Friday, May 8, 2020

Murder Hornets

Q. Hi Lynn, Perhaps someone has already asked about this. What do you see on that strange looking murder hornet? is this some sort of psyops to keep people inside? It looks like a flying toy/drone. Thanks for all you do.

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2020/may/02/murder-hornets-washington-state-bees-twitter


https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/invasion-murder-hornets-180974809/


A. When I focus on this, I see this hornet has been around for a long time. It started in Asia, then was in parts of Canada and now started to show up in the northwestern United States. These hornets made an appearance in late 2019, but the news of the "beer bug" was ramping up, so it wasn't as needed by the media to "stir things up." As people grow tired of the constant fear being portrayed by the media, and numbers start to level in relationship to the "beer bug" it is time for the media to introduce a new villain.


There really is a murder hornet, and it is primarily centered around Asia. It made it's way to the states and has made some colonies in Washington state. These hornets should be avoided if possible, and if you stumble upon a nest, get away from it and call a professional, but this isn't something to fear and consume your life with. As we approach summer, and people are grow tired of being quarantined and push back by going out, I see the media using this to create fear of the outside. "They" don't want us out! There are several agendas at play here, and one of the "main" ones is to create a scenario where we can not congregate, share ideas, go to rallies and most importantly lead to a gateway of mail-in voting via voter fraud.


What the media doesn't realize is that people can internally feel when they are being manipulated, and the emergence of the murder hornet doesn't carry a heavy weight of fear. People have been burnt out with this "beer bug." I do not see this story sticking, even if local governments try to push the issue. These hornets feel like a naturally occurring event. We aren't held inside for fear of Lyme disease from tics (which isn't true either, but a different reading) or West Nile virus from mosquitoes, so fear of a hornet looks to quickly dissolve.


And that is all I have on this reading. Thank you. Love and light, Lynn


To view free public posts, videos and discussion, please view
any of the following platforms:

Brighteon
BitChute
YouTube
YouTube BACKUP Channel
GAB

5 comments:

SB said...

Wonder what is going on up there....another reason to keep people inside? Some comments said the magnetosphere is really messed up.

https://youtu.be/2O1y1ioz8DU

Robert Schoen said...

Probably completely unrelated,but where I live in the south we've always had lots of friendly curious green chameleon lizards in our yard, but this year they have disappeared to be replaced by uglier and more aggressive brown lizards with a yellow stripe on their back they say originated from Mexico that hitchhiked here hidden in Nursery plants.

It's a shock whenever a new species is introduced into our environment, but it's also a sign that the world is always changing.

ken said...

We do see them every year in Japan. Nothing unusual.

Christina Gould said...

This reminds me of the "killer bee" scare back in the 80's (?). The way MSM talked, we all thought we'd be dead from these scary bees.

Lynn White, Focus Sessions said...

@SB: I have felt our magnetosphere has shifted a lot over the past few decades, and that is contributing to a lot of strange animal behavior. I do get these bees came to North America via ships, and their population is really low. This isn't something to panic about, but the media will use this for both fear and ratings (reminds me of Anchor Man).

@Robert: Very true, Robert.

@ken: I didn't see them as something to really fear.

@Christina: Exactly. The only fear we have is what is created in our minds.

Thanks for the comments, everyone! Have a great day!