In California, 100% of the USGS's examples of the bighead carp do not contain weights and are not supported by contemporary media documentation. The USGS's claim that the range of the bighead carp includes California is false

THE BIGHEAD CARP IN CALIFORNIA

The USGS map for the bighead carp shows it to be present in but not native to California.

Bighead Carp California Map
(USGS map of the bighead carp in California)

There is no California state record bighead carp.

Why is there no California state record bighead carp, if the bighead carp’s range includes California.

The USGS’s claim that the range of the bighead carp includes California is false.

The USGS map shows the range of the bighead carp at is existed in the early 1800’s, during the time of Constantine Samuel Rafinesque, and not as it exists today.

From 1992 to this writing in May 2024, there are 29 examples of the bighead carp in California in the historical record.

1992 - “a bighead carp was reported in California” - 1

October 1992 - “stocked for biocontrol” in “a small drainage in Tahema County” - 26

January 1, 2012 - a bighead carp or carps was “collected” in Lake Mendocino, Russian River - 1

January 1, 2013 - a bighead carp or carps was “collected” in Lake Mendocino, Russian River - 1

From 1992 to 2024, 100%, or 29 of 29 examples of the bighead carp in California do not contain a specific example of the bighead carp.

From 1992 to 2024, 100%, or 29 of 29 examples of the bighead carp in California do not contain a certified weight.

From 1992 to 2024, 100%, or 29 of 29 of the examples of the bighead carp in California are not supported by media documentation.

From 1992 to 2024, 29 of 29, or 100% of the examples of the bighead carp in California are fabricated.

The USGS’s claim that California is part of the range of the bighead carp is false.

AN ANALYSIS OF THE EXAMPLES OF THE BIGHEAD CARP IN CALIFORNIA

1992 - “a bighead carp was reported in California” - False

This statement is false, given that the weight and length of the bighead carp is not documented, the location of the report is not documented, the person who reported it is not documented, and that there are no examples of the bighead carp in California for which certified weights or media documentation is provided.

October 1992 - 26 bighead carp were “stocked for biocontrol” in “a small drainage in Tahema County; length, “32-33”. Their status is “failed”, with the comment “ponds have flooded since 1989; some grass carp and bighead may have reached the Sacramento River.” - False

This statement is false, given that the numbers and weights of the bighead carp are not documented, that the length of “32-33” is simply a use of two important Illuminist numbers, that there are no examples of the bighead carp in the Sacramento River, or anywhere in California, and that there are no media accounts documenting this assertion.

As a bonus, the USGS repeated this identical table entry in two different watersheds, the Big Chico Creek and Thomes Creek, to give the illusion of “heft” to the wholly-false data.

January 1, 2012 - a bighead carp was “collected” in Lake Mendocino on the East Fork of the Russian River - False

This statement is false, given that the number of bighead carp “collected” are not identified, no weights or lengths are provided, that the person or persons who “collected” the bighead carp are not identified, that there are no examples of the bighead carp in California, and that there are no independent media accounts documenting this assertion.

January 1, 2013 - a bighead carp was “collected” in Lake Mendocino on the East Fork of the Russian River - False

This statement is false, given that the number of bighead carp “collected” are not identified, no weights or lengths are provided, that the person or persons who “collected” the bighead carp are not identified, that there are no examples of the bighead carp in California, and that there are no independent media accounts documenting this assertion.

THE BIGHEAD CARP IN CALIFORNIA - ALL THE DATA

In 1992, a bighead carp was reported in California, albeit of an unknown weight and length, at an unnamed location, by an unnamed person, according to a person named Nico and their unnamed colleagues in 2018, and seconded by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in 2011, and revised in June 2018.

In October 1992, 26 bighead carp were “stocked for biocontrol” in “a small drainage in Tahema County; length, “32-33”. Their status is “failed”, with the comment “ponds have flooded since 1989; some grass carp and bighead may have reached the Sacramento River.” That according to the California Department of Fish and Game’s “History and status of introduced fishes in California, 1871-1996. Fish Bulletin 178”, by W.A. Dill and A.J. Cordone, 1997, per the USGS.

The Black magic trick here is that the folks running the Con know that the Sacramento River is the most likely place that the bighead carp will wink into existence, and, when it does, they’ll have this plank of horizontal propaganda in place to give the Coincidence theorists in California a story which will allow them to remain off the hook of personal responsibility.

In May 2024, an article on the California Department of Fish and Wildlife’s website said “California’s Invaders: Bighead Carp”.

Invaders, wait, what? They were brought here, in “the 1970’s”, by the godless Communist Red Chinese.

“Invaders” is a made-up meme, I’m sorry to say, put in place so that the Feds can do their best to destroy the species when it begins manifesting in California.

There are no actual media accounts of a bighead carp in California, just like there is no bighead carp state record in California.

“California’s Invaders” is an example of the “Big Lie” so favored by Hitler, Goebbels and small-town Mayors the world over.

They’ve put it in place so that, when the species begins to wink into existence in California, the Coincidence theorist can nod knowingly and say “I read all about it on the California Department of Fish and Wildlife’s website.

And then the Feds can begin genociding the bighead carp, like in Illinois.

On January 1, 2012, a bighead carp was “collected” in Lake Mendocino on the East Fork of the Russian River in California, with a potential pathway of “dispersed/escaped captivity aquaculture”, according to the University of Georgia’s Center for Invasive Species and Ecosystem Health’s EDDMapS: Early detection and distribution mapping system in 2019, as verified by the US Army Corps of Engineers Ombil Database, per the USGS.

On January 1, 2013, a bighead carp was “collected” in Lake Mendocino on the East Fork of the Russian River in California, with a potential pathway of “dispersed/escaped captivity aquaculture”, according to the University of Georgia’s Center for Invasive Species and Ecosystem Health’s EDDMapS: Early detection and distribution mapping system in 2019, as verified by the US Army Corps of Engineers Ombil Database, per the USGS.

Jeff Miller, Honolulu, HI, May 7, 2024

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