The increased-otter-awareness revolution

“Society wants to believe it can identify evil people, or bad or harmful people, but it’s not practical. There are no stereotypes.”

― Ted Bundy

During a trip to California on Republican Party business in the summer of 1973, Bundy rekindled his relationship with Brooks, who marveled at his transformation into a serious, dedicated professional who was seemingly on the cusp of a legal and political career.

Ted Bundy served on the Nelson Rockefeller (1908–1979) presidential campaign in 1968 and the successful reelection campaign of Washington governor Dan Evans. Bundy was appointed to the Seattle Crime Prevention Advisory Committee , and later became an assistant to Ross Davis, the chairman of the Washington State Republican Party.

Wikipedia

May 17, 2018 - California - Sea otters rebound but struggle to regain historic range

July 18, 2019 - Long Island’s River otter population is on the rise

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The North American river otter is making a comeback on Long Island

October 23, 2019 - River otters appear to be making comeback in Texas

December 22, 2019 - Indiana - River otters are latest successful comeback

December 26, 2019 - Southeast Asia - Rare Dolphin Species Makes A Comeback

February 17, 2020 - U.K. - Water-loving insects including dragonflies and mayflies make a comeback

The insects mak ing a comeback in our lakes and rivers as mayflies, dragonflies and caddisflies surpass 1970s levels in remarkable recovery

April 14, 2020 - With humans in lockdown , animals flourish | MNN - Mother Earth Matters › Animals

Wildlife ma y be mak ing a comeback while humans stay home during the coronavirus lockdown.

As you can see from the set of headlines up above, the folks in charge are lying about basically everything, including their virus, along with its fictitious influence on wildlife that’s booming and burgeoning a level never seen previously, and regardless of geography.

The words " mystery ", " baffled ’ and " puzzled " are memes, used, among numerous similar variants, whenever anyone in the wholly-controlled-and-coopted Political, Academic, Scientific and Media establishments wants to lie about, well, basically anything. One of those variants is " remarkable ".

That’s why a story below from the U.K. from a couple of months ago, headlined “Water-loving insects including dragonflies and mayflies make a comeback” reads “The insects mak ing a comeback in our lakes and rivers as mayflies, dragonflies and caddisflies surpass 1970s levels in remarkable recovery.”

Did you notice how they led with " make a comeback" in the first sentence, then “walked it back” to “mak ing a comeback in the next?”

Another story below is headlined "October 2019 River otters appear to be mak ing comeback in Texas

Where “appear to be” hedges, clearly implying that there’s doubt as to whether that comeback is in fact taking place. The article continues:

“Simon attributes the apparent population increase to the reduction in fur trade and better river management, though, she says due to limited staffing , Texas Parks and Wildlife have not been able to keep tabs on the otter population through the years. Citizen reporting apps, such as iNaturalist, show trends that point to an increase in population, but it is possible there is simply peaked interest and ability to report, given new technology . " (That should be " piqued interest”, sigh. - ed)

There’s the tirelessly-played “increased awareness” canard. The Illuminist-shill talking head quoted in the mainstream news article is Kelly Simon, an “urban wildlife biologist” for Texas Parks and Wildlife. I mean, what kind of bullshit title is that?

Kelly, or much more probably her handler, prattles on about plausible-deniability reasons for the growing, expanding river otter population, and takes care to not mention it’s part of the larger, wider trend I’m elucidating here. She’s using a propaganda technique called " compartmentalization ."

Here’s her picture:

[image]

(Kelly Simon, “urban wildlife biologist”, Texas Parks and Wildlife)

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

If you’re all upset because she’s young and innocent-looking, you’re going to have to explain why she said that more otters in Texas came from increased Otter-watching , when multiple stories that I easily collected from the same time period show river otters booming and burgeoning in widely-dispersed locations in Indiana and on Long Island in New York. To maintain current programming levels, stop reading immediately and affirm " it’s an increased-otter-awareness revolution ".

You can tell she didn’t write the claptrap she’s quoted as saying, simply by looking at her face. The reporter, Shannon Ryan, who’s in on the con with her, dispatched it to the news wire, where it was picked up, and repeated, everywhere. It’s how the few control the many.

Here’s Shannon’s picture:

[image]

(Shannon Ryan, Reporter, Fox 7, Austin, TX)

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

They look just like regular folks. It’s just they’re from bloodline generational-Satanist families, were born into the game. You’ve been condition to not see them, and to believe they don’t exist, at all .

The first rule of Fight Club is you don’t talk about Fight Club. The second rule of Fight Club is you don’t talk about Fight Club.

" Compartmentalization " is practiced in each and every one of the examples I’ve presented here today. They’re all obeying the international news blackout on the subject in lock-step. But that’s what a controlled press is for. It’s how the few control the many.

My dedicated subscribers endure near-daily demonstrations of these simple, highly-repetitive tactics in the controlled press. I’ve been writing such articles without cease for seven years, now.

Since the programming is continuous, and unending, and for the most part unnoticed, I feel it’s my duty to call attention to it until is withdrawn as a method of social control. Withdrawn when a critical mass of rubes gets wise to the game.

I think we’re getting very close to that time, now.

Jeff Miller, Brooklyn, New York, April 24, 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]

May 17, 2018 - California - Sea otters rebound but struggle to regain historic range

October 23, 2019 - River otters appear to be mak ing comeback in Texas

Texas - According to Texas Parks and Wildlife officials, river otters appear to be making a comeback in the Lone Star State.

Kelly Simon, an urban wildlife biologist for Texas Parks and Wildlife, says river otters have not been common in “recent memory” but things are changing.

“[River otters have] been primarily found in the eastern parts of Texas, as well as the United States," Simon said. “So, what we’re seeing is not only an increase perhaps in populations but also maybe a bit of a westward expansion of their population.”

Simon attributes the apparent population increase to the reduction in fur trade and better river management, though, she says due to limited staffing, Texas Parks and Wildlife have not been able to keep tabs on the otter population through the years. Citizen reporting apps, such as iNaturalist, show trends that point to an increase in population, but it is possible there is simply peaked interest and ability to report, given new technology.

December 22, 2019 - Indiana - River otters are latest successful comeback

December 26, 2019 - Southeast Asia - Rare Dolphin Species Makes A Comeback

Irrawaddy River Dolphins have been in steady decline for the last couple of decades — until this year. Daphne Willems of the Global River Dolphin Initiative for the World Wildlife Fund discusses.

(The author has used the general " rare dolphin species " in the headline, in place of the dolphins’ specific name, which, in journalistic parlance, they’ve “buried” below. - ed)

NOEL KING, HOST:

OK. We have some good news today about a species that is almost extinct. The dolphins of the Irrawaddy River are making a comeback.

DAVID GREENE, HOST:

So what are the Irrawaddy River dolphins exactly? Well, they’re a rare species of dolphin native to Southeast Asia, like rivers in Cambodia, Laos and Myanmar. And they look a lot like beluga whales with these adorable smiles, rounded foreheads - but smaller and with a small, curved dorsal fin.

DAPHNE WILLEMS: So when you sit in the boat and you see it coming along, first thing you hear is a big sigh. Then they’re breathing out just like, phew.

KING: That’s Daphne Willems. She leads the Global River Dolphin Initiative at the World Wildlife Fund. And she says it’s really uncommon to see the dolphins, especially these days.

GREENE: The number of Irrawaddy River dolphins dropped over the last couple of decades from about 200 in the 1990s to just 84 last year. As for the cause of this decline…

WILLEMS: It’s all due to us.

(It’s technically correct. However, “us” is a hedging generality, put forward to cover the specific driver of the decline, which is the deliberate degradation of the Etheric environment the dolphins inhabit. - ed)

KING: Willems says it’s two things - dams that destroy dolphin habitats and fishing nets that trap them. But things are turning around for the dolphins.

WILLEMS: It has been a very positive year. I just said the low levels of the Mekong River are disturbing . But at the same time, we’ve seen more newborns of the Irrawaddy dolphin in the Mekong than deaths. So we have celebrated the 13th calf last week. And that’s really a big change.

(The folks in charge use the dam upriver to keep the water levels as low as they possibly can without the populace stringing them up from lamp posts. The author uses the " mystery ", " baffled " variant " disturbed " as a cover, and does not elaborate, as I have. - ed)

GREENE: Yeah. The change - this is bringing the number of dolphins up to 92 . And that is huge, Willems says. And it’s because the rules around fishing nets are actually being enforced these days.

(The author provided last years and this year’s number, but hedged by separating them by many paragraphs, then hedged again by not giving you the much more impactful percentage increase between them. The number of Irawaddy dolphins on the Mekong River increased 9% from 2019 to 2020. - ed)

February 17, 2020 - U.K. - Water-loving insects including dragonflies and mayflies make a comeback

The insects mak ing a comeback in our lakes and rivers as mayflies, dragonflies and caddisflies surpass 1970s levels in remarkable recovery

Amid all the gloom about the state of Britain’s wildlife, there’s a glimmer of good news to be found in our rivers, ponds and lakes.

(Where a sudden, wholesale, quantum change in insect numbers, to the highest level ever recorded, is referred to as a " glimmer of good news." - ed)

The population of water-loving insects, in decline since the 1970s, has staged a remarkable recovery.

And scientists think it is a result of measures to improve air and water quality brought in over the past half century .

(They’re whitewashing it with a half-truth. It’s an improvement in the air and water quality, but the improvement is Orgonite driven. Here, as elsewhere, they’ll bury the real driver and try to claim they fixed it for you. - ed)

The study published in the journal Nature Ecology and Evolution found the distribution of freshwater insects such as mayflies, dragonflies and caddisflies have surpassed 1970s levels.

That follows a decline by almost half from 1970 to 1994, the researchers said.

But they also warned that the increases had to be seen against a backdrop of decline over two centuries.

(Two centuries of assiduous, ongoing, never-ceasing degradation of the Etheric environment. With plenty of physical environment damage to cover it up. - ed)

Study co-author Professor Richard Gregory of University College London said: ‘Our findings demonstrate that policies designed to safeguard the natural environment are working and can yield positive change.’

April 14, 2020 - With humans in lockdown , animals flourish | MNN - Mother Earth Matters › Animals

Wildlife may be making a comeback while humans stay home during the coronavirus lockdown.

(Did you notice how my article features specific examples, while theirs uses the general “animals” and “wildlife”? That’s because generality is a hallmark of propaganda.

To name simply one of countless examples that categorically refute this bullshit thesis, the highest blue whale numbers in history obviously have nothing to do with people hiding in their houses as they’ve been ordered to. - ed)