If the white catfish is native to Delaware, Georgia, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Vermont, Virginia, and West Virginia, then why is there no example of it in any of those states between 1874 and 1976?

Inigo Montoya: You are wonderful!

Man in Black: Thank you; I’ve worked hard to become so.

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(From “The Princess Bride”, Written and adapted for the screen by William Goldman, 1987)

I have now completed a data consolidation for the Westslope cutthroat trout, the cutthroat/rainbow trout hybrid, and the white catfish.

It’s slow going, but the breakthroughs keep coming. They include:

From 1982 or soon after to 1998 or soon after, the white catfish disappeared from Nevada (1982), Pennsylvania (1983), Indiana (1985), South Carolina (1986), Oregon (1989), Florida (1991), Illinois (1991), Missouri (1991), Virginia (1992), Tennessee (1993), Ohio (1994), Rhode Island (1994), New Hampshire (1996), Georgia (1996) and New York (1998) and Arkansas (1998).

I believe that next I’ll take another catfish species, and take it through the same paces as the white catfish.

Then I’ll compare and contrast what I learn.

WHITE CATFISH

Nas.er.usgs.gov lists the white catfish as native to twelve states: Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Vermont, Virginia, and West Virginia.

Five of the thirteen, or 38%, or over one third of the states that the USGS map indicates as the indigenous range of the white catfish do not, in fact have state records for the white catfish. Why?

Eleven of the 23, or 49%, or half of all the states where the UGSS table documents the white catfish as “nonindigenous” have state records for the white catfish. Why?

From 1874 to 1973, the first eleven examples of the white catfish in the record (California, Nevada, Washington, Ohio, Florida, Alabama, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Puerto Rico and Arkansas) are all locales which the USGS says that the white catfish is not indigenous to. Why?

If the white catfish is native to Delaware, Georgia, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Vermont, Virginia, and West Virginia, why is there no example of it in the record in any of those states between 1874 and 1976?

The USGS lists an example of the white catfish in California in 1874. The nas.er.usgs.gov table says that the white catfish is non-indigenous to California.

The white catfish first manifested on this plane of existence in California, in 1874.

From 1874 to present, the USGS lists 16 examples of the white catfish. The nas.er.usgs.gov table says that the white catfish is non-indigenous to California.

Why does the USGS list the white catfish as non-indigenous to California, when there have been 16 examples documented there from 1874 to present? Given that the USGS lists the white catfish as indigenous to Rhode Island, and the species has been documented only once there, in 1994.

From 1877 to 2001, the USGS has documented eleven appearances of the white catfish in Nevada. Yet the USGS says that the white catfish is not indigenous to Missouri. Why?

From 1874 to 1877, the white catfish expanded its range from California into Nevada.

From 1874 to 1877, the first two examples of the white catfish in the record (California and Nevada) are both in states where the species is purported to be non-indigenous. Why?

In 1880, the USGS documented an example of the white catfish in Washington.

The nas.er.usgs.gov table says that the white catfish is nonindigenous to Washington, and has been observed there six times from 1880 to 2003.

Essay: Explain why the USGS would list the white catfish as nonindigenous to Washington, when the species has been observed there continuously for over one hundred years. Cross reference against the USGS listing the white catfish as indigenous to New Jersey, where they state it has been observed just once in history.

Note: There are three documented observances of the white catfish in New Jersey, not one, as falsely alleged by the USGS.

From 1874 to 1880, the first three examples of the white catfish in the record (California, Nevada and Washington) are all in states where the species is purported to be non-indigenous. Why?

In 1939, the USGS documented an example of the white catfish in Ohio. The USGS says that the white catfish is non-indigenous to Ohio.

From 1874 to 1939, the first four examples of the white catfish in the record (California, Nevada, Washington and Ohio) are all in states where the species is purported to be non-indigenous. Why?

From 1939 to 1994, the USGS documents seven examples of the white catfish in Ohio. The USGS says that the white catfish is non-indigenous to Ohio.

Why does the USGS say that the white catfish is not indigenous to Ohio, when there are seven examples of it there from 1939 to 1994, and when the USGS states that the white catfish is indigenous to Rhode Island, where it has been documented only once, in 1992?

There is no Ohio state record for the white catfish.

Why doesn’t Ohio have a state record for the white catfish, when the USGS has documented seven examples of the species there from 1939 to 1994?

In 1954, the white catfish suddenly expanded its range from Ohio to Florida, which are separated by hundreds of miles. The table at nas.er.usgs.gov says that the white catfish is nonindigenous to Florida.

From 1874 to 1954, the first five examples of the white catfish are all in states where the species is purported to be non-indigenous (California, Nevada, Washington, Ohio and Florida). Why?

Nevada and Florida are separated by thousands of miles. How did the white catfish get from Nevada to Florida?

The USGS documented seven examples of the white catfish in Florida from 1954 to 2020.

Why does the USGS say that the white catfish is non-indigenous to Florida, when the USGS documented five examples of it there from 1954 to 2020? Given that the USGS lists the white catfish as indigenous to Rhode Island, and that the USGS lists just one example there, in 1994.

From 1954 to 1991, the white catfish came into its first manifestation in Florida, stayed there 37 years, then disappeared in 1991 at a weight of 18.88 pounds.

In 1960, the USGS documented the first-ever white catfish in Alabama.

Alabama is not one of the 12 states that the USGS states that the white catfish is indigenous to.

How did the white catfish, which may or may not be indigenous to Florida, per the USGS, get from Florida to Alabama in the six years from 1954 to 1960, given that the USGS does not list the white catfish as indigenous to Alabama?

From 1954 to 1960, the white catfish expanded its range from Florida to Alabama.

The white catfish fist manifested in Alabama in 1960, and was there for 21 years until it disappeared in 1981.

From 1874 to 1960, the first six examples of the white catfish in the record (California, Nevada, Washington, Ohio, Florida, and Alabama) are all states which the USGS says that the white catfish is not indigenous to. Why?

In 1965, the white catfish winked into existence in Illinois for the first time. The USGS does not list the white catfish as indigenous to Illinois.

From 1965 to 1991, the USGS documented five examples of the white catfish in Illinois. Yet the USGS says that the white catfish is not indigenous to Illinois. Why?

From 1874 to 1960, the first seven examples of the white catfish in the record (California, Nevada, Washington, Ohio, Florida, Alabama and Illinois) are all states which the USGS says that the white catfish is not indigenous to. Why?

In 1968, the USGS documented the first-ever white catfish in Indiana, where the USGS does not list it as indigenous.

The nas.er.usgs.gov table says that the nonindigenous white catfish has been observed just twice in Indiana, in 1968 and 1972. Actually, their official table says “one”, and lists both of those dates. That’s not very, er, Scientific. Indiana’s state record white catfish weighed 9.72 pounds, and was caught in Wabash pond by Melissa Grimes in 1985.

Why does the USGS list just one observation of the white catfish in Indiana, when there have been three, from 1968 to 1985?

Why does the USGS’s official data omit the Indiana state record from 1985?

Why does Indiana, a state in which the white catfish is purported to be non-indigenous, have a state record for the species?

Why does the USGS list the white catfish as non-indigenous to Indiana, when the species has been documented there three times from 1968 to 1985? Given that Rhode Island, where the USGS states the white catfish to be indigenous, has only one record of the species, in 1994.

From 1874 to 1968, the first eight examples of the white catfish in the record (California, Nevada, Washington, Ohio, Florida, Alabama, Illinois and Indiana) are all states which the USGS says that the white catfish is not indigenous to. Why?

In 1970, the USGS documented the white catfish in Kentucky for the first time ever. The USGS does not list the white catfish as indigenous to Kentucky.

From 1874 to 1970, the first nine examples of the white catfish in the record (California, Nevada, Washington, Ohio and Florida, Alabama, Illinois, Indiana and Kentucky) are all states which the USGS says that the white catfish is not indigenous to. Why?

In 1972, the USGS documented an example of the white catfish in Puerto Rico, for the first time in history.

From 1972 to 2007, the USGS documented 4 examples of the white catfish in Puerto Rico.

The nas.er.usgs.gov table says that the white catfish is nonindigenous to Puerto Rico.

Why does the USGS list the white catfish as non-indigenous to Puerto Rico, when the species has been documented there four times from 1972 to 2007? Given that Rhode Island, where the USGS states the white catfish to be indigenous, has only one record of the species, in 1994.

How did the non-indigenous fresh water white catfish get to an Island in the middle of the Caribbean Sea?

From 1874 to 1972, the first ten examples of the white catfish in the record (California, Nevada, Washington, Ohio Florida, Alabama, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky and Puerto Rico) are all locales which the USGS says that the white catfish is not indigenous to. Why?

In 1973, the USGS documented a white catfish in Arkansas. The nas.er.usgs.gov table says that the white catfish is nonindigenous to Arkansas.

From 1973 to 1988, the USGS documents seven examples of the white catfish in Arkansas.

Why does the USGS list the white catfish as non-indigenous to Arkansas, when the species has been documented there seven times from 1973 to 1988? Given that Rhode Island, where the USGS states the white catfish to be indigenous, has only one record of the species, in 1994.

There is no state record for the white catfish in Arkansas.

Why there is no white catfish state record in Arkansas within the context of seven observations of the species there from 1973 to 1988?

From 1874 to 1973, the first eleven examples of the white catfish in the record (California, Nevada, Washington, Ohio, Florida, Alabama, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Puerto Rico and Arkansas) are all locales which the USGS says that the white catfish is not indigenous to. Why?

In 1973, the white catfish manifested independently in Arkansas, where it stayed for 15 years, until it disappeared, in 1998, or soon after.

The next example on the record is three years later, in 1976, when the New Jersey state record white catfish was caught by Timothy Jasko in Dallenbach Pond in East Brunswick, Middlesex County. It weighed 10 pounds, 14.88 ounces.

From 1973 to 1976, the white catfish expanded its range from (Arkansas - undocumented weight) to New Jersey - 10 pounds, 14.88 ounces (New Jersey).

Arkansas and New Jersey are separated by thousands of miles. How did the white catfish get from Arkansas to New Jersey in just three years from 1973 to 1976?

In 1975, the USGS documented an example of the white catfish in Missouri. From 1975 to 1991

From 1975 to 1991, the USGS documented three examples of the white catfish. The USGS does not list the white catfish as indigenous to Missouri.

Why does the USGS list the white catfish as non-indigenous to Missouri, when it has the same three documented examples that New Jersey does?

There is no state record in Missouri for the white catfish. How does Missouri not have a state record for the white catfish when the USGS has documented three examples of it from 1975 to 1991.

1976 is the first example of the white catfish in New Jersey for which we have a weight (10 pounds, 14.88 ounces, New Jersey).

In 1976, the white catfish manifested independently in New Jersey, where it stayed for 18 years until it disappeared in 1994.

The USGS says that the white catfish is not indigenous to Arkansas, In 1976, after sixteen years in existence in Alabama, either the white catfish somehow expanded its range from Alabama to New Jersey, or the species manifested independently in a second location, New Jersey.

New Jersey is one of twelve U.S. states which nas.er.usgs.gov’s map says that the white catfish is indigenous to.

From 1976 to 2004, the New Jersey state record white catfish increased in size by 30%, from 10 pounds, 14.88 ounces to 14 pounds, 4 ounces. It is the first New Jersey state record for the white catfish.

The USGS says that New Jersey is one of the twelve states that the white catfish is native to. If the white catfish is native to New Jersey, why are there no records of it there prior to 1976?

Arkansas and New Jersey are separated by thousands of miles.

The USGS currently say that the white catfish is not indigenous to Alabama, despite sixteen documented examples there from 1960 to 1999, and a state record on the books in Alabama since 1976. Compare that with New Jersey, which the USGS says that the white catfish is indigenous to, despite just three documented examples there in 1976, 1994 and 2004.

In 1976, the white catfish winked into existence independently in New Jersey for the first time, at a weight of 10 pounds, 14.88 ounces. It existed there over the next 18 years from 1976 to 1994, then disappeared from this plane of existence sometime soon after 1994. For the ten years from 1994 to 2004, the white catfish is absent from the record in New Jersey. I believe it winked out of existence in New Jersey in 1994 and reappeared there ten years later, in 2004. It was one of the first species to be recovered, or brought back into existence by the improvement in the health of the ether driven by the recent introduction of the simple, inexpensive Orgonite devices Don Croft had invented just four years earlier.

I started gifting in 2004, getting my TB’s from double-agent Don Bradley, whom I did not suspect at that time. He called his TB’s “slimlines” - they were thin…not muffin-sized, but rather about a centimeter thick, and a couple inches across. The bottom centimeter of a muffin pan. I know surmise that was done to keep them as ineffective as possible. He maintained “that’s all you need”.

I did chuck a couple in the “wet cave” on the Na Pali coast on Kauai, I believe that was in 2005. It’s an old-time human-salamander hybrid hangout grotto.

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(Wet Cave”, Kauai)

In 1979, the USGS documented an example of the white catfish in Pennsylvania.

On the USGS map at nas.er.usgs.gove, the white catfish is listed as indigenous to Pennsylvania. Yet their table below lists it as non-indigenous, with just three observations from 1979 to 1983.

Why does the USGS, who loves them some fish like it’s their taxpayer-funded job, list the white catfish as both indigenous and nonindigenous to Pennsylvania? As compared to California, to which the USGS says the white catfish is non-indigenous, despite the fact that it has been documented there continously from 1874 to present.

Why did all three white catfish observations of the white catfish in Pennsylvania occur within a span of just four years, from 1979 to 1983?

If the white catfish is indigenous to Pennsylvania, and the white catfish has been documented in Pennsylvania three times from 1979 to 1983, why is there no Pennsylvania state record for the white catfish?

In 1979, the white catfish winked into existence in Pennsylvania for the first time.

In 1980, the USGS documented an example of the white catfish in Maine, where the white catfish is purported to be non-indigenous.

In 1980, the USGS documented an example of the white catfish in Oregon, where the white catfish is purported to be non-indigenous.

From 1980 to 1989, the USGS documented five examples of the white catfish in Oregon. The USGS says that the white catfish is non-indigenous to Oregon.

Why does the USGS say that the white catfish is non-indigenous to Oregon, when the USGS documents five examples of it there from 1980 to 1989? This within the context of Rhode Island, where the USGS says that the white catfish is indigenous, yet is has been documented there only once, in 1992.

The nas.er.usgs.gov table from February 2022 says that the nonindigenous white catfish has been observed 5 times in Oregon from 1980 to 1989.

On April 3, 1981, Roy T. Britton caught the Alabama state record white catfish. It weighed 10 pounds, 5 ounces.

Alabama has had a state record for white catfish for over forty years. The earliest example of the white catfish is in Alabama, in 1960. And, yet, the USGS does list the white catfish as indigenous to Alabama. Why?

The USGS documents the white catfish fish sixteen times in Alabama from 1960 to 1999. Thus the white catfish first manifested in 1960 in Alabama, at an unknown weight then increased to a maximum size in 1981.

In 1981, the white catfish in Alabama reached its maximum size of 10 pounds, 5 ounces.

From 1976 to 1981, the white catfish decreased in size by 6% from 10 pounds, 14.88 ounces (New Jersey) to 10 pounds, 5 ounces (Alabama)

1981 is our first documented weight for the white catfish in Alabama, where it was first seen anywhere in 1960.

In 1982, Jean Bianchi caught the Nevada state record white catfish in the Humboldt river. It weighed 16.15 pounds.

In 1982, or soon after, the white catfish disappeared from Nevada, after existing there for 105 years. It would reappear there in 2001.

From 1982 or soon after to 1998 or soon after, the white catfish disappeared from Nevada (1982), Pennsylvania (1983), Indiana (1985), South Carolina (1986), Oregon (1989), Florida (1991), Illinois (1991), Missouri (1991), Virginia (1992), Tennessee (1993), Ohio (1994), Rhode Island (1994), New Hampshire (1996), Georgia (1996) and New York (1998) and Arkansas (1998).

From 1981 to 1982, the white catfish increased in size by 56%, from 10 pounds, 5 ounces (Alabama) to 16.15 pounds (Nevada).

From 1982 to 2001, the white catfish is absent from the record in Nevada.

From 1982 to 1985, the white catfish in decreased in size by 39.7%, from 16 pounds, 2.4 ounces (Nevada) to 9 pounds, 11.52 ounces (Indiana).

In 1983, after just four years of existence there, the white catfish winked back out of existence in Pennsylvania.

In 1985, Melissa Grimes caught the Indiana state record white catfish. It weighed 9.72 pounds. The USGS does not list the white catfish as indigenous.

The USGS verbally lists one documented white catfish in Indiana. Yet the USGS data table shows two in Indiana, one in 1968 and one in 1972. Thus there are three documented examples of the white catfish in Indiana: 1968, 1972, and the state record from 1985.

Why does the current USGS data table omit the current Indiana state record white catfish from 1985?

Why does the USGS say there is one white catfish documented in Indiana, when there are three?

Why does the USGS say that the white catfish is not indigenous to Indiana, when there are three documented examples over seventeen years, and a state record? As compared to Pennsylvania, where the USGS says that the white catfish is indigenous, where there are three examples over just four years.

From 1985 to 1986, the white catfish in increased in size by 2.2%, from 9 pounds, 11.52 ounces (Indiana) to 9 pounds, 15 ounces (South Carolina).

The white catfish has now expanded its range from Alabama to Arkansas to New Jersey to South Carolina. None of which are connected with one another.

In 1985, or soon after, after 17 years in existence there since 1968, the white catfish winked back out of existence in Indiana.

In 1986, or soon after, the white catfish disappeared from South Carolina, and would not reappear there for 28 years, until 2014.

In 1985 and 1986, the disappearances of the white catfish from Indiana and South Carolina were very close to one another.

From 1986 to 2014, the South Carolina state record white catfish increased in size by 22.5%, from 9 pounds, 15 ounces to 12 pounds, 2.9 ounces.

From 1986 to 1994, the USGS documents the white catfish just four times in Connecticut. If the white catfish is native to Connecticut, why was it documented just four times there from 1986 to 1994?

In 1989, Wayne Welch caught the Oregon state record white catfish on the Tualatin river. It weighed 15 pounds.

Why does the USGS list the white catfish as non-indigenous to Oregon, when Oregon has a state record for the white catfish, and the USGS lists five examples of it from 1980 to 1989? This within the context of Rhode Island, where the USGS says that the white catfish is indigenous, and yet it has been documented there only once, in 1992.

In 1989 or soon after, the white catfish disappeared from existence in Oregon, after existing there for nine years.

On May 21, 1990, Jerry Wayne Bentley caught the North Carolina state record white catfish. It weighed 13 pounds.

nas.er.usgs.gov lists the white catfish as indigenous to North Carolina.

The USGS lists 3 examples of the white catfish in North Carolina from 1991 to 2013.

If the white catfish is indigenous to North Carolina, as the USGS states, then why is the first appearance of it in 1991? This within the context of examples of the white catfish in California and Nevada in 1874 and 1877 - both states which the white catfish is not indigenous to.

From 1986 to 1990, the white catfish increased in size by 30.8%, from 9 pounds, 15 ounces (South Carolina) to 13 pounds (North Carolina)

In 1991, Jim Miller caught the Florida state record white catfish. It weighed 18 pounds, 14.08 ounces.

From 1990 to 1991, the white catfish increased in size by 45.2%, from 13 pounds (North Carolina) to 18 pounds, 14.08 ounces (Florida)

In 1991, or soon after, after 37 years of existence there, the white catfish winked out of existence in Florida.

In 1991 or soon after, after 26 years in existence there, the white catfish winked out of existence in Illinois.

In 1991, or soon after, after 17 years in existence there, the white catfish winked out of existence in Missouri.

In 1991, or soon after, the disappearances of the white catfish in Florida, Illinois and Missouri were simultaneous.

The Virginia state record white catfish from 1992 weighed 7 pounds, 6 ounces.

nas.er.usgs.gov lists the white catfish as indigenous to Virginia. Yet the USGS does not list any examples of the white catfish in Virginia.

How can the white catfish be indigenous to Virginia if the USGS does not list any examples of it there?

Why doesn’t the USGS include the Virginia state record white catfish from 1992 in its records?

In 1992 or soon after, the white catfish disappeared from existence in Virginia.

In 1993, the USGS documented the only example of the white catfish in Tennessee. The nas.er.usgs.gov table lists the white catfish as non-indigenous to Tennessee.

The USGS lists the white catfish as non-indigenous to Tennessee, with just one documented example, from 1993. Yet the USGS lists the white catfish as indigenous to Rhode Island, with just one documented example, from 1994. Why?

Tennessee does not document a state record white catfish, despite having a documented example of the species there in 1993. Why?

In 1993 or soon after, the white catfish winked out of existence in Tennessee.

In 1994, the USGS documented the last of seven examples of the white catfish in Ohio.

In 1994, or soon after, after 55 years in existence there, the white catfish winked out of existence in Ohio.

In 1994, James Robinson caught the California state record and world record white catfish. It weighed 22 pounds.

Why does California have a state record for the white catfish, when the USGS says that the white catfish is not indigenous to California?

In 1994, the USGS documented one, single example of the white catfish in Rhode Island - the only example in the history of the state. That’s the 1994 Rhode Island state record white catfish, caught by L. Angell. It weighed 16 pounds, 12 ounces.

The USGS says the white catfish is indigenous to Rhode Island. Why does the USGS list the white catfish as indigenous to Rhonde Island, when there is only one example of the fish on the record in all history, in 1992? Within the context of the USGS say that it is non-indigenous to California, where they documented 16 examples of the species from 1874 to present (and a 2005 world record).

In 1994 or soon after, the white catfish disappeared from existence in Rhode Island.

In 1994 or soon after, the disappearances of the white catfish from Ohio and Rhode Island were simultaneous.

From 1991 to 1994, the white catfish increased in size by 16.5%, from 18 pounds, 14.08 ounces (Florida) to 22 pounds (California state record). On June 10, 1996, James D. Sanders caught the Georgia state record white catfish. It weighed 8 pounds, 10 ounces.

The USGS lists the white catfish as indigenous to Georgia.

From 1994 to June 10, 1996, the white catfish decreased in size by %, from 22 pounds (California state record and world record, 12 ounces (Rhode Island) to 8 pounds, 10 ounces (Georgia).

From 1994 to June 10, 1996, the white catfish decreased in size by 48%, from 16 pounds, 12 ounces (Rhode Island) to 8 pounds, 10 ounces (Georgia). The health of the ether is degrading rapidly, and the white catfish is on its way out of existence.

Florida and Georgia are right next to each other. The first documented white catfish in Florida was in 1954. The first documented white catfish in Georgia is from 1996. Why the forty-plus years between those examples?

Why does the USGS currently state “no record of the white catfish” in Georgia when there is a state record on the books for the species in Georgia in 1996, and, further, that the USGS lists the white catfish as indigenous to Georgia?

On August 4, 1996, Zachary Cross caught the New Hampshire state record white catfish. It weighed 5 pounds, 11 ounces.

There are no news accounts covering the only white catfish caught in the history of the state of New Hampshire, and which was awarded a state record. Why?

The first and only appearances of the white catfish in Georgia and New Hampshire in 1996 were simultaneous.

In 1996 or soon after, the white catfish disappeared from New Hampshire.

In 1996 or soon after, the white catfish disappeared from Georgia.

From June 10, 1996 to August 4, 1996, the white catfish decreased in size by 34.7%, from 8 pounds, 10 ounces (Georgia) to 5 pounds, 11 ounces (New Hampshire).

In 1998, the first New York state record white catfish weighed 10.5 pounds. The USGS documents the white catfish as indigenous to New York.

The USGS states that there is “no record of the white catfish” in New York state.

Why does the USGS state that there is no record of the white catfish in New York, when there is a state record for the white catfish in New York, and the USGS states that the white catfish is indigenous to New York?

From 1996 to 1998, the white catfish increased in size by 22%, from 8 pounds, 10 ounces (Georgia) to 10.5 pounds (New York

From 1998 to 2020, the New York state record white catfish increased in size by 14.2% from 1998 to 2020.

From 1998 or soon after to 2020, the white catfish disappeared from the environment in New York, and was absent from it for 22 years, until it reappeared there at a size 14% larger in 2020.

I believe that the white catfish manifested briefly in New York state in the late 1990’s and then was snuffed out of existence there for the 22 years until In 2020, white catfish literally “winked back into existence” in New York state, where the etheric environment had recovering in health to a point where the white catfish can once again manifest there.

In 1998, after 15 years of existence there, the white catfish disappeared from Arkansas.

In 1998, the disappearances of the white catfish from New York and Arkansas were simultaneous.

From 1998 to 2020, the New York state record white catfish increased in size by 14.2%, from 10 pounds, 8 ounces to 12 pounds.

In 2001, the USGS documented the last of its eleven examples of the white catfish in Nevada.

From 1998 to 2001, the white catfish is absent from the record anywhere in the world. It had been driven completely out of existence by low wavelength microwave radiation.

In 2002, Kentucky recorded its first-ever state record for the white catfish, at 1.78 pounds

If the white catfish is native to Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Vermont, Virginia, and West Virginia, then what is it doing here in Kentucky, in 2002?

It appears that, in 2002, the white catfish has independently manifested once again, this time in Kentucky, at a very low threshold weight of 1.78 pounds.

It also appears that, after being driven out of existence anywhere from 1998 to 2001 by low wavelength microwave radiation, the white catfish came back into existence in Kentucky in 2002 as the health of the ether shifted back to the positive under the influence of the simple, inexpensive Orgonite devices that Don Croft had invented two years earlier in 2000, based on previous work by Wilhelm Reich and Karl Hans Welz.

From 2002 to 2004, the Kentucky state record white catfish increased in size by 2.2%, from 1.78 pounds (Kentucky) to 1.82 pounds (Kentucky).

From 2004 to 2007, the white catfish increased in size by 184%, or almost tripled in size, from 1 pound, 13.2 ounces (Kentucky) to 5 pounds, 3 ounces (Kentucky).

From 2004 to 2007, the 184% increase in size of the Kentucky state record white catfish was 8,263% greater than its 2.2% increase in size from 2002 to 2004.

From 2004 to 2007, the 61.3% average annual increase in size of the Kentucky state record white catfish was 5,636% greater than its 1.1% average annual increase in size from 2002 to 2004

The growth of the Kentucky state record white catfish is increasing hyper-exponentially, going forward in time. That’s not scientifically possible, at least according to the obviously-false Orthodoxy which holds that organisms grow in increasingly smaller increments to a genetically-determined 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 its etheric environment.

In 2004, after a 28-year absence, a 14-pound, 4-ounce New Jersey state record white catfish was caught that was 30% larger than the previous record holder from 1976.

If the white catfish is native to New Jersey, why are there only two examples of it on the record, one in 1976 and one in 2004? And why is the 2004 record holder a third larger than that from 1976, when such records are usually broken by tiny margins?

In 2005, the world record white catfish was caught in California. It weighed 19.3 pounds.

If the white catfish is not indigenous to California, then why or how could the 2005 world record white catfish have been caught in California?

If the IGFA World Record white catfish was caught in California in 2005, then does the current California state record white catfish, from 19 years earlier in 1994, weigh a 14%-larger 22 pounds?

The USGS lists the white catfish as nonindigenous to California, where it has been observed 21 times from 1874 to present.

While the USGS lists the white catfish as indigenous to New Jersey, where it has been observed just once, in all history.

Why, or how has the white catfish been documented 21 times in California from 1874 to present, when it is not indigenous to California?

Why or how has the white catfish been documented just three times in New Jersey from 1874 to present, when it is purportedly indigenous to New Jersey?

From 2007 to 2016, the Kentucky state record white catfish increased in size by 42.4%, from 3.7 pounds to 5.27 pounds.

In 2013, the year I began writing this series of articles, entitled “Positive Changes That Are Occurring”, the white catfish suddenly “winked into existence” in Maryland.

In 2014, the white catfish reappeared in the environment in South Carolina for the first time in since 1986, at a 12-pound, 2.9 ounce weight 23% above the 9 pounds, 15 ounces at which it had disappeared.

On July 7, 2015, Danny shores caught the Maine state record white catfish. It weighed 6.69 pounds.

There are no media accounts documenting Danny Shores catching of the Maine state record white catfish. Why?

The USGS lists three examples of the white catfish in Maine from 1980 to 2015. The USGS does not list the white catfish as indigenous to Maine.

Maine have a state record white catfish, and three examples from 1980 to 2019, and yet the species is not listed as indigenous to Maine. Why?

On October 11, 2016, Ethen Vest caught the Kentucky state record white catfish. It weighed 5.27 pounds. The USGS does not list the white catfish as indigenous to Kentucky.

Why would a state in which a species is not indigenous have a state record for that species?

From 1970 to 1986, the USGS documented five examples of the white catfish.

Why would the USGS say a species with five examples over almost two decades was non-indigenous?

In 1970, the USGS documented the white catfish in Kentucky for the first time ever.

The nas.er.usgs.gov table from February 2022 says that the nonindigenous white catfish has been observed five times in Kentucky from 1970 to 1986.

The Kentucky state record white catfish weighed 5.27 pounds, and was caught by Ethen Vest in Guist Creek Lake on October 11, 2016.

In June 2017, an uncredited news.maryland.gov said “Record White Catfish Caught in Lower Potomac River”. Where, under the false guise of familiarity, the unnamed author omitted the word “state” from “state record”, and “Maryland” (the name of the state), both to make the subject far less searchable. That’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”.

Whenever an article is uncredited, it was by definition written by an Intelligence asset.

The subhead reads “Lexington Park Resident Sets Standard with 8.27-Pound Catch”.

The article goes on to say “The Maryland Department of Natural Resources confirmed a St. Mary’s County man has set a new state fishing record for white catfish. The fish was recognized as a game fish a few years ago, but until now nobody had broken the seven-pound minimum weight to be eligible for state records.”

That’s more than curious. In that, in February 2022, nas.er.usgs.gov said of the white catfish in Maryland: “MD First observed, 2019, last observed 20191 Tangier”.

Ah, wow, this is a key breakthrough. Here, in 2017, we can see the Feds claiming to have put the white catfish in the game fish category in Maryland “a few years” prior to a record being established, and five years later, in 2022, their official Fed USGS version is still that there was only one white catfish seen in the history of the state of Maryland, and it was on Tangier Island, in 2019. To this moment, the USGS has memory holed the 2017 Maryland state record white catfish.

So, why, pray, was the Maryland state record for white catfish only established in 2017, when they’d been documented there since 2013? The reason is that white catfish suddenly showed up in Maryland waters in 2013. The establishment of the record slow-plays the public’s awareness of the sudden appearance of the new species within the ecosystem, and then the ruse is played “oh, that record’s been on the books for years!”

Rather it is simply that the species “winked into existence” in Maryland waters in 2013, and four years later, was large enough to be counted as a mature fish.

The white catfish winked into existence in Maryland waters in 2013 because the etheric environment reached a level of health where that species could manifest there.

As you can see, the folks in charge are not your friends, and are lying to you about basically everything, including the white catfish in Maryland.

The news.maryland.gov article continues: “Jacob Vosburgh, 20, of Lexington Park, caught the fish recorded at 8.27 pounds June 1 in the lower Potomac River. The white catfish was 23 inches in length.”

In June 2018, an uncredited proptalk.com said “Cecil County Angler Breaks Maryland White Catfish Record”.

Any time an article is uncredited, it was by definition written by an Intelligence asset.

Here, the uncredited author used the general “breaks record” in place of the far more impactful percentage increase between the records. That’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”.

The article goes on to say “According to the Maryland DNR, a North East man broke the Chesapeake Division state record for white catfish in the early morning hours of June 3. Brian Dvorak, an avid night angler, caught the fish off Turkey Point near the mouth of the Elk River.

A Maryland Department of Natural Resources biologist confirmed the species and the fish was weighed on a certified scale at local grocer. Coming in at 9.61 pounds, Dvorak’s catch beat the previous record of 8.27 pounds, set in 2017, by 1.34 pounds. 2017 was the first year for the record in Maryland.”

In February 2022, nas.er.usgs.gov said of the white catfish in Maryland: “MD First observed, 2019, last observed 2019 1 Tangier”.

Wait, what? How come a lay person with too much time on their hands such as myself knows that there are at least two records of the white catfish in Maryland (the state records of 2017 and 2018), yet the folks at nas.er.usgs.gov, who purport to love them some fish like it’s their job, are saying there aren’t any white cafish in the state, at all?

The folks in charge are not your friends, and are lying to you about basically everything, including white catfish in Maryland.

In this case, they’re trying to cover up the fact that, from our perspective, the white catfish in Maryland suddenly “winked into existence” there in 2013.

The USGS says that the white catfish is not native to Maryland. If that’s the case, why did it suddenly show up there in 2013?

So we now know that nas.er.usgs.gov, which purports to love it some fish like it’s its taxpayer-funded job, currently says that there is no record of the white catfish in New York, while a lay researcher with too much time on his hands such as myself was able to find two examples, albeit over a couple or three decades.

And we’ve learned that the uncredited author from New York Upstate, who professes, albeit anonymously, to love them some fish like it’s their job, was lying when they were saying that white catfish were “relatively rare” in New York state. They’re not relatively rare, they are fantastically rare.

That’s because the folks in charge are not your friends, and are lying to you about basically everything, including white catfish in New York state.

In 2020, white catfish literally “winked back into existence” in New York state, where the etheric environment is recovering in health to a point where that organism can once again manifest there.

The existence of any organism is determined by the relative health of the etheric environment.

The size, fertility, longevity, and very existence of any organism varies directly with the health of its etheric environment.

In 2020, after being not being seen there for over twenty years, the white catfish “winked back into existence” in New York state in 2020.

The New York state record white catfish increased in size by 14.2% from 1998 to 2020. In regard to white catfish in New York state, nas.er.usgs.gov currently says: “no record of the white catfish”.

If the USGS says that the white catfish is indigenous to New York, and there are New York state records for the white catfish in 1998 and 2020, why does usgs.gov currently say that there is “no record of the white catfish” in New York state?

In 2021, the Connecticut state record and world record white catfish weighed 21 pounds, 3 ounces.

The white catfish was documented there just four times in Connecticut from 1986 to 1994, and then was absent from the record there for 17 years from 1994 to 2021, when it reappeared at a 21-pound, 3 ounce weight which was 70% larger than the previous 12-pound, 7.5-ounce record holder.

Why or how could the largest white catfish ever caught, in all history, in Connecticut in 2021, be 70% larger than the previous Connecticut state record holder and 10% larger than the previous 19.3-pound world record holder, when the white catfish is not native to Connecticut?

In February 2022, nas.er.usgs.gov said “NJ 1994 1994 1 Raritan”.

So we now know that the USGS, which purports to love it some fish like it’s its taxpayer-funded job, currently says that there was no record of the white catfish in New Jersey prior to 1994. While a lay researcher with too much time on their hands such as myself was quickly able to find three examples (1976, 1994, 2004).

The folk in charge are not your friends, and are lying to you about basically everything, including the white catfish.

As of December 2022, nas.er.usgs.gov’s map lists the white catfish as indigenous to Delaware.

As of December 2022, the state of Delaware does not list a white catfish state record.

Why does the state of Delaware not list a white catfish state record when nas.er.usgs.gov lists the white catfish as indigenous to Delaware?

As of December 2022, nas.er.usgs.gov lists the white catfish as indigenous to Massachusetts.

Why does the state of Massachusetts not list a white catfish state record when nas.er.usgs.gov lists the white catfish as indigenous to Delaware?

Why does the USGS currently state “no record of the white catfish” in Massachusetts when the USGS lists the white catfish as indigenous to Massachusetts?

In December 2022, nas.er.usgs.gov lists the white catfish as indigenous to Vermont.

Yet Vermont does not have a state record for the white catfish, and the USGS does not list any examples of it there. Why?

Jeff Miller, Libertyville, IL, December 6, 2022

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