The number of birds counted at Najafgarh wetland in India increased 478% from 2019 to 2020, while the species count there increased 73%

“The best fighter is never angry.”

― From " Tao Te Ching ", by Lao Tzu, 6th Century B.C.

It’s March 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.

I’ve concluded that these changes are being driven by untold thousands of simple, inexpensive Orgonite devices based on Wilhelm Reich’s work. Those devices are collectively unknitting and transforming the ancient Death energy matrix that’s been patiently built and expanded by our about-to-be-former Dark masters, well, all the way back to Babylon and before. And the Ether is returning to its natural, ages-long state of health and vitality.

One of those changes is that Nature is booming and burgeoning to a level not seen in my lifetime. Since that statement directly refutes our State Religion, which holds that " Poor Mother Gaia is Dying, Crushed by the Virus-Like Burden of Mankind ", I’ve appended numerous mainstream news articles below to support it.

One, from India, from just last month is headlined " More water birds, species recorded at Najafgarh wetland."

The author provides the numbers, but hedged by omitting the percentage increase between them, instead using the general " more water birds" in the headline. So I had to do the math. It’s a 463% increase, in one year.

54 species were counted. The author says “The number is up from 31 species, including four red-listed birds, recorded in last year’s census.”

They provided the numbers, but hedged by omitting the percentage increase between them, instead using the general " up from 31 species." So I had to do the math. It’s a 73% increase, in one year.

Well, if that’s true, why is another current news story below headlined “India’s bird population ’ going down sharply '”?

India’s bird population is not ’ going down sharply '. That’s a bold, brazen, bald-faced lie, and you might also take notice that it is general . As you may recall, generality is a hallmark of propaganda.

Another article below, from India, from 2016, is headlined " Record number of migratory birds arrives in Hirakud Reservoir."

“Record” means “most, ever, in all history.”

This leads off the article: “The waterfowl census, conducted over the weekend, at the reservoir area recorded arrival of 95,912 birds of 60 species this year, an official of the Wildlife Division said today.”

While this next line is, in journalistic parlance, " buried " in the very last line of the article: “Around 58,057 birds of 63 species were counted in the Hirakud Reservoir during the Waterfowl Census last year.”

Since the author provided the numbers, but hedged by omitting the year-over-year percentage increase, I had to do the math. The overall bird count at Hirakud Reservoir in India increased 65% from 2015 to 2016, to the highest level ever recorded . The species count there increased 5% during that time period.

There’s no mention in the article as to what the previous record was, or when it was set.

Another story below from India from 2017 is headlined “Gurugram WINGS as migratory birds arrive en masse”.

It reads "The park has also broken all records in terms of the number of domestic and migratory birds

Gurugram’s wildlife department has recorded 60% more such long-distance fliers at the Sultanpur sanctuary this season "

The record 65% increase in birds seen in 2016 at India’s Hirakud Reservoir is very similar to 2017’s record 60% increase in bird numbers at the Sultanpar sanctuary at Gurugram, India.

The folks in charge are desperate to keep you from becoming aware of this great positive transformation. That’s why a story below from February of last year is headlined " Why Did Flamingos Flock to Mumbai in Record Numbers This Winter ? "

A current story below, also from India, is headlined "BHUBANESWAR: The bird population of Chilika lagoon this year is expected to break the previous record of 10.47 lakh.

“The avian population in Asia’s largest brackish water lagoon is expected to be in the range of 10.5 lakh to 10.7 lakh this winter,” said Chief Executive of Chilika Development Authority (CDA) Susanta Nanda after the annual monitoring in the lagoon on Friday. However , the exact number of birds and bird species in the lagoon will be known only after the annual bird census is carried out by Chilika Wildlife Division on Sunday ."

This is a common propaganda tactic. As a journalist, you pretend like you’re on top of it, so much so that you wrote the Johnny-on-the-spot article about the upcoming record. But in it, you omit mention of the scope of the current record. Then you don’t publish an article when the results are tallied, under the false guise of “we just published an article on that!”

The battle in the controlled press has reached a fever pitch:

February 17, 2020 - India - Report shows dramatic rise in India’s peacock count in last 25 years ; 50% of other birds record decline

February 18, 2020 - India’s bird population ’ going down sharply ’ - BBC News

Those two news accounts came from two different nations, within 24 hours of each other. They’re both part of an international propaganda campaign that I’m taking pains to document here. In those two examples, you can see the use of the general " decline ", and the more-specific but still-general " going down sharply. "

It’s " other birds" that decline. It is " Bird population down sharply."

As you may recall, generality is a hallmark of propaganda. If one speaks generally, one may lie much more easily.

We’re at the moment in this process where the game is already over for them, but they’re still in their jobs, still telling the same lies.

The next step is where wider awareness of all this spreads, and they’re thrown out of their jobs.

Jeff Miller, Brooklyn, New York, March 3, 2020

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January 12, 2016 - Record number of migratory birds arrives in Hirakud Reservoir

The Hirakud Dam Reservoir in Odisha’s Sambalpur district witnessed arrival of a record number of migratory birds this winter.

The waterfowl census, conducted over the weekend, at the reservoir area recorded arrival of 95,912 birds of 60 species this year, an official of the Wildlife Division said today.

The five most numerous birds species visiting area are Lesser Whistling Duck, Common Pochard, Tufted Duck, Great Crested Grebe and Common Coot, the official said.

A total of 16,547 Lesser Whistling Duck, 16,473 Common Pochard, 11,506 Tufted Duck, 10,886 Great Crested Grebe and 9,148 Common Coot have been counted in the reservoir area this season.

Other migratory birds found in the reservoir area this year include, 6,112 Little Cormorant, 5,724 Black Headed Gull, 3,560 Red Crested Grebe and 2,260 Brown Headed Gull, the official said.

During this time of the year, the 746 sq km reservoir, becomes a haven for these winged visitors who arrive during the first week of November and leave in the month of March.

These birds fly from Caspian Sea, Baikal Lake, Aral Sea, Mongolia, Central and South East Asia and Himalayan region during winter to escape the biting cold. Moreover, they get sufficient food here.

“The soothing climate, hills around the reservoir and availability of food attract these birds from far flung areas. Some birds arrive here for breeding during this time,” said Range Officer of Hirakud Wildlife Division, Madan Lal Sharma.

Stating that adequate arrangements were made for security of the migratory birds, he said, “Ten staff and four boats have been engaged to regularly patrol the area.”

For the census, 14 teams were formed with five persons in each including two boatmen and a bird expert. Census kits comprising binoculars, bird field-guides and census sheets were given to the teams.

Around 58,057 birds of 63 species were counted in the Hirakud Reservoir during the Waterfowl Census last year.

January 24, 2017 - Paradise Park! Heavy snow in Europe gives Gurugram WINGS as migratory birds arrive en masse

(The headline deliberately omits the word “record”. - ed)

The park has also broken all records in terms of the number of domestic and migratory birds

Gurugram’s wildlife department has recorded 60% more such long-distance fliers at the Sultanpur sanctuary this season

(60% more than what? Last season? The prior record? Since last season, which was also a record? More obfuscation. - ed)

Many rare birds are being seen in Delhi for the first time

(“Many” is general. Like what? More hedging. - ed)

With a record number of winged visitors, Sultanpur National Park in Gurugram has a new feather in its cap.

The wetland planes of northern India have turned into a paradise of migratory birds because of heavy snowfall in Siberia, eastern Europe, Mongolia and northern China.

Gurugram’s wildlife department has recorded 60% more such long-distance fliers at the Sultanpur sanctuary this season with many rare birds seen here for the first time.

The park has also broken all records in terms of the number of domestic and migratory birds.

The previous highest figure was 60,000. But this time, it has counted 1.25 lakh birds, with 40,000 of them flying in from abroad.

(When was that previous highest figure? Why did you use the word " highest " instead of “record”? More hedging and obfuscation. - ed)

Shyam Sundar Kaushik, divisional forest officer (DFO) of wildlife Gurugram range told Mail Today that migratory birds have been flocking here since the winter season started and arrivals will continue if the chill in the air remains for the next few days.

'We have registered 25,000 migratory pelicans of 40 varieties last season and the figure in this category has reached 40,000 already with at least 35 more varieties of birds this season.

‘This is an encouraging sign for us and it is also an indication of good air quality in the region,’ Kaushik said.

(The most birds in all history, a mere " sign ". The most birds in all history, due to air quality that is merely " good ". And I thought the word was “increased snowfall”? What does air quality have to do with anything. More blatant hedging, and misdirection. - ed)

February 4, 2019 - Why Did Flamingos Flock to Mumbai in Record Numbers This Winter?

(Where " this winter" implies it’s a one-season outlier, vs. the truth, that it’s a multi-year trend. - ed)

January 4, 2020 - Chilika’s bird population likely to break record

Nalabana water bird sanctuary, spread over 15.53 square km, has one of the largest congregation with around 3.74 lakh birds of 114 species. Of these, 47 are waterfowls while 40 are waders.

BHUBANESWAR: The bird population of Chilika lagoon this year is expected to break the previous record of 10.47 lakh.

“The avian population in Asia’s largest brackish water lagoon is expected to be in the range of 10.5 lakh to 10.7 lakh this winter,” said Chief Executive of Chilika Development Authority (CDA) Susanta Nanda after the annual monitoring in the lagoon on Friday.

However , the exact number of birds and bird species in the lagoon will be known only after the annual bird census is carried out by Chilika Wildlife Division on Sunday.

January 15, 2020 - More water birds, species recorded at Najafgarh wetland

Gurugram Fifty-four species of waterfowl, including six species red-listed by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), were recorded in a census at the Najafgarh jheel in Gurugram. The number is up from 31 species, including four red-listed birds, recorded in last year’s census.

The population has also gone up from 1,679 birds in 2019 to 9,453 birds this year.

(They provided the numbers, but hedged by omitting the percentage increase between them, instead using the general “more water birds” in the headline. So I had to do the math. It’s a 463% increase, in one year. - ed)

Conducted on January 4, as part of the 2020 Asian Waterbird Census (AWC) by Netherlands-based Wetlands International, the census also recorded healthy populations of winter migratory birds. A report shared with HT by TK Roy, an ecologist and Delhi state coordinator for the AWC, notes that 1,337 specimens of bar-headed geese were recorded, besides 1,057 specimens of gadwall, 3,738 Eurasian coots, 684 common teals and 780 northern shovelers, all of which migrate from Central and Northern Asia.

Moreover, six of the IUCN’s red-listed species — the black-headed ibis, black-tailed godwit, common pochard, painted stork, greater spotted eagle and oriental darter — were spotted.

February 17, 2020 - Report shows dramatic rise in India’s peacock count in last 25 years; 50% of other birds record decline

February 18, 2020 - India’s bird population ‘going down sharply’ - BBC Newswww.bbc.com › news › world-asia-india-51541741
Feb 18, 2020 -