If one of the four main spawning areas of the yellowfin tuna is the Gulf of Mexico, and the yellowfin tuna is a smart seafood choice because it is sustainably managed, then why was there no Louisiana state record yellowfin tuna until 2012?

My shit is real, I had to pioneer in this
Around the way, all the fake niggaz fear this
Paragraphs bust your membrane
On and on I bust through like teflon

Prodigy, from Mobb Deep’s “Me and My Crew”, 1991


(Mobb Deep: Albert Johnson, aka “Prodigy” (left), Kejuan Waliek Muchita, aka “Havoc” (right). Note how they are subtly accentuating their left eyes, and how they are both using purportedly-secret Masonic “gestures of recognition”, Prodigy with the extended thumb, and Havoc with the pointing finger.)

Gestures of Recognition
(19th Century depiction of purportedly-secret Masonic “gestures of recognition”, including the pointing finger used by Havoc in the photo immediately above.)

I’m just about done with the Tuna article, for now, anyway. So much for Darwin’s “Origin of Species”.

THE YELLOWFIN TUNA IN THE GULF OF MEXICO OFF LOUISIANA

In March 2005, the Louisiana Sportsman’s M.A. Fisher states that Anthony Taormina caught the Louisiana state record yellowfin tuna at the Midnight Lump off the mouth of the Mississippi River, and that it weighed 240.19 pounds.

However, there are no independent news articles documenting this catch, and there are no photographs of this fish.

The 2005 Louisiana state record yellowfin tuna is fabricated.

On August 6, 2007, at 11:03 p.m., on the fishing forum thehulltruth.com, thread starter Junior Member SEAYA12 said “Had a great trip Sunday out of Fouchon looking for Yellowfin and buy did we find them. Finished the day with 7 fish,2 in the 40 - 50# class, 3 in the 70-80# one that weighed 168# and the grand daddy that weighed in at 233 pounds. For those of you keeping score the is the third largest Yellowfin ever caught in the Gulf of Mexico.

Here is the rest of the story. The fish was landed at around 3:30 on Sunday but not weighed until 9:00 am on Monday beacuse there was no certified scale around by the time we got in. The fish was kept in an ice slurry overnight and weighed at Sanddollar Marine this morning.

My question is could this fish have lost 5 pounds overnight s***?*** If so this fish would have broken the GOM record of 238 pounds.

I guess we will never know.

I will post pictures as soon as I can weed through the 200 shots we have”.

This is a pile of carefully crafted hearsay, put in place by the uncredited Intelligence operative known as SEAYA12 to give the false impression that there are yellowfin tuna in the Gulf of Mexico off Mississippi in August 2007.

Under the false guise of familiarity, they walked “yellowfin tuna” back to “yellowfin”, and then walked yellowfin back once again to “fish”. Then the 7 “fish” are walked back to “the fish”. And, golly, all the stumbling and bumbling just manage tokeep “the fish” off the books as the Gulf of Mexico record.

SEAYA12 avers that he will, indeed, post pictures, however he never does.

The fake record from 2005 and this fabricated “chatter on the ballfield” from 2007 are pieces in a paper trail created in preparation for the yellowfin tuna winking into existence in the Gulf of Mexico off Louisiana in 2012.

On August 6, 2007, at 11:21 p.m., Senior Member A Few Dollars replied “You only needed 2 lbs. 4 oz. to beat my buddy’s record fish…’Anthony Taormina IV, on the right shakes hands with Deckhand Hunter Caballero. Anthony Taormina fought this 240.3# Yellowfin Tuna while fishing with Strike Zone Charters. The catch is the largest Yellowfin Tuna ever caught in Louisiana and the Gulf of Mexico’.”

Where “Louisiana state record” and “Gulf of Mexico record” are inexplicably walked back to “the largest ever caught in Louisiana and the Gulf of Mexico”.

Spectacularly, there is no photograph. Senior forum member A Few Dollars simply posted what is purported to be the caption of a photograph.

The fake caption says “fought”, “fishing”, “catch” and “caught” to hammer the false meme that yellowfin tuna had been out there in the Gulf of Mexico off Louisiana all along, only nobody had pursued them with the proper skill or assiduousness, previously.

Senior Member “A Few Dollars” is an uncredited Intelligence operative, creating a piece of a false “paper trail” to establish “bona fides” for the false, fabricated Louisiana state record yellowfin tuna from 2005.

On August 7, 2007, at 8:01 a.m., Senior Member GotchaRB replied “I heard that… Sounds Like Fun!!”

Here, the ambiguous “I heard that” can be interpreted by the Coincidence theorist reader as a confirmation of the in-fact fabricated Louisiana state record yellowfin tuna from 2005. The propagandist uses “Sounds Like Fun!!”, where the capital letters and the double “bangs”, or exclamation points, distract from the sleight-of-hand.

The people who write this propaganda for a living proudly refer to it as “tradecraft”.

The uncredited Intelligence operative known as SEAYA12 didn’t post a photo of the (almost!) Gulf of Mexico yellowfin tuna because he had 200 pictures to “weed through”. Where he used “weed” to infer he was a lazy stoner, and never got to it (cough). While the uncredited Intelligence operative known as A Few Dollars didn’t post a photo of the 2005 Louisiana state record yellowfin tuna because he “forgot”, I guess.

I’ve got a lot of firsts to my credit, and identifying uncredited Intelligence operatives on Internet forums is certainly one of them.

Those operatives know that the key to any successful Confidence game is misdirection.

On October 16, 2012, louisianasportsman.com said “Pending state-record yellowfin caught out of Grand Isle”.

Where, under the false guise of familiarity, the humorously-named author M.A. Fisher omitted the name of the state, and omitted the word “tuna” from “yellowfin tuna” to make the subject almost unsearchable.

That is an example of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization.

For the record, it is the Louisiana state record yellowfin tuna.

The subhead reads ”West Delta gives up 251-pound tuna, crushes existing state record”.

Where, once again under the false guise of familiarity, author M.A. Fisher once again redacted the name of the state, and has now walked it back from “yellowfin tuna” to “yellowfin”, and then walked it back again to “tuna”.

They also obscured the date of the previous record, along with the specific margin between the old record and the new with the lurid-but-general “crushes existing state record”.

Those are examples of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”.

Mr./Ms. Fisher said “West Delta gives up” to reinforce the false meme that far-larger yellowfin tuna had been out there in the West Delta, all along, only nobody had pursued them with the proper skill or assiduousness, previously.

The article goes on to say “A trip out of Grand Isle on Saturday (Oct. 13) ended with a pending new state-record yellowfin tuna hanging at the docks of Bridge Side Marina. The catch of the 251-pound yellowfin by New Iberia’s 22-year-old Elliot Sale will, if certified by the Louisiana Outdoor Writers Association, break an eight-year-old record.”

Here, Fisher once again obscured the date of the previous record, along with the specific margin between the old record and the new with the general “break and eight-year-old record”.

The propagandist used “catch” to reinforce the false meme that far larger yellowfin tuna had been out there in Louisiana all along, only nobody had pursued them with the proper skill or assiduousness previously.

The article goes on to say “The previous mark was held by Anthony Taormina, who landed a 240.19 pound yellowfin in March 2005 at the Midnight Lump off the mouth of the Mississippi River.

Where the propagandist walked the specific “Louisiana state record” back to the general “mark”, and used “landed” to reinforce the false meme that far larger yellowfin tuna had been out there off the mouth of the Mississippi River all along, only nobody had pursued them with the proper skill or assiduousness previously.

On October 16, 2012, the Louisiana Sportsman’s M.A. Fisher stated that, in March 2005, Anthony Taormina had caught the Louisiana state record yellowfin tuna at the Midnight Lump off the mouth of the Mississippi River, and that it weighed 240.19 pounds.

However, there are no independent news articles documenting this catch, and there are no photographs of this fish.

The 2005 Louisiana state record yellowfin tuna is fabricated.

Spectacularly, there are no photographs of the Louisiana Sportsman’s M.A. Fisher online. At the top of this article, I called bullshit as soon as I heard his name, “Fisher”.

“M.A. Fisher” is a pseudonym under which a variety of uncredited Intelligence operative published their propaganda.

I have exposed the duplicity of the Louisiana Sportsman by using what was known in the old days as “fact checking”.

In October 2012, the yellowfin tuna winked into existence in the Gulf of Mexico off Louisiana, where it had never been documented previously, as the health of the ether there improved to the point where the species could manifest within it. It weighed 251 pounds.

October 13, 2012, Elliot Sale caught the first-ever Louisiana state record yellowfin tuna. It weighed 251 pounds.

Here’s a picture of it.

Louisiana state record yellowfin tuna 2012
(Elliott Sale with the first-ever Louisiana state record yellowfin tuna, 251 pounds, October 13, 2012)

A current article on fisheries.noaa.gov says of the Atlantic yellowfin tuna “The stock is not overfished”, and that “U.S. wild-caught Atlantic yellowfin tuna is a smart seafood choice because it is sustainably managed and responsibly harvested under U.S. regulations”.

Further, a July 2024 article on onthewater.com says “Atlantic yellowfin tuna have four major spawning areas, including the Caribbean, the Gulf of Mexico, and off the coast of Africa.”

If one of the four main spawning areas of the yellowfin tuna is the Gulf of Mexico, and the yellowfin tuna is a smart seafood choice because it is sustainably managed, then why was there no Louisiana state record yellowfin tuna until 2012?

There are plenty of places where the yellowfin tuna is plentiful. What’s not being explained, here, is that the degradation of the health of the ether in the Gulf of Mexico off Louisiana was sufficient to keep the yellowfin tuna from manifesting there up until 2012.

2012 is the year that the great positive changes I’m documenting in these articles got underway in earnest. It’s the year that the Mayan “Long Count” ended. The beginning of a new “Golden Age”.

I began writing this series of articles, entitled “Positive Changes That Are Occurring”, on Don Croft’s Etheric Warriors forum in July 2013.

On and on I bust through like teflon.

Jeff Miller, Honolulu, HI, August 16, 2024

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