Courage is resistance to fear, mastery of fear, not the absence of fear.
- Mark Twain
It’s May 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 since. I’ve been writing articles on the subject since 2013.
These positive changes are being collectively driven by tens of thousands of inexpensive Orgonite devices based on Wilhelm Reich’s work. Since the early 2000’s, simple Orgonite 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 wildlife is booming and burgeoning to a level never seen previously. For example, the current Oklahoma state record bigmouth buffalo fish, from May 2020, is 10% larger than a previous record holder from 1988.
Such records are usually broken by tiny margins, as an organism will necessarily see smaller increments of growth as it approaches its maximum possible size.
An article on the subject, from May 12, 2020, is headlined “State record fish caught in eastern Oklahoma.”
Where the headline omits the name of the fish, to make the subject drastically less searchable. Then the author omits any mention of the previous record. I researched eight or ten other articles on the subject. None included the previous record. That’s an example of what’s known as a “news blackout”, and also of how the few control the many.
When I finally found a story on the previous record holder, from April 2015, it said only “The fish was weighed on certified scales at the Durant State Fish Hatchery”, while inexplicably omitting the weight .
In yet another separate story I was then forced to research, the body text again omits the weight. Only in the non-searchable caption of a photograph in the article do we read “Allen Bynum of Ardmore with his state-record bighead buffalo weighing 60 pounds 6 ounces, caught at Lake Texoma on April 25, 2015.”
Can you see how they deliberately got the fish’s name wrong, to make the subject less searchable? They brazenly called the bigmouth buffalo " bighead buffalo".
So now, we’ve at last learned the weight of the 2015 record holder.
The current Oklahoma state record bigmouth buffalo fish, from May 2020, weighed 66 pounds, 4 ounces. 1060 It was 9.7% larger than the previous 60 pound, six ounce 966 record holder from 2015.
Such records are usually broken by tiny margins, as the organism will grow in ever smaller increments as it approaches its maximum possible size, given no other drastic changes in environment.
That record holder from 2015 was seven tenths of one percent larger than the previous 59 pound, 15 ounce 959 record holder from 1988.
That’s an example of such a record being broken by a tiny margin, as the organism will necessarily grow in ever smaller increments as it approaches its maximum possible size, given no other drastic changes in its environment.
However, we must now address the fact that the growth rate of the bigmouth buffalo fish in Oklahoma is increasing exponentially, going forward in time. That’s not supposed to be scientifically possible.
The record stood unbroken for almost thirty years, then was broken by a small margin in 2015. Five years later, in 2020, the record was broken again, but this time by a huge margin. What changed in the environment of the bigmouth buffalo fish in Oklahoma to drive those changes? Why were there almost thirty years between records, then only just five? Why is the growth rate of the fish increasing exponentially, going forward in time, when the opposite should be the case?
It is all evidence of the Orgonite-driven return to health of the Etheric environment that the fish inhabit.
The record prior to 1988 has been scrubbed from the web.
Because the folks in charge are really desperate to keep the information I’m surfacing a secret.
It’s easy to see why a systematic effort is in place to defray research into these records. Because research shows that the Orgonite-driven return to health of the Etheric environment the fish inhabit is causing the fish to grow to sizes never seen previously.
The primary driver of the size and longevity of any organism is the health of its Etheric environment.
Eighth grade kids doing book reports on fish records should have been ahead of me on this. Even more certainly, people who fish. The fact that the information is not more widely known underscores the effectiveness of the linguistics-driven programming surrounding the subject.
But you only have to learn something once.
Jeff Miller, Brooklyn, New York, May 25, 2020
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1988 - Oklahoma, Bigmouth Buffalo, 59 lbs 15 oz, 43.75", Greenleaf Lake, Leroy Broaddrick, 11/12/1988.
May 11, 2015 - Alligator Gar, Bigmouth Buffalo State Records Set
The Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation has certified new state fishing records for alligator gar and bigmouth buffalo.
About 5 p.m. April 25, 2015, angler Allen Bynum of Ardmore was bowfishing in Lake Texoma in Love County when he shot a new state-record bigmouth buffalo. The fish was 43 inches in length and 33 3/4 inches in girth.
The fish was weighed on certified scales at the Durant State Fish Hatchery. It was kept by the angler.
The previous state-record bigmouth buffalo weighed 59 pounds 15 ounces, caught in November 1988 at Greenleaf Lake.
(In the history of fishing, how many people have handed over their state-record fish to the guys at the measuring station? “It was kept by the angler” is a nonsensical statement to distract you from the fact that they omitted the weight. The headline omits the name of the state, to make the subject drastically less searchable. - ed)
May 12, 2020 - State record fish caught in eastern Oklahoma
According to the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation, a new state record fish has been caught.
Boe Meehan caught the new record Bigmouth Buffalo that weighed in at 66 pounds and four ounces.
Meehan caught the fish at Greenleaf Lake near Braggs, Oklahoma.
(Where the headline and the subhead both omit the name of the fish, to make the subject drastically less searchable. Then the author omits any mention of the previous record. - ed)