“They have an engine called the Press whereby the people are deceived.”
From " That Hideous Strength ", by C.S. Lewis, 1945
Just over thirty years ago, the Feds nearly drove Chinook salmon in the Sacramento River to extinction, by messing with the water flow in the river at key times in their lifecycle.
"By 1992, the Sacramento River Chinook salmon run had declined to less than 200 fish “due to water exports to corporate agribusiness and southern California water agencies and poor management by the state and federal water and fishery agencies.”
Fast forward to our current era, when the Feds are still trying to drive Chinook salmon in the Sacramento River to extinction, by messing with the water flow in the river at key times in their lifecycle. As you’ll see in an article below from 2017, which reads:
“Meanwhile, Governor Jerry Brown is promoting the Delta Tunnels, designed to export water to corporate agribusiness, the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California and the oil industry for fracking and other extreme oil extraction methods. The two massive tunnels under the Delta would hasten the extinction of winter-run Chinook salmon, Central Valley steelhead, Delta and longfin smelt and green sturgeon, as well as imperil the salmon and steelhead populations on the Trinity and Klamath rivers.”
Like every other politician holding elected office, regardless of nation, Jerry Brown is a generational Satanist, whose bloodline family members have literally worshipped Death, well, all the way back to Babylon, and before. Which explains why he’s trying his best to drive the salmon to extinction.
But be of good cheer. An article from 2017 also reads “Management for the winter-run Chinook salmon, an endangered species, will impact the Sacramento River ocean salmon fishery. Remember that this fish was once extremely abundant, with a run of 117,000 fish estimated in 1969 .”
That excerpt is from what in propaganda terms is known as a “hit piece”. The author betrays themselves with “was once extremely abundant”. They’ve omitted mention of that fact that, just three years earlier, in 2014, there were 862,500 adult Chinook salmon in the Sacramento River.
That’s when the Feds really got busy and cranked up the heat, with the undiminished goal of killing off all the salmon. As this article from November 2015 demonstrates:
"However, in 2014 and 2015, the bureau failed to meet basic temperature requirements for salmon . Louis Moore, public affairs specialist with the Bureau of Reclamation, says a faulty temperature gauge deep in the lake is to blame. Inaccurate readings, he says, threw off calculations in 2015.
That resulted in too much water released from the reservoir early in the season and not enough cold water left later for the benefit of fish .
Many in the environmental community are not sold on this story.
“All of that is either negligence or incompetence ,” says Jon Rosenfield, a conservation biologist with the The Bay Institute, an environmental group in San Francisco. " Why did they only have one temperature gauge? Saying the thermometer broke is like saying, ‘The dog ate my homework.’ "
The Feds " failed to meet basic temperature requirements for salmon ." Man, that’s some fantastic Mil-speak!
Now let’s read it another way:
“The firefighter died because the burning building did not meet the basic temperature requirements for humans.”
While enjoying fat paychecks and pensions funded by tax dollars, they ignored the dozens of operational thermometers, claimed publicly that they only had one , and then claimed further that it was broken . And then let the water get warm enough to kill the salmon.
The article’s helpful " Deep in the lake " implies they j ust couldn’t get to it to fix it .
Mission accomplished: the Adult Chinook salmon population in the Sacramento River decreased 73% from 2014 to 2018. " Global warming broils fish! ", read the accounts in the controlled press.
Well, make that almost accomplished. Because even a vast conspiracy of bloodline-linked generational Satanists cannot stop the great positive changes that are occurring at every level of our reality. Adult Chinook on the Sacramento River increased 106% - more than doubled - from 2018 to 2020, to a run of 473,000. Because the Orgonite-driven breaking of the great artificial drought stopped the literally-blood-drinking Feds from being able to fuck with the water temperature at key times in the salmon’s life cycle.
That’s not a joke. Set worship involves ritual human sacrifice and cannibalism, and, if we’re going to get past this situation as a species, we’re going to have to come to terms with that, er, particular set of religious practices, and practitioners.
Not having it all their own way, continued: in 2014, some honest scientist (I’m guessing from Sacramento State University) outed the Feds faking the numbers year after year, and they were forced to go a more honest method of tracking the fish:
“In 2014, PFMC modified the methods used to calculate preseason abundance estimates by switching from a linear model to a logarithmic regression curve . While the old method would have estimated 476,342 Chinook salmon for last year’s preseason forecast, the new method predicted 634,650 salmon for the forecast, and therefore no restrictions were imposed on the Chinook salmon fishery for 2014.”
We’ve just learned that, prior to 2014, the folks in charge deliberately used a method that counted 33% less - a third less - Sacramento river adult Chinook than were in fact in the water. In another article below, we learn that the Feds’ preseason estimate for the Klamath river for 2014 was 73% below the actual total.
So they’re not only killing as many salmon as they can each year, they’re also lying pathologically about how many salmon there actually are, and also that they think there will be.
But the great positive changes are sweeping them away: the number of Adult Chinook salmon in the Klamath River increased 562% from 2017 to 2018. The article on the subject omits the percentage, and uses the hedging generality “there are greater numbers of Klamath River fall Chinook projected to be in the ocean in 2018.”
The number of adult Chinook salmon in the Klamath river decreased 24% from 2018 to 2019. The article on the subject omits the percentage, and states that “The Klamath River fall Chinook (KRFC) abundance forecast of 274,200 adult salmon is lower than 2018 forecast, but still an improvement over low forecast numbers seen in recent years .”
Here, the Ministry of Truth has just erased the 500-plus present increase of the previous season, and lied bald-facedly with " but still an improvement over low forecast numbers seen in recent years ." That was written in 2019. The number of Adult Chinook salmon in the Klamath River increased 562% from 2017 to 2018.
That’s an example of what is known as “fake news”.
The number of adult Chinook salmon on the Sacramento River increased 65% from 2018 to 2019. The article on the subject omits the percentage, and use the hedging generality “an increase over 2018 forecasts.”
The number of adult Chinook salmon in the Sacramento River increased 25% from 2019 to 2020. The article n the subject omits the percentage, and uses the hedging generality "there will be more fall-run Chinook salmon in the Sacramento River than there were in 2019.
Adult Chinook Salmon in the Sacramento River decreased 73% from 2014 to 2018, then increased 106% - more than doubled - from 2018 to 2020, to a run of 473,000.
United in malice, down through the generations. Every elected office compromised. Many or most scientific institutions wholly coopted. A controlled press at their disposal, in lock-step in all the nations. A populace almost entirely conditioned into a state of paralyzing stupidity. And still the Ether’s Orgonite-driven return to health has brought the salmon back to historic highs. And soon enough, that great positive change will sweep our dark masters to their ruin.
2014 - 862,500; 212,000 adult spawners
2015 - 652,000 (a 24% decrease over 2014)
2016 - 229,600 (a 64% decrease over 2015)
2017 - 230,700 (a .5% decrease over 2016
2018 - 229,000 (a .7% decrease over 2017)
2019 - 379,000 (a 65% increase over 2018)
2020 - 473,000 (a 25% increase over 2019; a 106% increase from 2016 to 2020)
Klamath River Adult Chinook Salmon
2014 - 160,444; 40,700 natural adult spawners
2015 - 423,800 (164% increase over 2014)
2016 - 142,200 (a 66% decrease over 2015)
2017 - 54,200 (a 62% decrease over 2016)
2018 - 359,200 (a 562% increase over 2017)
2019 - 274,200 (a 24% decrease over 2018)
2020 - 186,000 (a 32% decrease over 2019)
Jeff Miller, Brooklyn, New York, April 4, 2020
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March 17, 2014 - The preliminary abundance estimates for this past season were 862,500 Sacramento River Fall-run Chinook salmon (SRFC), based on returning salmon and fish harvest numbers,
February 26, 2015 - At the annual salmon informational meeting held in Santa Rosa today, state and federal fishery scientists presented encouraging news for sport and commercial salmon anglers. Forecasts suggest there are 652,000 adult Sacramento River fall Chinook salmon in the ocean this year, along with 423,800 adults from the Klamath River fall run. Fish from these runs comprise the vast majority of salmon taken in California’s ocean and inland fisheries.
These forecasts, which were higher than last year, will be used over the next few months by fishery managers to set sport and commercial fishing season dates, commercial quotas, and size and bag limits.
March 3, 2015 - The preliminary postseason river run size estimate for the fall run Klamath Chinook is 160,444 – much higher than the 92,800 preseason prediction.
(Describes an actual run 73% higher than initially estimated with the hedging generality " much " higher. - ed)
March 9, 2015 -
In 2014, PFMC modified the methods used to calculate preseason abundance estimates by switching from a linear model to a logarithmic regression curve. While the old method would have estimated 476,342 Chinook salmon for last year’s preseason forecast, the new method predicted 634,650 salmon for the forecast, and therefore no restrictions were imposed on the Chinook salmon fishery for 2014. At the end of the season, the final SI total reported by PFMC was 554,932 (right in between the two predictions), with 167,116 salmon returning to spawn in river and 44,552 in Central Valley hatcheries. The result was an exploitation rate of 62%, which is higher than in fourteen of the last sixteen years. While it is acknowledged that Chinook salmon forecasts for the Central Valley need improvement, PFMC has overestimated the SI by 13–72% in nine of the past 12 years (Figure 1). While the PFMC’s minimum escapement goal of 122,000 Chinook salmon was still met in 2014, the overestimation of the index is a continuing concern for management of Central Valley salmon harvest.
November 6, 2015 - However, in 2014 and 2015, the bureau failed to meet basic temperature requirements for salmon. Louis Moore, public affairs specialist with the Bureau of Reclamation, says a faulty temperature gauge deep in the lake is to blame. Inaccurate readings, he says, threw off calculations in 2015.
That resulted in too much water released from the reservoir early in the season and not enough cold water left later for the benefit of fish.
Many in the environmental community are not sold on this story.
“All of that is either negligence or incompetence,” says Jon Rosenfield, a conservation biologist with the The Bay Institute, an environmental group in San Francisco. "Why did they only have one temperature gauge? Saying the thermometer broke is like saying, ‘The dog ate my homework.’ "
March 2, 2016 - At the annual salmon informational meeting held in Santa Rosa today, state and federal fishery scientists presented updates on the numbers of spawning salmon, and the expected abundance for the upcoming fishing season. Forecasts suggest there are 299,600 adult Sacramento River fall Chinook salmon in the ocean this year, along with 142,200 adults from the Klamath River fall Chinook run. Both forecasts are lower compared to the previous few years. Salmon from these runs comprise the majority of salmon taken in California’s ocean and inland fisheries.
March 1, 2017 - Forecasts suggest there are 230,700 Sacramento River fall run Chinook adults in the ocean this year, along with 54,200 Klamath River fall run adults. Both forecasts are lower than those of recent years, with the forecast for Klamath fall run being among the lowest on record. Salmon from these runs typically comprise the majority of salmon taken in California’s ocean and inland fisheries.
March 17, 2017 - By 1992, the run had declined to less than 200 fish due to water exports to corporate agribusiness and southern California water agencies and poor management by the state and federal water and fishery agencies.
Management for the winter-run Chinook salmon, an endangered species, will impact the Sacramento River ocean salmon fishery. Remember that this fish was once extremely abundant, with a run of 117,000 fish estimated in 1969.
Meanwhile, Governor Jerry Brown is promoting the Delta Tunnels, designed to export water to corporate agribusiness, the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California and the oil industry for fracking and other extreme oil extraction methods. The two massive tunnels under the Delta would hasten the extinction of winter-run Chinook salmon, Central Valley steelhead, Delta and longfin smelt and green sturgeon, as well as imperil the salmon and steelhead populations on the Trinity and Klamath rivers.
March 1, 2018 - Forecasts presented at today’s annual Salmon Information Meeting suggest there are 229,400 Sacramento River fall Chinook adults in the ocean this year, along with 359,200 Klamath River fall Chinook adults. While the Sacramento River fall Chinook forecast is comparable to last year, there are greater numbers of Klamath River fall Chinook projected to be in the ocean in 2018.
March 1, 2019 - California’s 2019 ocean salmon fishing season should be slightly better than last year’s, according to information presented at this week’s annual Salmon Information Meeting held in Santa Rosa by the California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW). The ocean abundance projections for Sacramento River fall Chinook (SRFC), a main salmon stock harvested in California waters, is estimated at 379,600 adult salmon, an increase over 2018 forecasts. This may result in increased fishing opportunity in some central coastal areas. The Klamath River fall Chinook (KRFC) abundance forecast of 274,200 adult salmon is lower than 2018 forecast, but still an improvement over low forecast numbers seen in recent years.
March 3, 2020 - Fisheries biologists present California’s ocean salmon forecast for 2020
(The headline is neutral - no mention of the increase in Chinook salmon increase. - ed)
SANTA ROSA, Calif. — In 2020, state and federal scientists predict there will be more fall-run Chinook salmon in the Sacramento River than there were in 2019, while the Klamath River is predicted to have less fall-run Chinook salmon in 2020 than there were in 2019, according to the California Dept. of Fish & Wildlife.
(Where " more " and " less " are hedging generalities. Are the Chinook doing better, or worse? I’m so confused and ensheepled!
Fishery scientists presented the California’s fall Chinook salmon forecast at the annual Ocean Salmon Informational Meeting in Santa Rosa on Feb. 27, according to the California Dept. of Fish & Wildlife.
(Once again, neutral. They presented , but what they presented is withheld. - ed)
The CFDW said it expects about 473,000 fish will be harvested from the Sacramento River in 2020, which is more than the 2019 forecast predicted. In 2019, the CDFW projected 379,000 adult salmon for the Sacramento River.
(A 25% increase. - ed)
For the Klamath River, the CDFW predicts 186,000 adult Chinook salmon in 2020. The forecast in 2019 predicted 274,200 adult salmon, which was an improvement over low forecast numbers seen the years prior, according to the CDFW.
(A 32% decrease. - ed)