“The world is full of magic things, patiently waiting for our senses to grow sharper.”
― W.B. Yeats
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 writing articles on the subject since 2013.
These 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 these changes is that the great artificial drought has been broken. I’ve appended numerous current news stories below to support my thesis. You’ll see they’re from widely-separated geographies.
A current news story below from Ottowa, Canada is headlined "Rainfall record set on Friday but you might not have noticed ."
Following are a couple of excerpts from the article. Fasten your seat belt for some whip-crackin’ Black magic weather propaganda!
“A previous record of 36.4 mm of rain was set on June 5, 2016. This latest record smashes it, but Schuster said this wasn’t a major storm in the traditional sense.”
" Sometimes you’ll see events like this where you get a lot of rain in a short period of time and it’s the rainiest day on record, but while 52.1 millimetres of rain is a significant amount , it wasn’t a significant event , if that makes sense," he said.
For those paying attention, the record went from 36.4 mm in 2016 to 52.1 mm in 2020. It’s a new rainfall record, the most rain that’s ever fallen that day in all history. And it’s 43% above the old record . Written of straightforwardly as an insignificant event that you might not have noticed .
The author used conscious deception while retaining the firmness of purpose that goes with complete honesty.
Such records are usually broken by tiny margins.
They can spin it all they want, but the great artificial drought has been broken.
Another current news story below, from Idaho, is headlined “Boise has seen nearly double the normal amount of rain for June, and more is on the way.”
In it, the National Weather Service’s Dave Groenert says “The unusual amount of rainfall comes during a year that’s already particularly wet .”
He said " wet " because the international news blackout that is in place on this subject forbids the use of the word “rain”.
He doesn’t offer any suggestion as to why we’re seeing more rain than ever in all history. And, despite getting paid money to study the weather, he also doesn’t mention that it’s part of a wider trend. That’s a propaganda technique called " compartmentalization ."
Here’s Dave’s picture:
[image]
I’ve included it so you could get a better idea of what a generational Satanist in a position of marginal influence looks like.
“Dave Groenert: Dave is a Navy child , so he has moved around quite a bit, but eventually settled in the Washington DC area. He has been a forecaster at NWS Boise for 12 years. In his free time he enjoys getting outdoors.”
Agent Groenert, Naval Intelligence, lives in D.C. and handles the Idaho weather remotely . Fleecing all the wholly-credulous rubes, except for one crackpot fringe journalist.
Please consider sending Dave highest love energy, as he is almost certainly the victim of trauma-based mind control. It’s how his tribe rolls.
Now, not every Weather guy is a generational Satanist. But every one that’s quoted in a mainstream news article is. It’s how the few control the many.
They’re in every city, town and village on Earth. They’re all genetically related to one another. It’s a bloodline thing.
Another article below from last month reads "May 2020 is now Chicago’s wettest on record in 150 years of official rainfall observations, U.S."
They said " wettest " because the international news blackout that is in place on this subject forbids the use of the word “rain”.
Prior to ten years or so ago, a critical mass of what Wilhelm Reich called “Dead Orgone Radiation” had been reached in the Ether, sufficient that weather modification of all types was not only possible, but was being practiced, all over the Earth.
The Orgonite-driven improvement in the health of the Ether has rendered those technologies unusable. It has “dried up” the deadly type of subtle energy they run on. And it has also returned rainfall levels to where I guess they sat for all history, right up until powered technology came into being.
It’s just that we’ve been conditioned to forget that’s how it was, in the past. “Before record keeping began”.
Just as we’ve been conditioned to think that rain is a bad thing. That’s a post-Industrial-revolution thing to think, for sure.
Now we’ve got a fully-programmed populace in the midst of a great positive change in their situation.
The great news is that programming is not permanent. It has to be laid in, again and again. It’s also important to remember that it is not the natural state of our minds, of our beings.
And, remember: when the school of fish, the flock of birds turns, they do so apparently as one.
Jeff Miller, Brooklyn, New York, June 19, 2020
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May 21, 2020 - May 2020 is now Chicago’s wettest on record in 150 years of official rainfall observations, U.S.
Following a week of continuous heavy rainfall, Chicago set a record on Tuesday, May 19, 2020, for the city’s wettest May in history. According to the National Weather Service (NWS), 2.79 mm (0.11 inches) of rainfall was recorded overnight at the O’Hare Airport, pushing the city’s May precipitation to 210.8 mm (8.3 inches)-- this surpassed the previous record of 209.55 (8.25 inches) set in 2019.
“May 2020 is now the wettest on record in 150 years of official rainfall observations here-- and the month isn’t over ,” said American meteorologist Tom Skilling. “We’ll be adding to the month’s rainfall total.”
The new record also marks three consecutive years of record-setting rainfall in the month of May. The third wettest May on record is now May 2018 with 208.53 mm (8.21 inches) of rain.
Records are made to be broken, but three years in a row? That’s exactly what has happened as we have set then exceeded new rainfall totals for each month of May over the past three years. We still have almost two weeks to go, so we will add to this new record. @nbcchicago
Two other rainfall records were smashed in the previous week. Last Thursday, May 14, more than 88.9 mm (3.5 inches) was recorded in the city, making it the single wettest May day since 1871. On Sunday, May 17, the city recorded another 79 mm (3.11 inches), marking its fifth wettest day in May.
(The propaganda technique used here is to announce the " surpassing " of the record, then never mention it again, so that when you get to the end of the month and the previous record has been beaten by a huge margin, that article is never produced, under the guise of “we just ran an article on that.”
The two other records that were " smashed " omit any number on the previous record, so you can’t get an idea of the margin between the records. That’s a propaganda technique called " compartmentalization ". - ed)
June 6, 2020 - Ottowa, Canada - Rainfall record set on Friday but you might not have noticed
A brief but heavy rain shower left behind large puddles in parts of Ottawa June 5, 2020, while other parts stayed dry.
OTTAWA – A powerful band of thunderstorms dumped a record 52.1 mm of rain on the Ottawa Airport on Friday, but unless you lived in a narrow area of the city, you probably didn’t notice.
The storm started at around 6:50 p.m., according to historical radar data, and formed a thin band of heavy rain and thunderstorms that moved quickly to the east and out of Ottawa about two hours later. Some areas only saw rain activity for ten or twenty minutes before the sky cleared up again, the radar suggests.
Severe weather meteorologist Mark Schuster, of Environment Canada, tells CTVNewsOttawa.ca, these types of storms are common in the summer months.
(Breakin rain records by huge margins is common - ed)
“It’s not unusual to have one area get a ton of rain and another to get almost none,” he said.
(Breaking rain records by huge margins is not unusual - ed)
Ottawa’s geographic area is quite large, but official records are kept at the Ottawa Airport. It just so happened Friday’s storm moved right over it and hit it hard.
There were thousands of people in downtown Ottawa Friday afternoon and evening for a Black Lives Matter march, and barely a drop of rain was felt.
A previous record of 36.4 mm of rain was set on June 5, 2016. This latest record smashes it, but Schuster said this wasn’t a major storm in the traditional sense.
“Sometimes you’ll see events like this where you get a lot of rain in a short period of time and it’s the rainiest day on record, but while 52.1 millimetres of rain is a significant amount, it wasn’t a significant event , if that makes sense,” he said.
(Breaking rain records by huge margins is common, not unusual, and not significant. - ed)
June 11, 2020 - Boise has seen nearly double the normal amount of rain for June, and more is on the way
Less than a third of the way through June, Boise had already seen more precipitation than it typically does during the whole month, and forecasters say more rain is on the way.
As of June 9, the National Weather Service’s Boise branch had measured just over an inch of precipitation at its office near the Boise Airport, meteorologist Dave Groenert said in a phone interview. That was boosted by a storm last weekend that dropped snow at Bogus Basin and several other parts of Idaho.
In a typical year, Boise sees less than one-third of an inch of precipitation by June 9, Groenert said.
“ We’re at about four times that normal (June 9 measurement),” he said.
What’s more, in an average June, Boise sees .69 inches of rain for the entire month.
“Even if we end the month with no more precipitation, we’ll still be far above average,” Groenert said.
According to Groenert, there’s a chance we’ll get more rain in the Treasure Valley beginning Friday evening and lasting through the weekend, though it’s not clear how much precipitation we could see. Additional low-pressure systems could keep cool, wet weather around through mid-June.
Still, it’s not likely we’ll surpass the 3.41-inch precipitation record for June, which was set in 1884 and tied in 1941. Instead, additional bouts of rain could bump June 2020 into the top 10 or 15 wettest Junes on record, according to National Weather Service data.
The unusual amount of rainfall comes during a year that’s already particularly wet , Groenert said. Boise has received at least an inch of precipitation each month this year, bringing the year-to-date total to 9.5 inches by Wednesday. Typically by the same date, the region has received 6.5 inches of precipitation.