In 2012, the giant lacewing reappeared in the environment in Arkansas. Eleven years later, in 2023, Penn State's Michael Skvarla said that it was “interesting” and that he had “forgot about it.”

“A long habit of not thinking a thing wrong, gives it a superficial appearance of being right, and raises at first a formidable outcry in defense of custom. But the tumult soon subsides. Time makes more converts than reason.”

From “Common Sense”, by Thomas Paine, 1776

2012, from “The Etheric Origin of Species and Microwave Radiation as a Driver of Their Extinction”, by Jeff Miller.

2012

SUMMARY

2012 was the year that the Mayan “long count” ended. We’ve come to the end of what the Hindu’s referred to as the “Age of Iron”, and have just transitioned into a new Golden Age.

AI says “Kalyug (or Kali Yuga) is the fourth and final epoch in the grand cycle of ages in Hindu cosmology. Often referred to as the “Age of Darkness” or “Iron Age,” it is traditionally characterized by a profound decline in morality, righteousness (dharma), and spiritual awareness.”

From 2012 to 2013, the respective 3% (average) and 9.6% (average) increases in water clarity in Lake Tahoe and Caspian Lake, Vermont occurred simultaneously.

From 2012 to 2013, the respective 3.8%, 4.2%, 5% and 5.6% (average) decreases in severe thunderstorms and tornadoes in Iowa, severe thunderstorm warnings in the National Weather Service’s Aberdeen, South Dakota forecast area, earthquakes of 4.0 or larger in Oregon and Washington compared to the the three decades from 1969 to 1999 and lightning deaths in the United States all occurred simultaneously and were statistically similar.

From 2012 to 2013, the respective .3% (average), 1.2% (average), 4.5% (average), and 20.75% (average) increases in the size of the blue catfish in Ohio, the dog snapper in the Gulf of Mexico off Texas, the blue catfish in Georgia and the Tiger shark in the Gulf of Mexico off Mississippi; the 6.8% (average) increase in the volume of bigeye tuna production in the Philippines and the 12.5% (average) increase in butterfly numbers on Hope Farm in the U.K. all occurred simultaneously.

In 2012, the first verifiable swordfish in the history of fishing in Virginia was caught in the Atlantic Ocean; the first verifiable yellowfin tuna in the history of fishing in Louisiana was caught in the Gulf of Mexico; the first verifiable West Virginia state record blue catfish was caught in the Ohio River; the second blue catfish in the history of fishing in Maryland was caught in the Potomac River.

In 2012, after an absence of four years, the blue catfish reappeared in Maryland in the Potomac River; after an absence of over seventy years, the sturgeon reappeared in the James River in Richmond, Virginia; after an absence of some indeterminate period of time, the blue catfish reappeared simultaneously in West Virginia in the Ohio River and in Kansas in the Missouri River, the blue marlin reappeared in the Pacific Ocean off Australia, the freshwater drum reappeared in Wyoming in (location), the yellowfin tuna reappeared in the Gulf of Mexico off Louisiana, the swordfish reappeared in the Atlantic Ocean off Virginia, and the giant lacewing reappeared in Arkansas, where none of these species had ever been documented previously.

Prior to 2012, the yellowfin tuna is absent from the record in the United States.

It had been driven out of existence by the low-wavelength microwave radiation from what we collectively refer to as technology.

From 2012 to 2025, the verifiable Kansas state record blue catfish increased in size by an annual average of 1.4%.

From 2012 to 2025, the verifiable Kansas state record blue catfish increased in size by 17.8%, or by almost one fifth, from 102.8 pounds to 121.1 pounds.

Since this is a quantum increase in size, which is not explainable by Charles Darwin’s theory of natural selection, we must conclude that, in 2012, after being caught and killed, the blue catfish was absent from the record in Kansas, until it reappeared there in 2025 at a weight of 121.1 pounds, which was 17.8% larger, or almost one fifth larger than the 102.8 pounds at which it had last manifested there in 2012.

From 2012 to 2023, the verified Maryland state record blue catfish increased in size by an annual average of 2.12%.

From 2012 to 2023, the 2.12% average annual increase in size of the verified Maryland state record blue catfish was 51.4% greater, or more than half again greater than the 1.4% average annual increase in size of the verified Kansas state record blue catfish.

From 2012 to 2023, the 2.12% average annual increase in size of the verified Maryland state record blue catfish was 66.9% less, or two thirds less than its 6.4% average annual increase from 2008 to 2012.

From 2012 to 2023, the verified Maryland state record blue catfish increased in size by 23.4%, or by almost one fourth, from 84.28 pounds (Jones) to 104 pounds (Spagnola)

This is an exponential increase in size which cannot be explained by Charles Darwin’s theory of natural selection.

From 2012 to 2022, there are just four verifiable examples of the blue catfish in West Virginia (2012, 2014, 2016 and 2022).

That’s roughly one every two years, which is rarer than sightings of Sasquatch or the Great Orm of Loch Ness.

From 2012 to 2022, the verified West Virginia state record blue catfish increased in size by an annual average of 3.8%.

From 2012 to 2022, the verified West Virginia state record blue catfish increased in size by 37.7%, or by more than one third, from 44.5 pounds (Foster, Ohio River) to 61.28 pounds (Carver, Kanawha River).

From 2012 to 2014, the verified West Virginia state record blue catfish in the Ohio River increased in length by an annual average of 4.4%.

From 2012 to 2014, the verified West Virginia state record blue catfish in the Ohio River increased in size by an annual average of 9.5%.

From 2012 to 2014, the verified West Virginia state record blue catfish in the Ohio River increased in size by 19%, or by almost one fifth, from 44.5 pounds to 52.95 pounds.

Wvmetronews.com’s Chris Lawrence described it as “bested the previous record”.

Where the general “bested” obscures the quantum 19% increase in size of the blue catfish in West Virginia from 2012 to 2014.

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

From 2012 to 2014, the verified West Virginia state record blue catfish in the Ohio River increased in length by 8.8%, from 43.9 inches to 47.75 inches.

2012 was the year that the Mayan “long count” ended.

We’ve come to the end of what the Hindu’s referred to as the “Age of Iron”, and have just transitioned into a new Golden Age.

AI says “Kalyug (or Kali Yuga) is the fourth and final epoch in the grand cycle of ages in Hindu cosmology. Often referred to as the “Age of Darkness” or “Iron Age,” it is traditionally characterized by a profound decline in morality, righteousness (dharma), and spiritual awareness.”

In 2012, the greatest Secchi measurement at Caspian Lake in Vermont was 8.2 meters.

From 2012 to 2013, the verified Ohio state record blue catfish increased in size by .3% (average).

From 2012 to 2013, the dog snapper in the Gulf of Mexico increased in size by 1.2% (average).

From 2012 to 2013, the water clarity in California’s Lake Tahoe increased by 3% (average).

From 2012 to 2013, severe thunderstorms and tornadoes in Iowa decreased by 3.8% (average).

From 2012 to 2013, severe thunderstorm warnings in the National Weather Service’s Aberdeen, South Dakota forecast area decreased by 4.2% (average).

From 2012 to 2013, the verified Georgia state record blue catfish increased in size by 4.5% (average).

From 2012 to 2013, earthquakes of 4.0 or larger in Oregon and Washington decreased by 5% (average) compared to the the three decades from 1969 to 1999.

From 2012 to 2013, lightning deaths in the United States decreased by 5.6% (average).

From 2012 to 2013, the respective 3.8%, 4.2%, 5% and 5.6% (average) decreases in severe thunderstorms and tornadoes in Iowa, severe thunderstorm warnings in the National Weather Service’s Aberdeen, South Dakota forecast area, earthquakes of 4.0 or larger in Oregon and Washington compared to the the three decades from 1969 to 1999 and lightning deaths in the United States occurred simultaneously and were statistically similar.

From 2012 to 2013, the volume of bigeye tuna production in the Philippines increased by 6.8% (average).

From 2012 to 2013, butterfly numbers on Hope Farm in the U.K. increased by 12.5% (average).

From 2012 to 2013, the size of the tiger shark in the Gulf of Mexico off Mississippi increased by 20.75% (average).

On March 9, 2012, John Nichols caught the first verifiable Alabama state record blue catfish in Holt Reservoir. It weighed 120 pounds, 4 ounces.

Tuscaloosa News Senior Writer Robert DeWitt said it was “the new state record”, where, under the false guise of familiarity, Robert redacted “Alabama”.

The article goes on to say “The big fish easily beat the old state record and previous rod and reel world record held by William P. McKinley of Elkmont of 111 pounds. It was caught from Wheeler Reservoir, on July 5, 1996.”

Where the biggest blue catfish in the history of fishing in Alabama was walked back to merely “big”.

And where Senior Writer Robert DeWitt has deviously slipped in the fact that Nichols’ fish was not just the, er, “state record”, but, even moreso, the world record.

The largest in the history of the world.

And, big problem for Tuscaloosa New Senior Writer Robert DeWitt, I fact-checked his claim about there being a previous record in 1996, and there are no contemporary news accounts documenting it, nor are there any photographs of the fish, or of erstwhile world-record holder William P. McKinley.

erstwhile - adjective - former

Nope, Robert DeWitt and his employer, the Tuscaloosa News have put forward a fabricated state record fish, part of a larger Confidence game to obscure the fact that the species had been driven out of existence by the low-wavelength microwave radiation from what we collectively refer to as technology.

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

Here’s a picture of Robert DeWitt, in a Satanic-purple shirt, and where his left eye is withered and adrift.

Robert DeWitt
(The Tuscaloosa News Robert DeWitt)

Here’s a picture of actor Victor Wong from “Big Trouble in Little China”, from 1986, with the same condition.

Victor Wong
(Victor Shen from “Big Trouble in Little China”, from 1986)

In 2012, after an absence of some indeterminate period of time, the blue catfish reappeared in Alabama in Holt Reservoir on the Black Warrior River, as the health of the ether improved to the point where the species could once again manifest within it.

Per Wikipedia, “The Holt Lock and Dam is a lock built on the Black Warrior River near Holt, Alabama in Tuscaloosa County”.

It weighed 120 pounds, 4 ounces, and was the only documented example of the blue catfish in the history of fishing in Alabama. It was the first blue catfish state record in the history of Alabama.

Further, it was also the world record, which means that it was the largest example of the blue catfish ever documented, anywhere.

As you can see on this USGS map, the blue catfish is native to Alabama.

Well, if that’s true, then why are there no verifiable examples of the blue catfish prior to 2012?

It is true, that the blue catfish is native to Alabama.

It’s just that the USGS map for the species documents its range prior to its being driven out of existence by the low-wavelength microwave radiation from what we collectively refer to as technology.

In 2012, BioOne published “Gulf-Wide Decreases in the Size of Large Coastal Sharks”.

When, in fact, from 2010 to 2016, the verified Mississippi state record tiger shark increased in size by 124.5%, or by more than one and a half times, from 173 pounds, 12 ounces (Dwayne Armes) to 390 pounds (David Rogers).

As you can see, the general “Gulf-Wide Decreases n the Size of Large Coastal Sharks” is an example of the propaganda technique known as “the big lie”.

It has been put forward by the propagandists at the Controlled-Opposition mouthpiece BioOne because they know that the key to any successful Confidence game is misdirection.

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

In 2012, the second blue catfish in the history of fishing in Maryland was caught in the Potomac River.

In 2012, per fishinoc.com’s Scott Lenox, Ed Jones caught the Maryland state record blue catfish which weighed 84.28 pounds in the Potomac River.

There’s a picture of Ed with the fish.

Maryland describes them as an “invasive species”.

Where did the blue catfish invade from, pray, and when, and how?

In 2012, the verified Maryland state record blue catfish caught by Ed Jones is not included in the USGS’s eleven examples of the blue catfish in Maryland.

Why?

In 2012, the first swordfish in the history of fishing in Virginia was caught in the Atlantic Ocean.

In 2012, the first yellowfin tuna in the history of fishing in Louisiana was caught in the Gulf of Mexico.

In September 2012, Mark A. Foster caught a verifiable West Virginia state record blue catfish in the Ohio River. It weighed 44.5 pounds and was 43.9 inches long.

There’s a picture of Mark with the fish.

An uncredited author from the West Virginia DNR said “Foster’s catch establishes a new West Virginia record for length and weight. His catch breaks his own 2011 record catch of a 32.28-pound blue catfish. The previous length record was a 42.25-inch blue catfish caught by Lynn Lange in 2009.”

The only trouble is, there are no contemporary news articles documenting Mark Foster’s 2011 state record blue catfish, nor are there any photographs of the fish.

Ergo, Mark A. Foster is a generational Satanist Freemason, working with his buddies at the West Virginia DNR.

Further, there are no there are no contemporary news articles documenting Lynn Lang’s purported 2009 West Virginia state length record blue catfish, nor are there any photographs of the fish.

Here, the West Virginia DNR has told two different gigantic, bald-faced lies, and Mark A. Foster is playing the straight man on one of them. While the subconscious of the

Coincidence theorist reader cannot conceive that the West Virginia Department of Natural Resources and Mark A. Foster could be, yes, conspiring with one another in this way.

I have exposed the duplicity of Mark A. Foster and the West Virginia DNR by using what was known in the old days as “fact checking”.

Here’s Mark A. Foster’s picture, proudly sporting the team colors with a Satanic-purple hat and a Satanic-green shirt, and where he’s pointedly holding the fish with his left hand, and inclining his head for emphasis to accentuate his left eye.

That’s because Mark is letting the faithful know that he is a follower of the Left-Hand Path.

Mark A. Foster
(Mark A. Foster)

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

They are all related to one another through the maternal bloodline. Generational Satanists 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 recognizing that you have one.

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

How long do you think that these people have left in power, now?

Please consider doing what you can to speed the transition.

On September 27, 2012, Visit Manhattan Kansas on Facebook said "KDPWT has officially recognized a NEW RECORD! A 102.8 lb blue catfish caught by Rob Stanley of Olathe beat the previous record by more than 8 pounds. It was a 40 minute battle- and after the weigh-in the fish was released back to the river. In case you were curious.

Where the general “new record” redacts the specific “Kansas state record”, and where the specific margin between the records, the weight of the previous record, name of the person who caught the previous record, and the year of the previous record have all been redacted.

The uncredited author put “new record” in block capitals and followed it with a hand-waving exclamation point to distract.

Only trouble is, there is no previous Kansas state record blue catfish.

The uncredited Intelligence operative from Visit Manhattan Kansas has created a fabricated state record fish. It is part of a larger Confidence game to obscure the fact that the blue catfish had been driven out of existence in Kansas by the low-wavelength microwave radiation from what we collectively refer to as technology, and had just reappeared there in 2012 as the health of the ether improved to the point where the species could once again manifest within it.

In September 2012, the reappearances of the blue catfish in West Virginia and Kansas occurred simultaneously.

In 2012, after an absence of some indeterminate period of time, the blue catfish reappeared in Kansas in the Missouri River, as the health of the ether improved to the point where the species could once again manifest within it.

Robert Stanley caught it, killed it, had it certified as the Kansas state record, and ate it.

Here’s a picture of Robert, where he’s pointedly cradling the fish with his left arm. You’re going to want to remember that.

Michael is letting the faithful know that he is a follower of the Left-Hand Path.

Robert Stanley Blue Catfish
(Robert Stanley with the Kansas state record blue catfish, 2012)

It would remain absent for more than a decade, until it reappeared there in 2025 at a weight of 121.1 pounds, which was 18.3 pounds greater, or 17.8% greater, or almost one fifth greater than the 102.8 pounds at which it had last manifested there in 2012.

With just one jerk of a barbed hook, Robert eradicated the peaceful, fantastically-rare creature from the environment for a period of over ten years.

With each example such as this, we can see just how key that the Illuminist fetish of sport fishing is to their overarching agenda of species eradication.

That’s not to imply that all people who fish are Illuminists.

But Robert Stanley certainly is.

In 2012 after an absence of some indeterminate period of time, the blue catfish reappeared in West Virginia in the Ohio River, where it had never been documented previously, as the health of the ether improved to the point where the species could once again manifest within it.

It weighed 44.5 pounds and was 43.9 inches long.

Mark A. Foster caught it, killed it, had it certified as the first verifiable West Virginia state record blue catfish, and ate it.

Fantastically, the previous West Virginia state record blue catfish, from 2011, which the West Virginia Department of Natural Resources attributes to Mark A. Foster cannot be verified by contemporary news articles or photographs, and thus is a fabricated state record fish, part of a larger Confidence game to obscure the fact that the blue catfish had been driven out of existence by the low-wavelength microwave radiation from what we collectively refer to as technology, and also to rebut the fact that the species had just reappeared in the Ohio River in West Virginia after an absence of some indeterminate period of time.

It also exposes the fact that Mark A. Foster was sent out to find and kill the blue catfish the instant it reappeared in the Ohio River in West Virginia. Which he did.

He went every day, hunting for it remorselessly, nay, gleefully.

And, with just one jerk of a barbed hook, the peaceful, fantastically-rare creature was eradicated from the environment for a period of two years.

With each example such as this, we can see just how key that the Illuminist fetish of sport fishing is to their overarching agenda of species eradication.

That’s not to imply that all people who fish are Illuminists.

But Mark A. Foster certainly is.

In 2012, after an absence of four years, the blue catfish reappeared in Maryland in the Potomac River, as the health of the ether improved to the point where the species could once again manifest within it.

Ed Jones caught it, had it certified as the first-ever Maryland state record, and ate it.

It weighed 84.28 pounds, which was 25.6% greater, or more than one fourth greater than the 67.1 pounds at which it had last manifested there in 2008.

That is an exponential increase in size which cannot be explained by Charles Darwin’s theory of natural selection.

Charles Darwin’s theory of natural selection is false.

The truth is that the origin of species is etheric.

It would remain absent from the Potomac River for eleven years.

With just one jerk of a barbed hook, the peaceful, fantastically-rare creature was eradicated from the environment for a period of over a decade.

With each example such as this, we can see just how key that the Illuminist fetish of sport fishing is to their overarching agenda of species eradication.

Here’s a picture of Ed Jones, pointedly cradling the fish with his left arm, just as Robert Stanley in the photo which reviewed previously. While the gentleman on the right in the frame is using his left arm for emphasis as well.

That’s because they are letting the faithful know that they are followers of the Left-Hand Path.

Ed Jones Blue Catfish
(Ed Jones with the Maryland state record blue catfish)

That’s not to imply that all people who fish are Illuminists.

But Ed Jones and his buddies certainly are.

In 2012, the reappearances of the blue catfish in the Potomac River in Maryland, the Missouri River in Kansas and the Ohio River in West Virginia all occurred simultaneously.

In 2012, for the first time in over seventy years, the sturgeon reappeared in the James River in Richmond, Virginia, as the health of the ether improved to the point where the species could once again manifest within it.

In 2012, after an absence of some indeterminate period of time, the swordfish reappeared in the Atlantic Ocean off Virginia, as the health of the ether improved to the point where the species could once again manifest within it.

In 2012, after an absence of some indeterminate period of time, the yellowfin tuna reappeared in the Gulf of Mexico off Louisiana, as the health of the ether improved to the point where the species could once again manifest within it.

In 2012, after an absence of some indeterminate period of time, the freshwater drum reappeared in Wyoming in (location), as the health of the ether improved to the point where the species could once again manifest within it.

In 2012, after an absence of some indeterminate period of time; the blue marlin reappeared in the Pacific Ocean off Australia, as the health of the ether improved to the point where the species could once again manifest within it.

In 2012, after an absence of twelve years, the blue catfish reappeared in Kansas in (location), for the first time since 2000, as the health of the ether improved to the point where the species could once again manifest within it.

In 2012, after an absence of some indeterminate period of time, the giant lacewing reappeared in the environment in Arkansas, where it had never been documented previously.

It had been extinct in the Eastern United States for over fifty years.

Giant Lacewing
(The giant lacewing)

Michael Skvarla, Director of Pennsylvania State University’s Insect Identification Lab, sat on the discovery for over a decade, until he announced it in 2023. He said it was “interesting” and that he had “forgot about it”.

Here’s a picture of Michael Skvarla, where he’s pointedly handling the walking stick with his left hand,and where he has his thumb extended in a purportedly-secret Masonic “gesture of recognition”.

Michael Skvarla
(Michael Skvarla, Director of Pennsylvania State University’s Insect Identification Lab)

Michael is letting the faithful know that he is a follower of the Left-Hand Path.

END 2012