2022
2002 SUMMARY
From 2022 to 2023, the exponential increases in the number of bluefin tuna in the Atlantic Ocean, cutlass fish in the Atlantic Ocean off Vermont, Lake Trout in Lake Champlain in Vermont and kokanee in Idaho’s Payette Lake all occurred simultaneously.
From 2022 to 2023, the average price of dressed Atlantic bluefin tuna decreased exponentially.
In 2022, the largest yellowfin tuna in the history of fishing in Maryland was caught in the Atlantic Ocean; the first documented example of the blue catfish was caught in Idaho, despite roughly 50,000 of them being stocked across nine locations all over the state in 1985; the first verifiable chain pickerel was caught in Delaware; Cody Carver caught just the second verified West Virginia state record blue catfish; just the third state record blue catfish was caught in West Virginia; the largest swordfish in the history of fishing in North Carolina was caught in the Atlantic Ocean; after an absence of some indeterminate period of time, the chain pickerel reappeared in Delaware; the yellowfin tuna reappeared in the Atlantic Ocean off New Jersey; the blue catfish reappeared in the Kanawha River in West Virginia; the blue catfish reappeared in Delaware; six species of sticky, carnivorous sundew plants which had never been documented previously, including Drosera hortiorum and Drosera koikyennuruff reappeared in the environment in Australia; the swordfish reappeared in the Atlantic Ocean off North Carolina; the Galapagos rail reappeared on Pinzon Island in the Galapagos, the cactus finch reappeared on Rabida and Pinzon islands in the Galapagos.
Prior to 2022, the swordfish is absent from the record in the Atlantic Ocean off Florida and North Carolina.
In 2022, the price of sashimi grade Atlantic/ Pacific bluefin was $10–$30/lb for whole fish delivered fresh to high-end markets.
In 2022, sashimi grade bluefin tuna averaged $20 per pound.
From 2022 to 2023, the average price of dressed Atlantic bluefin tuna decreased exponentially.
Given that prices decrease either when supply increases, demand decreases, or both, here we can presume that, from 2022 to 2023, the population of the bluefin tuna in the Atlantic Ocean increased exponentially.
From 2022 to 2023, the population of the bluefin tuna in the Atlantic Ocean increased exponentially.
In 2022, the native Lake Trout population in Vermont’s Lake Champlain increased exponentially.
Department of Environmental Conservation biologist Nicole Balk said it was a "mystery ", and that “there are too many variables in the lake. We’d have to do quite a few studies to narrow it down."
Michelle’s general statement that is was a “mystery” is an example of the propaganda technique known as “the big lie”.
In 2022, the kokanee population in Idaho’s Payette Lake increased exponentially.
In 2022, the cutlass fish population in the Atlantic Ocean off New Jersey increased exponentially.
From 2022 to 2023, the exponential increases in the number of bluefin tuna in the Atlantic Ocean, cutlass fish in the Atlantic Ocean off Vermont, Lake Trout in Lake Champlain in Vermont and kokanee in Idaho’s Payette Lake all occurred simultaneously.
In 2022, the cutlass fish was once again plentiful in the Atlantic Ocean off New Jersey, having reappeared there three years previously in 2019.
From 2022 to 2023, the swordfish in the Gulf of Mexico off Louisiana increased in size by 1.3% (average).
From April 8, 2022 to May 25, 2022, the West Virginia state record blue catfish increased in size by a weekly average of 1.6%.
From April 8, 2022 to May 25, 2022, the 1.6% average weekly increase in size of the West Virginia state record blue catfish was 128.5% greater, or more than two times greater than its .7% average weekly increase from May 4, 2016 to April 8, 2022.
The growth rate of the blue catfish in West Virginia is increasing exponentially. That’s not scientifically possible, at least not according to the rapidly-collapsing false Orthodoxy which holds that organisms increase in ever-smaller increments to a genetically-programmed maximum size, and that there is “no such thing as the ether”.
The truth is that the size, fertility, longevity and very existence of any organism vary directly with the health of the ether.
From May 2022 to December 2023, the West Virginia state record blue catfish increased in size by 3.3%, from 67.22 pounds to 69.45 pounds.
From October 2022 to September 2, 2023, the Delaware state record blue catfish increased in length by 4.9%, from 40.5 inches to 42.5 inches.
From April 8, 2022 to May 25, 2022, the West Virginia state record blue catfish increased in size by 9.7%, from 61.28 pounds to 67.22 pounds.
From 2022 to 2023, the average price of dressed Atlantic bluefin tuna decreased by 10.2% (average).
In 2022, after an absence of almost twenty years, the tautog reappeared in the Atlantic Ocean off Delaware, where it had not been documented since 2005, as the health of the ether improved to the point where the species could once again manifest within it.
It weighed 21 pounds, 7.7 ounces.
Brent Wiest caught it, killed it, had it certified as the first-ever Delaware state record tautog in history, and ate it.
In 2022, after an absence of over thirty years, the white shark reappeared in the Atlantic Ocean off New Jersey, where it had not been documented since 1988, as the health of the ether improved to the point where the species could once again manifest within it.
In 2022, after an absence of over one hundred years, the tree species Magnolia pallescens, Magnolia domingensis and Magnolia hamorii all reappeared simultaneously in Haiti, where they had not been seen since 1925, as the health of the ether improved to the point where the species could once again manifest within it.
In 2022, after an absence of more than one hundred fifty years, two sticky, carnivorous sundew plants known as Drosera rubricalyx and Drosera macropetala reappeared in the environment in Australia where they had not been documented since the 1850’s, as the health of the ether improved to the point where the species could once again manifest within it.
In 2022, after an absence of more over 100 years, the snout moth reappeared in the Philippines, where it had not been documented since the early 1900’s, as the health of the ether improved to the point where the species could once again manifest within it
In 2022, after an absence of over one hundred years, the whorled pagonia orchid reappeared in the environment in Vermont, where it had not been seen since 1902, as the health of the ether improved to the point where the species could once again manifest within it.
In 2022, after an absence of five thousand years, the gecko reappeared on Rabida Island in the Galapagos, where it had not been documented since 3,000 B.C.
Paula Castrano, native species manager at Island Conversation, said "that they were likely present but in such small numbers that they weren’t able to track the populations.
Paula is reinforcing the false meme that the geckos were there on Rabida Island all along for the past five thousand years, only nobody looked for them with the proper skill or assiduousness, previously.
It’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “the big lie”.
Here’s a picture of Island Conservation’s Paula Castano, grinning, in a Satanic green hat, and where she’s carefully positioned her head to focus attention on her left eye.

(Island Conservation’s Paula Castano)
grin - intransitive verb - to draw back the lips and show the teeth in pain, scorn, etc.
I have included Paula’s picture so that you could get a better idea of what a generational Satanist Freemason of marginal influence looks like.
They are all related to one another through the maternal bloodline. Generational Satanists 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”.
How long do you think that these people have left in power, now?
Please consider doing what you can to speed the transition.
In 2022, the largest yellowfin tuna in the history of fishing in Maryland was caught in the Atlantic Ocean.
In 2022, after an absence of some indeterminate period of time, the yellowfin tuna reappeared in the Atlantic Ocean off New Jersey, as the health of the ether improved to the point where the species could once again manifest within it.
On March 5, 2022, William Mack caught the first Delaware state record chain pickerel which can be verified by contemporary news articles and photographs in McGinnis Pond. It weighed 7 pounds, 10 ounces.
On April 8, 2022, Cody Carver caught just the second verified West Virginia state record blue catfish in the Marmot Pool of the Kanawha River. It weighed 61.28 pounds and was 45.51 inches long.
Cody caught it, verified it as a West Virginia state record, and released it.
Wvdnr.gov’s Andy Malinoski said “The fish eclipsed the previous WV weight record of 59.74 pounds held by Mark Blauvelt. However, the length record of 50.15 inches held by Justin Goode still stands.”
On May 25, 2022, Steven Price, of Lancaster, West Virginia, caught just the third West Virginia state record blue catfish in history. It weighed 67.22 pounds and was 50.7 inches long.
In December 2022, the largest swordfish in the history of fishing in North Carolina was caught in the Atlantic Ocean.
It was only the second time in history a swordfish had been caught off North Carolina, with first having been caught just three months previously, in September 2022.
In 2022, after an absence of some indeterminate period of time, the chain pickerel reappeared in Delaware, in McGinnis Pond, at a weight of 7 pounds, 10 ounces, as the the health of the ether improved to the point where the species could once again manifest within it.
In 2022, after an absence of some indeterminate period of time, the blue catfish reappeared in the Kanawha River in West Virginia, where the species had never been documented previously, at a weight of 61.28 pounds.
Cody Carver caught it, had it certified as a West Virginia state record, and released it.
Thanks to Cody, the blue catfish remains viable in the Kanawha River to this day.
In October 2022, after an absence of some indeterminate period of time, the blue catfish reappeared in Delaware, where it had never been documented previously, as the etheric environment improved to a point where the species could once again manifest within it.
It weighed 48-pounds, 3.2-ounces, measured 40.5 inches long, and had a 30-inch girth.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said that it was "invasive ", but did not mention where it had invaded from, or when.
NOAA’s false claim that the blue catfish invaded Delaware is an example of the propaganda technique known as “the big lie”.
In 2022, the reappearances in Delaware of the chain pickerel and the blue catfish occurred simultaneously.
In 2022, the reappearances in the Atlantic Ocean of the swordfish off the coast of Maryland, the bluefin tuna off the coast of North Carolina, the yellowfin tuna off New Jersey, and the tautog off Delaware all occurred simultaneously.
In 2022, after an absence of some indeterminate period of time, six species of sticky, carnivorous sundew plants which had never been documented previously, including Drosera hortiorum and Drosera koikyennuruff reappeared in the environment in Australia, as the health of the ether improved to the point where the species could once again manifest within it.
Somehow, professional horticulturists only found two, while lay people on walks found four.
In 2022, the first documented example of the blue catfish was caught in Idaho, despite roughly 50,000 of them being stocked across nine locations all over the state in 1985.
This begs the question, did those stockings ever even take place?
Presuming that they did, we can infer that the Fish Feds knew that the blue catfish which they’d stocked would die, but them stocked them anyway, so that there would be a paper trail that their own efforts had led to the later examples of the blue catfish in Idaho, such as this first-ever example from 2022.
In 2022, after an absence of some indeterminate period of time, the swordfish reappeared in the Atlantic Ocean off North Carolina at a weight of 504.4 pounds, as the health of the ether improved to the point where the species could once again manifest within it.
Brandon Carney caught it, killed it, had it certified as the first verifiable North Carolina state record swordfish, and ate it.
In 2022, after an absence of some indeterminate period of time, the Galapagos rail reappeared on Pinzon Island in the Galapagos, where it had never been documented previously.
Abc7news.com’s Julia Jacobo said that it was “now that the invasive predatory rodent species is gone.”
Who gave the Galapagos rail the all-clear? Where did they travel from, and when, and in what numbers?
We must recall that, as we learned above, in 2019, rails reappeared on Aldabra Atoll in the Indian Ocean for the first time in 136,000 years. Now, here, in 2022, rails appeared on Pinzon Island in the Galapagos for the first time in history.
In 2022, when the rails suddenly appeared on Pinzon Island in the Galapagos, why didn’t ABC7 News’ Julia Jacobo mention anything about “iterative evolution”?
And what happened to paleobiologist David Martill’s “we know of no other example in rails”?
I have exposed the duplicity of David Martill by using what was known in the old days as “fact checking”.
David overplayed his hand.
Julia has floated the queasy plausible deniability excuse of “now that the invasive predatory rodent species is gone” because she knows that many or most readers will grasp virtually any straw, no matter how thin, to remain off the hook of personal responsibility.
It is an example of the propaganda technique known as “the big lie”.
Here’s a picture of the smirking Abc7news.com’s Julia Jacobo, where she’s carefully positioned her head to focus attention on her left eye.

(Abc7news.com’s Julia Jacobo)
smirk - noun - a smile that expresses satisfaction or pleasure about having done something or knowing something that is not known by someone else.
I have included Julia’s picture so that you could get a better idea of what a generational Satanist Freemason of marginal influence looks like.
They are all related to one another through the maternal bloodline. Generational Satanists 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”.
How long do you think that these people have left in power, now?
Please consider doing what you can to speed the transition.
In 2022, after an absence of some unmentioned period of time, the cactus finch reappeared on Rabida and Pinzon islands in the Galapagos.
Abc7news.com’s Julia Jacobo said they had been “reintroduced”, and that it was “ten years after the removal of an invasive rodent species”.
The claim is, well, plausible, however it doesn’t hold up well when the other reappeared species are taken into account.
And just who reintroduced the cactus finch, and when did they do so? And why doesn’t Julia mention it?
Julia’s claim that they were “reintroduced” is an example of the propaganda technique known as “the big lie”.
As a propagandist, Julia knows that many or most readers will grasp virtually any straw, no matter how thin, to remain off the hook of personal responsibility.
Jeff Miller, Honolulu, HI, June 1, 2026
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].