In 2003, after a 23-year absence from this plane of existence, the swordfish reappeared simultaneously in the Pacific Ocean, the Atlantic Ocean and the Gulf of Mexico

“The Party told you to reject the evidence of your eyes and ears. It was their final, most essential command.”

― From “1984”, by George Orwell, 1949

I’m not even done with “Swordfish”, yet…as the data sets continue to grow and expand, the picture will become clearer and clearer. Not that it’s not plenty clear enough already.

But I wanted to get this to press.

Once I’m done (for the moment) with swordfish, I’ll integrate the swordfish data into the larger body of billfish data, and we’ll see what we see. I’ll be providing a hard copy of “Billfish” to my mailing list at that time. For now, here’s a copy of “Swordfish”.

Then I’ll move to another species, I daresay tuna, and we’ll see what trends map across species, and across various regions.

Going forward, honest fisherfolk, or perhaps even honest Marine Biologists - if any may be found - will expand this dataset.

Remember, when Confidence games collapse, they do so in a rush, like a house of cards.

SWORDFISH DATA

In 1903, the record swordfish taken off Catalina Island in Southern California weighed 150 pounds.

(Record swordfish, Catalina Island, California, 1903, 150 pounds)

In 2021, the Florida state record swordfish weighed 767.8 pounds.

(Florida state record swordfish, 2021, 767.8 pounds)

From 1903 to 2021, the swordfish increased in size by 411%, or by well over five times, from 150 pounds to 767.8 pounds.

Now let’s look at the pictures next to one another:

(The record swordfish from 1903 (Catalina Island, California) and 2021 (Florida)

“The Party told you to reject the evidence of your eyes and ears. It was their final, most essential command.”

― From “1984”, by George Orwell, 1949

From 1903 to to 1979, there are no appearances of the swordfish in the Atlantic Ocean or the Gulf of Mexico - nowhere except Catalina Island in Southern California. From 1903 to 1979, the waters off Santa Catalina island in Southern California were the only place in the world that swordfish, or billfish of any kind manifested.

In 1915, Colonel John Sterns and George Farnsworth caught a swordfish off Santa Catalina Island in Southern California. It weighed 292 pounds

From 1903 to 1915, the swordfish increased in size by 94%, or close to doubled in size, from 150 pounds (Santa Catalina Island, California) to 292 pounds (Santa Catalina Island, California). That’s an average annual increase in size of 7.8% per year over each of those 12 years.

From 1903 to 1915, the waters off Santa Catalina island in Southern California were the only place in the world that swordfish, or billfish of any kind manifested.

On July 20, 1917, the world record swordfish was caught by A.C. Parsons off Catalina Island in Southern California. It weighed 422 pounds. (Add to swordfish and billfish data).

From 1915 to 1917, the world record swordfish increased in size by 45%, from 292 pounds (Catalina Island, California) to 422 pounds (Catalina Island, California). That’s an average annual increase in size of 24.5% per year over each of those two years.

The 24.5% average annual increase in size of the swordfish from 1915 to 1917 was 214% greater, or more than triple its 7.8% average annual increase in size from 1903 to 1915.

The growth rate of the swordfish 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 the health of its etheric environment.

The etheric environment in Southern California was improving hyper-exponentially from 1903 to 1917.

From 1903 to 1917, the waters off Santa Catalina island in Southern California were the only place in the world that swordfish, or billfish of any kind manifested.

Sometime in the 1930’s, the world record swordfish was caught off Catalina Island in Southern California. It weighed 571 pounds.

A current Wikipedia article contains this picture of a postcard made from a photograph of it:

(The picture’s caption reads “World’s Record Broadbill Swordfish caught at Catalina Island, California. Weight 571 lbs.”)

From 1917 to sometime in the 1930’s, the world record swordfish increased in size by 35.3%, from 422 pounds (Catalina Island, California) to 571 pounds (Catalina Island, California).

The swordfish suddenly more than tripled in size from 1915 to 1917, and then increased in size by only a third from 1917 to sometime in the 1930’s. The increase in size is slowing, exponentially, as the damage done to the ether by early technologies such as the telegraph, telephone, and radio steadily poison the etheric environment to an ever-greater degree.

From 1903 to sometime in the 1930’s, the waters off Santa Catalina island in Southern California were the only place in the world that swordfish, or billfish of any kind manifested.

On July 6, 1958, an unspecified “record” swordfish was caught off San Clemente island in California. It weighed 377 pounds, 12 ounces. Can you see how what type of record it was has been obfuscated? They far larger world record holder from the 1930’s has been memory-holed. Wikipedia - and everyone else - are all steadfastly pretending that it never existed.

From the 1930’s to 1958, the swordfish decreased in size by 34%, from 571 pounds (San Clemente Island, California) to 377 pounds, 12 ounces (San Clemente Island, California). Here, in 1958, television is in full swing, as are high tension power lines, and all manner of other “modern technologies”, all cumulatively poisoning the ether to an ever-greater degree, with clear, deleterious impact upon the swordfish.

From 1958 to 2003, the swordfish increased in size by 19.8%, from 377 pounds, 12 ounces (San Clemente Island, California) to 452 pounds, 8 ounces (San Clemente Island California). Here in 2003, with 2012 hoving into view, and the vibrational rate of the Earth continuing to increase, the swordfish has gone from decreasing in size by a third from the ’30’s to the late ’50’s to increasing in size by close to a fifth from 1958 to 2003.

In 1978, the swordfish appeared in the waters off Florida for the first time. It was the first time the swordfish - or a billfish of any kind, for that matter - had been documented anywhere outside San Clemente Island, California.

In May 1978, after the a twenty year absence from this plane of existence by the swordfish, Stephen Stanford caught the first Florida state record swordfish. It weighed 612.75 pounds.

There are no Florida state records for the swordfish prior to 1978. The swordfish is then absent from the record in Florida, or anywhere in the Atlantic, for the next 25 years, until it began to be caught once again in Florida in 2003.

On October 11, 1978, just five months after the swordfish’s first-ever appearance in the Atlantic Ocean, off Florida, James Alexander caught the first-ever Virginia state record swordfish. It weighed 381 pounds, 8 ounces.

From May 1978 to January 2021, the Florida state record swordfish increased in size by 25.3%, from 612.75 pounds to 767.8 pounds.From 1978 to 1979, the swordfish decreased in size by 28%, from 612.75 pounds (Florida) to 441.5 pounds (North Carolina).

In 1978, the Atlantic Ocean was the only place in off the East coast of the United States was the world that the swordfish existed. It was almost a third smaller off Virginia than it was off Florida because the etheric environment down in the Keys was that much healthier than it was off the heavily-populated and technology-ridden East Coast of the United States.

In 1979, the first-ever North Carolina state record swordfish weighed 441.5 pounds.

From 1978 to 1979, the swordfish decreased in size by 28%, from 612.75 pounds (Florida) to 441.5 pounds (North Carolina).

From 1978 to 1980, the swordfish decreased in size by 49.4%, from 612.75 pounds (Florida) to 310 pounds (Louisiana).

In just three years, the swordfish appeared virtually simultaneously in the Atlantic Ocean and the Gulf of Mexico (Florida and Virginia in 1978, North Carolina in 1979, and Louisiana in 1980).

From 1978 to 2012, the swordfish is absent from the record in Virginia.

From 1979 to 2022, the North Carolina state record swordfish increased in size by 14%, from 441.5 pounds to 504.5 pounds.

From 1979 to 1980, the swordfish decreased in size by 29.7%, from 441.5 pounds (North Carolina) to 310 pounds (Louisiana)

In July 1980, just two years after it first came into existence in the Atlantic off Florida, Tom Dentin caught the first Louisiana state record swordfish. It weighed 310 pounds. There no Louisiana state records for the swordfish prior to 1980.

Here we see nearly-simultaneous appearances of the swordfish in the Atlantic Ocean (Florida in 1978, North Carolina in 1979) and the Gulf of Mexico (Louisiana in 1980).

In July 1980, the swordfish manifested in the Gulf of Mexico for the first time in history in the waters off Louisiana at a threshold weight of 310 pounds. It then absent from the record disappeared in the Gulf for the next 23 years, when it reappeared in the waters off Alabama at a lower threshold weight of 225 pounds.

After briefly winking into existence in the Atlantic and the Gulf of Mexico, the swordfish is just as quickly snuffed back out.

From 1980 to 2003, there are no account of the swordfish anywhere in the record. The health of the ether was degraded enough by technology of all stripes that the swordfish, or billfish of any kind, for that matter, could simply not exist within this 3D environment.

On September 30, 2003, after a 23-year absence from this material plane, the current California state record swordfish was caught off Catalina Island in Southern California, by David M. Dernholm. It weighed 452 pounds, 8 ounces. Well, if that’s true, then why isn’t the 571-pound world record swordfish taken off Catalina Island in the 1930’s mentioned? It’s been memory-holed. Excised from existence by the folks obscuring all the rest of the data that I’m elucidating here, to their ruinous detriment.

On October 21, 2003, Terry Bunn caught the Alabama State record swordfish. It weighed 225 pounds. There are no records of the swordfish in Alabama prior to 2003.

In 2003, the Stanczyk team in Islamorada, Florida caught their first swordfish. Inthebite.com said “Modern deep drop, daytime swordfishing is attributed to the Stanczyk team fishing out of Bud and Mary’s Marina in Islamorada, Florida”. I was not able to locate any stories documenting the weight at which the swordfish first came back into existence in the waters off Florida in 2003. We’ll eventually learn their weights.

Inthebite.com said “Modern deep drop, daytime swordfishing is attributed to the Stanczyk team fishing out of Bud and Mary’s Marina in Islamorada, Florida”. It’s a gymnastic plausible deniability excuse trying to explain away the sudden return of the swordfish to Florida after a 25 year absence.

In 2003, after a 23-year absence from this plane of existence, the swordfish reappeared simultaneously in the Pacific Ocean (452 pounds, 8 ounces (California), the Atlantic Ocean (Florida, dates and weights obfuscated) and the Gulf of Mexico (Alabama, 225 pounds). The two instances we have dates for were within one month of each other, in September and October.

That compares notably to the respective first appearances of the swordfish in the Atlantic Ocean (Florida, 1978) and the Gulf of Mexico (Louisiana, 1980).

For any Coincidence theorists huffing and puffing in the readership that the Californians learned “modern deep drop daytime sword fishing” from the Stanczyk’s in Florida, I’ll have to have them go back to the beginning and look at the daytime swordfish record pictures from San Clemente from early in the 20th Century.

Can you see how the propaganda works when it’s off by itself, but collapses under cross-examination?

From 2003 to 2006, the swordfish in the Gulf of Mexico increased in size by 99%, or doubled in size, from 225 pounds (Alabama) to 448 pounds (Louisiana). That’s an average annual increase in size of 33% per year over each of those three years.

In 2005, the Gulf of Mexico record swordfish weighed 350 pounds.

From 2003 to 2005, swordfish in the Gulf of Mexico increased in size by 56%, from 225 pounds (Alabama) to 350 pounds (Alabama). That’s an average annual increase in size of 28% per year over each of those two years.

From 2005 to 2006, the Gulf of Mexico record swordfish increased in size by 28%, from 350 pounds (Alabama) to 448 pounds (Louisiana).

In August 2007, Scott Cochran caught the first-ever Mississippi state record swordfish. It weighed 75 pounds.There are no Mississippi state records for the swordfish prior to 2007.

From 2006 to 2007, swordfish in the Gulf of Mexico decreased in size by 83%, from 448 pounds (Louisiana) to 75 pounds (Mississippi).

The swordfish in the Gulf of Mexico suddenly doubled in size from 2003 to 2006, and then just as suddenly decreased in size by 83% in just one year, from 2006 to 2007.

2006 was the apogee of the Death-energy based storm steering and augmentation system that drove a massively-amplified hurricane Katrina around in the Gulf of Mexico like a bumper car and plowed it directly into New Orleans.

(Hurricane Katrina, pumped up and steered into New Orleans like a bumper car, 2006)

From 2007 to 2017, the Mississippi state record swordfish increased in size by 223%, or well more than tripled in size, from 75 pounds to 309.9 pounds.

In 2011, the Texas state record swordfish weighed 341 pounds. There are no records for the swordfish in Texas prior to 2011.

From 2007 to 2011, swordfish in the Gulf of Mexico increased in size by 354%, from 75 pounds to 341 pounds (Mississippi vs. Texas).

Wait, what? The swordfish in the Gulf of Mexico suddenly well more than quadrupled in size from 2007 to 2011, in just four years. Here we see the great Death energy matrix broken by the slow, steady, widespread and ever-increasing distribution of simple, inexpensive Orgonite devices.

I’ll have to go back into the old Etheric Warrior records…there was a gifter doing a lot of work down in that neck of the woods, whose name I cannot recall at this moment. They were on the Gulf coast, I believe it may have been in Mississippi.

From 2011 to 2017, the swordfish in the Gulf of Mexico increased in size by 29%, from 341 pounds (Texas) to 242 pounds, 8.64 ounces (Mississippi).

From 2011 to 2013, the Texas state record swordfish increased in size by 45%, from 341 pounds to 493 pounds.

On September 1, 2012, after a 34-year absence from the record there, the Virginia state record swordfish was caught by Joseph T. Harris. It weighed 446 pounds.

From 2012 to 2019, the Virginia state record swordfish increased in size by 4.5%, from 446 pounds to 466 pounds.

That’s an average annual increase in size of .6% per year over each of those seven years.

From 2011 to 2012, the swordfish increased in size by 30.7%, from 341 pounds (Texas) to 446 pounds (Virginia).

From 2013 to 2017, the swordfish in the Gulf of Mexico decreased I size by 51%, from 493 pounds (Texas) to 242 pounds, 8.64 ounces (Mississippi).

From 2013 to 2016, the swordfish in Texas decreased in size by 16.4%, from 493 pounds (state record) to 412 pounds (unrestricted state record).

From August 2013 to July 2016, the Texas unrestricted state record swordfish increased in size by 9.9%, from 374.8 pounds to 412 pounds.

From 2013 to 2016, the annual increase in size of the swordfish in Texas was 21.3% (16.4% plus 9.9% divided by 2).

From 2013 to 2016, the average annual increase in size of the swordfish in Texas was 7.1% per year over each of those three years.

From 2016 to 2017, the swordfish in the Gulf of Mexico decreased in size by 41.3%, from 412 pounds (Texas unrestricted) to 242 pounds (Mississippi), 8.64 ounces

In 2017, the Mississippi state record swordfish weighed 242 pounds, 8.64 ounces

In January 2021, the Florida state record swordfish weighed 767.8 pounds.

In 2021, the Mississippi state record swordfish weighed 309.9 pounds.

From 2017 to 2021, the IGFA world male junior record swordfish increased in size by 33%, from 212.4 kilograms (468.2 pounds) to 282.8 kilograms (623.4 pounds).

From 2017 to 2021, the Mississippi state record swordfish/swordfish in the Gulf of Mexico increased in size by 27.7%, from 242 pounds, 8.64 ounces to 309.9 pounds.

From 2017 to 2021, the increases in size of the IGFA world male junior record swordfish and the Missississippi state record swordfish were statistically nearly identical (33% vs. 27.7%).

In both 2017 and 2021, all-time swordfish records were set in both Mississippi and New Zealand.

Those are what’s known as “mapping data points”, proving that the size, fertility and longevity of any organism vary directly with the health of its etheric environment.

From 2017 to 2018, the swordfish increased in size by 105%, or more than doubled in size, from 468.2 pounds (IGFA world male junior record) to 961.6 pounds (Australian record).

From April 2018 to May 2018, the largest swordfish ever caught in Australia increased in size by 24%, from 349 kilograms (769 pounds) to 436.2 kilograms (961.6 pounds).

From 2019 to 2021, the Virginia state record swordfish increased in size by 28.1%, from 466 pounds to 597 pounds.

That’s an average annual increase in size of 14.5% per year over each of those two years.

The 14.5% average annual increase in size of the Virginia state record swordfish from 2019 to 2021 was 2,316% greater than the .6% increase documented in the species there from 2012 to 2019.

The size of the Virginia state record swordfish is increasing 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 varies directly with that of its etheric environment.

From 2021 to 2022, the swordfish in the Atlantic Ocean decreased in size by 34%, from 767.8 pounds (Florida) to 504.5 pounds (North Carolina).

In July 2021, the swordfish winked into existence in the Atlantic Ocean off the state of Maryland for the first time in history. It was caught by Peter Schulz, and weighed 301 pounds.

The news.maryland.gov article that I got that data from goes on to say “Annapolis resident Peter Schultz, 36, is the first record holder for the Atlantic division – Swordfish (Xiphias gladius). Schultz caught the 301-pound swordfish while participating in the Big Fish Classic Tournament, landing the record-breaking catch roughly 50 miles offshore at Washington Canyon.”

Record-breaking catch, wait, what?

There are no swordfish records in the state of Maryland prior to 2021. Here, the uncredited Intelligence operative from news.maryland.gov bald-fadedly lies that some record was broken, when, in fact, there was no record to be broken. I have exposed their duplicity by using what was known in the old days as “fact checking”.

News.maryland.gov attributed Maryland’s first-ever swordfish record the fact that “Deep dropping for swordfish has gained in popularity over the last few years, resulting in more catches of large swordfish.”

Where the largest (and only) swordfish in the history of the state of Maryland has been walked back to merely “large”, and included with numerous-but-unnamed others.

Since we’re studying the subject in a scholarly way, we know that, “Modern deep drop, daytime swordfishing is attributed to the Stanczyk team fishing out of Bud and Mary’s Marina in Islamorada, Florida”. And we know, further, that, in 2003 the Stanczyk team in Islamorada, Florida caught their first swordfish there.

I have once again exposed the duplicity of Maryland.gov by using what was known in the old days as “fact checking”.

If you think that it took almost twenty years for the technique of deep dropping for swordfish to make it from Florida to Maryland, there’s a bridge for sale in Brooklyn that I think it might profit you to look at.

We’ve now seen the range of the swordfish in the Atlantic move from its first manifestation there in Florida in 1978, to North Carolina in 1979, to Maryland in 2021.

From August 2021 to September 2022, the Maryland State record swordfish increased in size by 23.4%, from 318.5 pounds to 393 pounds. In September 2022, Cary Carney caught the North Carolina state record swordfish. It weighed 504.5 pounds.

Jeff Miller, Libertyville, IL, November 14, 2022

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