The Fifth Element

"O for a man who is a man, and, as my neighbor says, has a bone in his back which you cannot pass your hand through!”

From " Civil Disobedience ", by Henry David Thoreau, 1849

[image](Nathan Dicken and his 10-year old son, Braxton, hauled in this record-setting blue catfish from Lake Marble Falls, Texas on April 14, 2020. The fish weighed 39.03 pounds.)

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 documenting and analyzing the subject continually since 2013.

I have subjectively concluded that these positive 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 fish growing to sizes never seen previously. As may be seen in an article below from Texas from April 2020, headlined “Anglers set two Lake Marble Falls catfish records in three days.”

It’s an example of a propaganda technique that’s used whenever possible. If fish records in a certain area occur close in time to one another, they’ll be made into a single, less-searchable article, under the fictitious guise of “journalistic efficiency.”

Here’s a close variant on that technique:

June 6, 2019: Sixth fish record of 2019 breaks a mark that’s lasted 32 years

A Carthage angler has broken a Missouri fish record that stood for 32 years

Where the general " fish " is used in both the headline and the subhead in place of the fish’s correct name, the hybrid striped bass. In in journalistic parlance, the name is “buried” in the first paragraph of the article. It’s been deliberately lowered in the article to lessen its influence, to make the subject less searchable.

Under the false guise of familiarity, the headline omits the word " state ", along with the name of the state, again to make the subject drastically less searchable.

The subhead also omits the word " state ", once again to make the subject less searchable.

The current Missouri state record hybrid striped bass, from 2020, weighed 21 pounds, 11 ounces, and was 5.8% larger than the previous 20-pound, 8-ounce record holder from 1986.

That’s a 5.8% increase. Such records are usually broken by tiny margins, as an organism will grow in progressively smaller increments as it approaches its maximum possible size. Here the record stood for over thirty years, and then was suddenly broken by a very large margin.

The current Lake Marble Falls, Texas record blue catfish, from 2020, weighed 39.03 pounds, and was 6.3% larger than the previous 36.7-pound record holder from 2013.

Such records are usually broken by tiny margins, as an organism will grow in progressively smaller increments as it approaches its maximum possible size.

The current Lake Marble Falls, Texas record flathead catfish, from 2020, weighed 38.4 pounds, and was 12.9% larger than the previous 34-pound record holder from 2004.

Such records are usually broken by tiny margins, as an organism will grow in progressively smaller increments as it approaches its maximum possible size. Here the record stood for almost twenty years, and then was suddenly broken by a huge margin.

There’s obviously been a significant change for the better in environment in Lake Marble Falls, Texas, and also in environment of the hybrid striped bass in Missouri.

That change is the Orgonite-driven improvement in the health of the Ether.

The establishment that is firm in its assurance that the Ether does not exist is desperate to stop research into fish records, because that research easily proves that the primary driver of the size, fertility and longevity of any organism is the health of its Etheric environment.

The Ether is the fifth element. The five elements are Earth, Wind, Fire, Water, and the Ether.

The folks in charge redacted it, and the rubes never noticed.

But that’s all changed, now.

Jeff Miller, Brooklyn, New York, June 10, 2020

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June 6, 2019 - Sixth fish record of 2019 breaks a mark that’s lasted 32 years

A Carthage angler has broken a Missouri fish record that stood for 32 years.

On May 19, Cesar Rodriguez was fishing at Lake of the Ozarks when he hooked and landed a 21-pound, 11-ounce hybrid striped bass, according to a conservation department news release.

The fish breaks Missouri’s previous hybrid striped bass record: a 20-pound, 8-ounce fish, set in 1986 at the Lake of the Ozarks.

(The general “fish” is used in the headline and the subhead, to make the subject drastically less searchable. The fish’s correct name, “hybrid striped bass”, is, in journalistic parlance, “buried” in the first paragraph. Under the false guise of familiarity, the headline omits the word “state”, along with the name of the state, again to make the subject drastically less searchable. The subhead omits the word “state”, to make the subject less searchable. - ed)

April 17, 2020 - Texas - Anglers set two Lake Marble Falls catfish records in three days

Nathan Dicken and his 10-year-old son, Braxton, spent the better part of last year setting their trot lines on Lake LBJ, not really giving Lake Marble Falls much attention.

They decided to pull a couple of lines from Lake LBJ and move them to Lake Marble Falls after one of Dicken’s friends, Kevin Harris, hauled in a 38.4-pound flathead catfish from the smaller lake on April 12. He even told Dicken to “beat that.”

Nathan and Braxton did just that two days later when they pulled in a 39.03-pound blue catfish from Lake Marble Falls.

“It’s one of the bigger blue cats I’ve caught,” Nathan Dicken said.

(He’s caught blue cats larger than this lake-record fish? - ed)

Both fish set new Lake Marble Falls all-tackle records for their species based on Texas Parks and Wildlife Department records.

Dicken is putting his son’s name down as the record holder.

The previous blue catfish record was 36.7 pounds and set April 1, 2013. The flathead catfish lake record of 34 pounds had stood since March 15, 2004.