The Osprey expert said that the sudden 660% increase in Osprey around Cornell University in just nine years from 2005 to 2013 was the result of “hacking programs”, “ample artificial nest sites” and “a spillover effect”

From 2005 to 2014, Osprey in Ithaca, New York increased by 660%; from 2006 to 2013, violent crime in South Minneapolis, Minnesota decreased by 43%

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, November 5, 2021

In July 2014, news.cornell.edu said “Rebounding ospreys nest for first time near campus”.

Where I’m sure you noticed that the propagandist from Cornell University has used the general “rebounding ospreys”, because they know that, since sixty to seventy percent of readers only read the headlines, the hedging generality goes a long way toward blunting insight into the speed and magnitude of the great positive change I’m documenting here.

The article goes on to say “In the last five years, the number of observed osprey – fish-eating birds of prey – in the Cayuga Lake basin have increased sevenfold, including a new nest this year near Game Farm Road on university athletic fields near Cornell’s campus.

The author said “sevenfold” because it’s a softer, gentler way of saying “increased by 600%”. They’ve run with the five-year period to avoid having to say “the osprey population around Cornell University suddenly increased exponentially to the highest level in history in 2013."

Instructively, the article goes on to say “Ten years ago, osprey nests did not exist around Ithaca, and five years ago, there were only six known active local nests, said Candace Cornell, a biologist, osprey enthusiast and retired Cornell Lab of Ornithology staff member who has been tracking ospreys in the Cayuga Lake area. But this year, Cornell and others have identified at least 38 active breeding nests.”

I’m guessing you noticed that, while they provided the numbers, the propagandist from Cornell carefully hedged by omitting the far more impactful percentage increase that I was forced to do the math to learn. Osprey nests around Cornell University increased 660% from 2005 to 2014, from 5 to 38. As a bonus, the author wrenched the 660% increase down to “sevenfold”, which, for the record, is 600%. While 660% is heading for “eightfold”.

It is of vital interest to note that there were no Osprey nests near Cornell University in 2004, zero, and there were 38 in 2014.

What led to the sudden appearance of and exponential increase in Osprey nests around Cornell University from 2004 to 2014, to the highest level in history?

“The rise in local populations are likely a result of a number of factors, including a high breeding success rate, long-lived adults capable of reproducing into their 20s, excellent fishing in Cayuga Lake, clean water replete with shallow fishing areas, and ample artificial nest sites such as utility poles and athletic field lights, Cornell said.”

The size, fertility and longevity of any organism vary directly with the health of its etheric environment. That’s why the breeding success rate of Osprey around Cornell University has increased exponentially, and why the adult Osprey around Cornell University are living longer, capable of reproducing into their twenties.

Am I to believe that fishing in Cornell’s pristine, picture-postcard Cayuga lake was not excellent ten years ago, but for some reason is now? Wait, scratch that, reverse it…it is! The fish population in Cayuga Lake increased exponentially in 2013, along with every other fish population on Earth, as I have tirelessly documented.

The hilarious “ample artificial nest sites” postures that Osprey prior to the coming of the White Man must have had a very hard time getting along. It’s a Punch-and-Judy, Middle-Ages conceit that the mouth-breathing, NPR-addicted Coincidence theorists will gobble down like hungry birds. That’s because many or most readers will grasp virtually any straw, no matter how thin, to remain off the hook of personal responsibility.

The article goes on to say “Also, surrounding populations in the Great Lakes and along the Eastern Seaboard have done very well, creating a spillover effect around the Finger Lakes, said osprey expert Alan Poole, editor of Birds of North America Online and a senior research associate at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology.”

Wait, what? Why are Osprey everywhere suddenly increasing exponentially to the highest numbers in history?

Osprey expert Alan Pool, who loves him some birds like it’s his job, doesn’t mention that the sudden, exponential increase in the osprey population at large maps against similar increase among all birds, regardless of species or geography.

The article concludes “Hacking programs, where young pairs have been relocated to sparsely populated locales, have also played a role in rebounding populations, Poole said.”

How many were relocated? By whom? When? Alan doesn’t say, because propaganda is driven by only-general plausible-deniability excuses such as these.

It’s not that the birds aren’t plunked down, and the nest poles aren’t put up. It is just that their impact is incremental, and does not and cannot explain the sudden, exponential and historically unprecedented increase in bird populations that took place regardless of species or geography in 2013.

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(Osprey expert Alan Pool, who said a sudden 660% increase in Osprey around Cornell University in just nine years from 2005 to 2013 was the result of “hacking programs”, “ample artificial nest sites” and “a spillover effect”.)

I have included his photograph so that you could get a better idea of what a generational Satanist in a position of marginal influence looks like. Alan and his co-conspirators are all related to one another through the maternal bloodline. They comprise between twenty and thirty percent of the populace, and are hiding in plain sight in every city, town and village on Earth. It’s how the few have controlled the many all the way back to Babylon, and before.

But they say that the hardest part of solving a problem is recognizing that you have one.

Don Croft used to say “Parasites fear exposure above all else”.

Jeff Miller, Libertyville, IL, October 26, 2022

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