From 2018 to 2021, the .5% average annual increase in size of the North Dakota state record walleye was 614% greater than its .07% average annual increase in size from 1959 to 2018

“Ignorance is of a peculiar nature; once dispelled, it is impossible to reestablish it. It is not originally a thing of itself, but it is only the absence of knowledge; and though man may be kept ignorant, he may not be made ignorant.”

- Thomas Paine

WALLEYE IN NORTH DAKOTA

From 1959 to 2021, I was able to identify examples of the walleye in North Dakota: 1 in Wood Lake in 1959, 1 in the Missouri River near Fox Island in 2018, 1 in the Heart River in 2018, 1 in Lake Oahe in 2021, and 1 in Lake Oahe in 2023.

The USGS table for the walleye omits all five, or 100% of these examples, namely the North Dakota state record walleye from 1959, the North Dakota State Record Walleye from 2018, the falsely-rejected North Dakota state record walleye from 2018, the North Dakota state record walleye from 2021, and the longest walleye in the history of fishing in North Dakota from 2023, the latter which which was somehow not awarded a state record. Why are none of these examples in the USGS table for the walleye in North Dakota?

From 1959 to 2018, the North Dakota state record walleye increased in size by .4%, from 15 pounds, 12 ounces to 15 pounds, 13 ounces.

From 1959 to 2018, the average annual increase in size of the North Dakota state record walleye was .07%

In 1959, in the absence of any walleye stocking there, the walleye winked into existence in Wood Lake in North Dakota. It would remain in existence there only briefly. In 1959, or soon after, after less than a year in existence there, the walleye disappeared from Wood Lake, and remains absent to this day.

In 1959, in the absence of any walleye stocking there, Blair Chapman caught the Missouri state record walleye in Wood Lake. It weighed 15 pounds, 12 ounces. Its length is absent from every media account I could locate. That’s an example of what is known in the propaganda trade as a “news blackout”.

In 1959, or soon after, after less than a year in existence there, the walleye disappeared from Wood Lake, and remains absent to this day.

From 1994 to this writing in 2023, the walleye is absent from the record in Lake Sakakawea in North Dakota, despite the USGS professing to have stocked some undisclosed number of walleye fry there in seven stockings from 1994 to 2005.

Despite this absence of the walleye from 1994 to 2005, the USGS nevertheless brazenly states the walleye to be “established” there in 1994, 1999, 2002, 2003, 2004 and 2005.

The absence of any examples of the walleye in Lake Sakakawea proves that the USGS’s assertion that the walleye was established there in 1994, 1999, 2002, 2003, 2004 and 2005 are all false.

This absence of the walleye proves either that the stockings did not take place, as alleged, or all seven of those stockings did not take place, as alleged, or they all suffered 100% mortality rates for some unexplained reason.

From 1994 to 2021, the walleye is absent from the record in the Missouri River in North Dakota, despite the USGS professing that the US Environmental Protection Agency stocked some undisclosed number of walleye fry there in 1994.

The complete absence of the walleye from the record in the Missouri River in North Dakota from 1994 to 2018 proves either that the walleye stocking there in 1994 did not take place, or that stocking suffered a 100% mortality rate for some unexplained reason. It also proves that stocking is not the source of the North Dakota state record caught in the Missouri River in North Dakota in 2018.

The USGS map for the walleye indicates that it is non-indigenous to North Dakota.

The 2018 North Dakota state record walleye caught in the Missouri River and the absence of any walleye in the Missouri River from the first and only stocking there in 1994 to 2018 (which, I must note, is a stocking for which no data is provided) prove that the USGS’s assertion that the walleye is not indigenous to North Dakota is false.

From 1994 to 2005, the USGS table for the walleye in North Dakota lists nine walleye stockings in Lake Sakakawea, however no data is provided on any of those stockings, and they must be rejected as baseless assertions, put forward to prop up the great fish stocking sham.

Yet we will, for this moment, presume that all of those stockings took place, as alleged.

If the United States Environmental Protection Agency stocked some unknown number of walleye fry in Lake Sakakawea in North Dakota in seven stockings from 1994 to 2005, then the absence of the walleye from the record in Lake Sakakawea proves that the walleye stockings there in 1994, 1999, 2002, 2003, 2004 and 2005 all did not take place, as alleged, or all six of those stockings suffered 100% mortality rates for some unexplained reason.

On May 25, 1994, the USGS purports that the United States Environmental Protection Agency stocked some undisclosed number of walleye fry in the Missouri River at the Wilton boat ramp in the Painted Woods-Square Butte drainage. The USGS table states that the walleye was “established” there in 1994, with a potential pathway of “stocked for sport”.

Since no data is provided on this stocking, it must be rejected as a baseless assertion, put forward to prop up the great fish stocking sham.

Yet we will, for this moment, presume that all of those stockings took place, as alleged.

The absence of the walleye from the record in the Missouri River in North Dakota from proves either that the walleye stocking there in the Missouri River in 1994 did not take place, or that stocking suffered a 100% mortality rate for some unexplained reason.

On June 21, 1994, the USGS purports that the United States Environmental Protection Agency stocked some undisclosed number of walleye fry in New Johns Lake in the Painted Woods-Square Butte drainage in North Dakota. The USGS table states that the walleye was “established” there in 1994, with a potential pathway of “stocked for sport”.

Since no data is provided on this stocking, it must be rejected as a baseless assertion, put forward to prop up the great fish stocking sham.

Yet we will, for this moment, presume that all of those stockings took place, as alleged.

The complete absence of the walleye from the record in New Johns Lake in North Dakota proves either that the walleye stocking there in 1994 did not take place, or that stocking suffered mortality rate of 100% for some unexplained reason.

From 2018 to 2021, the .5% average annual increase in size of the North Dakota state record walleye was 614% greater than its .07% average annual increase in size from 1959 to 2018.

From 2018 to 2021, the 1.5% increase in size of the North Dakota state record walleye was 275% greater, or almost four times greater than its .4% increase in size from 1959 to 2018.

The growth rate of the walleye in North Dakota is increasing hyper-exponentially, going forward in time. 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 that of its etheric environment.

From 2018 to 2021, the North Dakota state record walleye increased in size by 1.5%, from 15 pounds, 13 ounces to 16 pounds, 6 ounces.

From 2018 to 2021, the North Dakota state record walleye increased in length by 1.5%, from 32.5 inches to 33 inches.

From 2018 to 2021, the average annual increase in size of the North Dakota state record walleye was .5%.

In 2018, the walleye winked into existence simultaneously in North Dakota in the Missouri River and the Heart River.

In 2018, in the absence of any walleye stocking there, the walleye winked into existence in the Heart River in North Dakota at a weight of 16 pounds, 4 ounces. It would remain in existence there only briefly. In 2018, or soon after, the walleye disappeared from the Heart River in North Dakota, and remains absent to this day.

The North Dakota Fish and Game Department falsely stated that the fish had been foul-hooked, to keep the fish from being documented as the new North Dakota state record.

The USGS table for the walleye in North Dakota omits this example of the walleye. Why?

In 2018, in the absence of any walleye stocking in the Missouri River since 1994, the walleye winked into existence in the Missouri River in North Dakota, near Fox Island. It would remain in existence there only briefly. In 2018, or soon after, after less than a year in existence there, the walleye disappeared from the Missouri River in North Dakota, and remains absent to this day.

The complete absence of the walleye from the record in the Missouri River in North Dakota from 1994 to 2018 proves either that the first and only walleye stocking there in 1994 did not take place, or that stocking suffered a 100% mortality rate for some unexplained reason, and, further, proves that the 2018 North Dakota state record walleye was not the product of that stocking.

On April 21, 2018, in the absence of any walleye stocking there, Tom Volk caught a walleye in the Heart River in North Dakota. It weighed 16 pounds, 4 ounces. Despite its being 3.2% larger than the then-current North Dakota state record walleye from 1959, which weighed 15 pounds, 12 ounces. They claimed it was “foul-hooked”, near the dorsal fin; the Officer’s Report contains a bunch of hearsay from trumped up generational Satanist Freemason “witnesses”, who agreed to join the Fish Feds in North Dakota in the serial-lying. For the record, it was Matthew Knuth and Jacob Magnes, along with a couple of others whose names are inexplicably whited out on the Officer’s Report.

If you are intentionally snagging, say, paddlefish, you use a barbless hook. Here Volk was using a barbed hook which would have ripped a big, bloody hole when it was pulled out.

Here’s a picture of the fish, where it’s not all bloody in the back, as it would be if you foul-hooked it and dragged it in:

Tom Volk Walleye
(Tom Volk with the falsely-stricken North Dakota state record walleye from April 2018)

Thanks to literally Millenia of programming, humanity has been programmed not to “see” the generational Satanist Freemasons who rig juries, “troll” on Internet forums, and put the fix in on fish records, as in this case.

But, let’s say that what the Fish Feds in North Dakota is saying is true, and that Tom did, indeed foul-hook the fish. Still, Why does the USGS table for the species omit the fish that Tom Volk caught in the Heart River in North Dakota in 2018?

Unfortunately for the folks doing the obfuscation and the serial-lying, just three years later, in 2021, Jarod Shypkoski caught an even-larger 16 pound, 6 ounce walleye, in the Missouri River south of Bismarck.

Their shafting of Tom Volk bought them just three years, the enmity of countless upright citizens, and provided me with the opportunity to take them to task here. Can you see how it’s all over but the crying for these people?

On May 21, 2018, kxnet.com said “The Man Behind the Record-Breaking Walleye”. Where author Malique Rankin replaced the name of the angler with the general “the man”, and, under the false guise of familiarity, omitted the word “state” from “state record”, and also omitted the name of the state, all to make the subject virtually unsearchable. Those are all examples of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”.

For the record, on May 20, 2018, Neal Leier caught the North Dakota state record walleye in the Missouri River near Fox Island. It weighed 15 pounds, 13 ounces and was 32.5 inches long.

The article goes on to say “As most of us have heard, Friday morning the state record for largest walleye caught was broken. KX News Reporter Malique Rankin met with Neal Leier and talk about his big catch.”

Where Monique used “caught” and “catch” to reinforce the false meme that far-larger walleye had been out there in North Dakota all along, only nobody had pursued them with the proper skill or assiduousness, previously. Then she walked the largest walleye in the history of fishing in North Dakota back to merely “big”.

The article goes on to say: “Greg Power; Fisheries Division Chief: ‘The previous record goes way back to 1959 so it’s a 59 year old record. The previous record was set in Wood Lake in Benson County. That fish was 15 lbs and 12 oz.’ Leier’s walleye was one ounce larger, caught in the Missouri near Fox Island.”

Can you see how Malique carefully omitted the margin between the records, and replace it with the general “one ounce larger”? That’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”.

Can you see how Fisheries Division Chief Greg Power carefully omitted the name of the person who caught the 1959 North Dakota state record walleye? That’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”. Since I’ve got time on my hands, I looked it up. It’s Blair Chapman.

So, I had to do the math - twice! - to learn that, from 1959 to 2018, the North Dakota state record walleye increased in size by .4%, from 15 pounds, 12 ounces to 15 pounds, 13 ounces. I say ‘twice’ because she replaced the specific weight of the 2018 record holder, which I was forced to do the math to learn, with “Leier’s walleye was one ounce larger”. It’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”.

The .4% increase in size of the North Dakota state record walleye from 1959 to 2018 is an example of a fish record being broken by a tiny margin, as one would expect, given that organisms are held to increase in ever-smaller increments to a genetically-programmed maximum size.

The article goes on to say “The previous record had a lot of controversy. Greg Power; Fisheries Division Chief: ‘There’s a great debate about whether that was a legitimate record. If that fish really existed or was that big. That was 59 years ago. The documentation – they didn’t have social media then, they didn’t have certified scales’.”

Where the generational Satanist Freemason Fish Fed in North Dakota is working overtime to convince you that the record was not legitimate, and that a 15-pound walleye is large. When, in fact, the Nevada state record walleye from 1998 weighed 25 pounds.

I have exposed the duplicity of Fisheries Division Chief Greg Power by using what was known in the old days as “fact checking”.

Here’s Greg’s picture:

Greg Power
(North Dakota Fisheries Division Chief Greg Power)

Can you see how the image is off-center to the left, to focus your attention on David’s left eye? And how Greg is holding the fish in his left hand? That’s because Greg is a follower of the Left-hand path, and, to generational Satanist Freemasons like David, the left eye is the “eye of Will” or the “eye of Horus”.

But don’t take my word for it:

‘The right eye is the Eye of Ra and the left is the Eye of Horus’.”

From “Freemasonry - Religion And Belief - The 3rd Temple”

Facebook: “Welcome to the Left-Hand-Path-Network, where Satanism is not about worship, but it’s study.”

I have included Greg’s photograph so that you could get a better idea of what a generational Satanist Freemason in a position of marginal influence looks like.

He figured that the rubes would never notice the coded visual imagery.

They 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 admitting that you have one.

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

In 2018, or soon after, the walleye disappeared simultaneously in North Dakota from the Heart River and the Missouri River.

In 2018, or soon after, the walleye disappeared from the Heart River in North Dakota, and remains absent to this day.

In 2018, or soon after, after less than a year in existence there, the walleye disappeared from the Missouri River in North Dakota, and remains absent to this day.

On May 4, 2019, wdbj7.com said “N.D. fisherman says record-breaking disqualified walleye spoils his love of fishing”. Where, under the false guise of familiarity, author Andrew Horn replaced “North Dakota” with the almost-completely-unsearchable “N.D.”, and replace the name of the person who caught it with “fisherman” and “his”. Those are all examples of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”.

The article goes on to say “Tom Volk’s would-be record breaking walleye was disqualified. Now he says the Game and Fish Department needs to change how it reviews catches. Volk says there’s no evidence that the fish was hooked in the back, despite Game and Fish saying the Walleye was ‘foul-hooked.’ ‘When you hook a fish in the mouth, you’ll feel the ‘tonk,’ you’ll feel the fish actually pick up the jig and it’ll be like a quick jerk, jerking motion, and that’s exactly what this fish did, just like every other fish,’ said Volk. He says this incident has spoiled his love of fishing.”

Here we can see the Fish Feds in North Dakota lying bald-fadedly to keep the largest walleye in the history of fishing in North Dakota off the books, and down the memory hole.

The article goes on to say “ ‘I haven’t thought about fishing in weeks. I’m considering selling the boat because I just don’t have the urge to fish. I’ve lost my urge to fish. It’s kind of disappointing and I hope over time that feeling will go away,’ said Volk. Volk says he’s going to keep the fish and mount it on the wall, reminding him of the great day he had with his family.”

Did you notice how wdbj7.com author Andrew Horn omitted any mention of what the fish weighed, or what its length was, or how it compared to the previous record? Those are examples of what is known in the propaganda trade as a “news blackout”.

Every single media account of Volk’s catch omits the weight and length of the walleye that he caught. I had to read the .pdf of the Officer’s Report to learn that the fish was caught in the Heart River in North Dakota near the Highway 6 bridge, and that it weighed 16.9 pounds. That’s 16 pounds, 4.4 ounces.

From 2021 to 2023, the 2% average annual increase in length of the North Dakota state record walleye was 300% greater, or four times greater than its .5% average annual increase in length from 2018 to 2021.

The growth rate of the walleye in North Dakota is increasing hyper-exponentially, going forward in time. 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 that of its etheric environment.

From 2021 to 2023, the length of the walleye in Missouri increased by 6%, from 33 inches to 35 inches.

From 2021 to 2023, the average annual increase in length of the North Dakota state record walleye was 2%.

In 2021, after an absence of three years, the walleye winked back into existence in the Missouri River in North Dakota, south of Bismarck, at a weight of 16 pounds, 6 ounces, which was 1.5% larger than the 15 pounds, 13 ounces at which it had last manifested in the Missouri River in North Dakota in 2018. It would remain in existence there only briefly. In 2021, or soon after, after less than a year in existence there, the walleye disappeared from the Missouri River in North Dakota, and remains absent to this day.

On March 13, 2021, Jarod Shypkoski caught the North Dakota state record walleye, in the Missouri River south of Bismarck. It weighed 16 pounds, 6 ounces and was 33 inches long.

The USGS table for the walleye omits the North Dakota state record walleye from 2021. Why?

The complete absence of the walleye from the record in the Missouri River in North Dakota from 1994 to 2018 proves either that the first and only walleye stocking there in 1994 did not take place, or that stocking suffered a 100% mortality rate for some unexplained reason, and, further, proves that neither the 2018 nor 2021 North Dakota state record walleye, both caught in the Missouri River in North Dakota, were not the product of that stocking.

On April 12, 2021, parkrapidsenterprise.com “buried” this in an unsearchable photo caption: “This 16-pound, 6-ounce walleye caught Saturday, March 13, by Jared Shypkoski of Dickinson, N.D., on the Missouri River south of Bismarck has been confirmed as the new North Dakota state record walleye, the state Game and Fish Department reported Monday, April 12.”

The unsearchability of the photo caption was used in an example of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”.

Author Brad Dokken goes on to say “Shypkoski’s trophy topped the previous record of 15 pounds, 13 ounces taken in 2018 by Neal Leier of Bismarck, approximately 30 miles upstream on the Missouri River near the Fox Island boat ramp.” Where author Brad Dokken replaced “state record walleye” with “trophy”, to make the subject far less searchable. That’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”.

Then Brad replaced the specific margin between the records with the general “topped”, to imply that one record had just exceeded the other. That’s an example of the propaganda techniques known as “compartmentalization” and “spin”.

Did you notice that, despite being an outdoors reporter for a living, Brad somehow omitted the length of the 2021 North Dakota state record walleye? That’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”.

So, I had to do the math to learn that, from 2018 to 2021, the North Dakota state record walleye increased in size by 3.6%, from 15 pounds, 13 ounces to 16 pounds, 6 ounces.

On April 12, 2021, gf.nd.gov said “Big Walleye Certified as State Record”. Where the uncredited author walked the largest walleye in the history of fishing in North Dakota back to merely “big”, and, under the false guise of familiarity, omitted the name of the state, to make the subject almost unsearchable. That’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”.

For those unaware, anytime an author is uncredited, it is proof that said author is an Intelligence operative.

The uncredited Intelligence operative from the state of North Dakota goes on to say: “A 16-pound, 6-ounce walleye caught March 13 by Dickinson angler Jared Shypkoski is the new state record, according to North Dakota Game and Fish Department personnel.”

Where the author said “angler” and “caught” to prop up the false meme that far-larger walleye had been out there in North Dakota, all along, only nobody had pursued them with the proper skill or assiduousness, previously.

Did you notice how they omitted “North Dakota” from “new state record”? That’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”.

The uncredited Intelligence operative from the state of North Dakota continues: “Shypkoski reeled in the 33-inch fish in the Eckroth Bottoms area of upper Lake Oahe.”

Where “reeled in” reinforces the false meme that far-larger walleye had been out there in North Dakota, all along, only nobody had pursued them with the proper skill or assiduousness, previously.

However we have, at last, documented the length of the 2021 North Dakota state record walleye.

In 2021, or soon after, after less than a year in existence there, the walleye disappeared from the Missouri River in North Dakota, and remains absent to this day.

In 2023, in the absence of any walleye stocking there, the walleye winked into existence in Lake Oahe in North Dakota, at a state-record length of 35 inches, yet that walleye was not awarded a state record, nor is it present in the USGS table for the species. Why?

The USGS map shows that the walleye is non-indigenous to North Dakota.

The fact that a walleye was caught in Lake Oahe in North Dakota in the absence of any walleye stocking there proves that the USGS’s assertion that the walleye is non-indigenous to North Dakota is false.

In April 2023, Chann App caught the longest walleye in the history of fishing in North Dakota. The uncredited Intelligence operative from US1033.com omitted its weight. I looked it up. It was 15 pounds, 15 ounces. The walleye was not awarded a state record, nor is it present in the USGS table for the species. Why?

On April 28, 2023, US1033.com questioned “Did A Mandan Angler Just Catch A North Dakota Record?” Where the uncredited author omitted the name of the fish, and also omitted the word “state” from “state record”, both to make the subject almost unsearchable. Those are examples of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”.

For the record, it’s a walleye.

For those unaware, anytime an author is uncredited, it is proof that said author is an Intelligence operative.

The uncredited Intelligence operative from US1033.com used “angler” and “catch” to prop up the false meme that far-larger walleye had been out there in North Dakota, all along, only nobody had pursued them with the proper skill or assiduousness, previously.

The article goes on to say “The state record fish was caught on March 13th, 2021 while trolling crankbaits in the Eckroth Bottoms area of Lake Oahe. That fish measured 33 inches.”

Where the uncredited Intelligence operative from us1033.com once again omitted the name of the fish, and the name of the person who caught it, both to make the subject almost unsearchable.

For the record, it’s a walleye, and the man who caught was named Chan Opp.

Did you notice how the author omitted the weight of the North Dakota state record walleye from 2021? That’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”.

The uncredited Intelligence operative from US1033.com used “caught” and “trolling” to prop up the false meme that far-larger walleye had been out there in North Dakota, all along, only nobody had pursued them with the proper skill or assiduousness, previously.

The article goes on to say “Yesterday, April 27th, 2023 Chan Opp of Mandan, North Dakota caught a massive Walleye that measured nearly 35 inches. I saw the video myself and it was just a tick short of 35. You would have to think a Walleye that long would be the new state record Walleye correct?”

Where the largest walleye in the history of fishing in North Dakota has been walked back to merely “massive”.

Since there is, indeed, a Great Big Conspiracy, the current North Dakota state record walleye is still from 2021.