants to lie about, well, basically anything.

Here, it’s a command to your subconscious, to make it seem as if we don’t know what is going on. The author goes on to tell you What To Think: that the historically-unprecedented numbers of birds were an accident of timing .

"When the weather turned and warm south winds started pouring up through the Mississippi Valley and Great Lakes, what soon followed was nothing short of mind-bendingly spectacular,” she said.

That’s Cleveland Metroparks Naturalist Jen Brumfield talking. She’s using conscious deception with the firmness of purpose that goes with complete honesty, saying that " a favorable chance wind " led to the great, historically-unprecedented abundance of birds.

Here’s her picture:

[image][image]

(Jen Brumfield, Naturalist, Cleveland Metroparks, Cleveland, Ohio)

I’ve included it so you could get a better idea of what a generational Satanist in a position of marginal influence looks like.

Now, not every Naturalist is a generational Satanist. But every one that’s quoted in a mainstream news article is. It’s how the few control the many. They’re in every city, town and village on Earth. They’re all genetically related to one another. It’s a bloodline thing.

The article continues:

Local birders observed in awe as they enjoyed other sightings, including the Scarlet Tanagers, the typically-difficult-to-see Black-billed Cuckoos mere feet away.

Where " mere feet away " blatantly and falsely implies the birds are coming closer because people are indoors.

"Brumfield looked back at what felt like a whirlwind, saying, “The camera shutters didn’t stop for almost eight days in a row.”

Several times, the day’s total broke 100 species of birds for the site, including a remarkable morning when 88 species were seen in 120 minutes."

" Remarkable " is a variant of " mystery ", " baffled " and " puzzled ".

Relentless south winds brought more and more birds each day, to the jaw-dropped awestruck birding community that did our best to get out safely to document the sheer phenomenon of birds ‘dripping’ from trees, hopping around on beaches and lawns, and even landing on hundreds of fisherman’s boats offshore,” she said."

Where she-man Agent Brumfield just pounded in the " relentless south winds " meme a second time.

There’s clearly been a significant change for the better in the environment in Ohio.

To preserve current programming levels, stop reading immediately, breathe through your mouth and repeat " A chance wind led to all these birds ".

Another article below from May 2020 is headlined “The birds are back in town !”

Using precisely the same tactic seen in the first article we reviewed, the headline uses the false guise of familiarity to omit the name of the town, and the state, and what specific sort of birds they’re discussing - all to make the subject drastically less searchable. With a cute exclamation point to distract the toddler!

In journalistic parlance, this is buried below:

“Rose-breasted Grosbeaks are passing through in record numbers this year. These are male birds and females or juveniles eating black oil sunflower seed quicker than I can refill it in the feeder.”

But the author doesn’t mention why there are record numbers, or what the old record was, or how high the new record is above the old. That’s a propaganda technique called " compartmentalization ".

There’s clearly been a significant change for the better in the environment in Ohio.

Another article below from May 2020 is headlined "Flamingos flock to a locked-down Mumbai".

The author is shaking the doll of the engineered bat virus as the driver of the record number of flamingos, hoping you forget that virus-free 2019 also produced a record number of flamingos.

There’s clearly been a significant change for the better in the environment in Mumbai, with " the virus did it! " put forward as a plausible-deniability excuse to keep your eyes off that long-term trend.

Here, you can see how they used the historic first of a lockdown of a healthy population as an excuse to stop counting flamingos:

“BNHS had already counted 125,000 flamingos before its work was disrupted by India’s coronavirus lockdown measures , introduced on March 25, said Khot, who expects the population to surpass the previous record by the end of May.”

There’s clearly been a change for the better in the environment in Ohio in the United States, and also in Mumbai in India.

That unmentioned positive change in the environment is Etheric.

There’s an international news blackout in place on the subject. Because you’re not supposed to know that the primary driver of the size, fertility and longevity of any organism is the health of its Etheric environment.

Jeff Miller, Brooklyn, New York, June 21, 2020

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February 6, 2020 - Midwinter Waterfowl Survey Shows Rise in Bird Count
In early January, aerial survey teams of pilots and biologists from the Maryland Department of Natural Resources made visual estimates of the ducks, geese, and swans along most of the state’s Chesapeake Bay, Potomac River, and Atlantic coast shorelines. This year, the teams counted about 627,000 waterfowl, which was higher than the 566,300 birds observed during 2019, but lower than the five-year average of 738,440 birds.

(That’s a 10% population increase, in one year. - ed)

May 1, 2020 - Flamingos flock to a locked-down Mumbai

The humans may be in lockdown in India, but tens of thousands of flamingos are making the most of the peace and quiet.

Huge numbers of the birds have flocked to Mumbai, the capital of Maharashtra state in western India, with photos of the flamingos becoming a hit with birdwatchers on social media.

The birds traditionally migrate to the area for feeding from September to the end of May, according to Rahul Khot, assistant director at the Bombay Natural History Society (BNHS), which monitors the flamingos.

Last year a record 134,000 flamingos were counted in the area, but Khot believes a new record will be set this year.

BNHS had already counted 125,000 flamingos before its work was disrupted by India’s coronavirus lockdown measures , introduced on March 25, said Khot, who expects the population to surpass the previous record by the end of May.

May 8, 2020 - The birds are back in town!

This weekend is World Migratory bird Day (Saturday, May 9th). Bird migration is at its peak right now in the Cincinnati area and on our Edge of Appalachia Preserve. All of our bird breeders that leave for the winter are now back in southern Ohio, Indiana, and Northern Kentucky and singing in their territories. Others are passing through and continuing on their merry way north. You have no doubt heard many of them while staying at home this Spring. To help you identify these wanderers if you see them in your yard or neighborhood, here are some photos from the Edge for reference. Enjoy !

Rose-breasted Grosbeaks are passing through in record numbers this year. These are male birds and females or juveniles eating black oil sunflower seed quicker than I can refill it in the feeder.

June 3, 2020 - Cleveland, OH - Texas bird among record-setting number of migrants spotted at Wendy Park

Welcome to Ohio, Scissor-tailed Flycatcher

An unassuming green oasis surrounded by industry, a port and bustling nightlife, the 22-acre patch of Wendy Park, also referred to as Whiskey Island, is a haven for wildlife, and as Cleveland Metroparks Naturalist Jen Brumfield puts it, “sticks out like a green thumb for migrants.”

Year after year, Wendy Park is a 5-star Airbnb listing for millions of migratory birds, monarch butterflies, dragonflies and bats. But this year has been different, says Brumfield, who patiently watched and recorded, to her amazement, record-setting numbers of warblers, songbirds, vireos, thrushes, tanagers, orioles, sparrows and flycatchers during the last week of May.

For those who are not familiar with warblers, they are a family of colorful birds. In Ohio, you can regularly see 36 species of warbler annually, according to John Pogacnik, a biologist at Lake Metroparks.

“The Lake Erie region is one of the best places in the world for observing warblers,” wrote Pogacnik in a blog detailing the presence of warblers in the region.

Nature and bird-watching enthusiasts were unsure what to expect when May started off with unwelcoming cold .

“When the weather turned and warm south winds started pouring up through the Mississippi Valley and Great Lakes , what soon followed was nothing short of mind-bendingly spectacular,” she said.

In a single day, Brumfield recorded over 400 individual warblers of 25 species—a red-letter record for any location in the Eastern U.S.

One moment Brumfield won’t ever forget is when she found an immature Scissor-tailed Flycatcher, a bird typically found in Texas and Oklahoma that foraged itself in the canopy of the cottonwoods at Wendy Park.

her.

“Other birders and I were in shock, awe and delight, who carefully and safely social distanced , of course, to see a bird that I have scoured the site of Cuyahoga for 12 years,” she said.

Local birders observed in awe as they enjoyed other sightings, including the Scarlet Tanagers, the typically-difficult-to-see Black-billed Cuckoos mere feet away .

Brumfield looked back at what f elt like a whirlwind, saying, “The camera shutters didn’t stop for almost eight days in a row.

Several times, the day’s total broke 100 species of birds for the site, including a remarkable morning when 88 species were seen in 120 minutes.

Relentless south winds brought more and more birds each day, to the jaw-dropped awestruck birding community that did our best to get out safely to document the sheer phenomenon of birds ‘dripping’ from trees, hopping around on beaches and lawns, and even landing on hundreds of fisherman’s boats offshore,” she said.

Other birds included:

Bay-breasted, Blackburnian

Magnolia

Mourning

Chestnut-sided

Cape May Warbler

Great Crested Flycatcher

Yellow-bellied Flycatcher

Philadelphia Vireos

Rose-breasted Grosbeaks

Indigo Buntings

Swainson’s Thrushes