“La plus belle des ruses du diable est de vous persuader qu’il n’existe pas."
(“The devil’s finest trick is to persuade you that he does not exist.”)”
From "Le Spleen de Paris", written by Charles Baudelaire, 1869
Sherlock: I’ve been neglecting my hobby. I’m going to visit Swirl-Theory.com and discuss conspiracy theories.
Watson: Your hobby is conspiracy theories?
Sherlock: No, of course not. They’re pure sophistry. Large groups of people cannot keep secrets. My hobby is conspiracy theorists. I adore them, as one with a barmy uncle or a pet that can’t stop walking into walls.
From the T.V. show “Elementary”, posted on Reddit’s “r/conspiratard” subgroup
sophistry - noun - the use of fallacious arguments, especially with the intention of deceiving.
Here, fantastically, reddit has used sophistry to claim that conspiracy theories are pure sophistry.
The title of this e-mail is an example of the advertising technique known as “click bait”.
I’m going through the USGS table for the longear sunfish, and am alfway through the states, so this is a draft.
It’s punishing enough that I wanted to get it released.
THE LONGEAR SUNFISH - EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
In 1820, Constantine Samuel Rafinesque first documented the longear sunfish, Lepomis megalotis.
Here’s a picture of him, against a Satanic purple and Satanic green “Tree of Life” background, where the image is constructed to focus attention on his left eye, and where he’s making a purportedly-secret Masonic “gesture of recognition”.
(Constantine Samuel Rafinesque)
The engraving which follows is the frontispiece of “The Builder’s Dictionary”, where two generational Satanist Freemasons are greeting one another with purportedly-secret “gestures” of recognition”. The one on the left is using the same gesture that Samuel is in the portrait immediately above. Note also the Masonic Square and Compass hidden in plain sight at the center of the image.
(Frontispiece from the Masonic publication “The Builder’s Dictionary”, 1734)
Here’s a picture of Fu-Xi and Nu-Wa, the human-salamander hybrid founders of Chinese Civilization, brandishing the same Masonic square and Compass as seen in the center of the frontispiece of “the Builder’s Dictionary” from 1734.
(Fu-Xi and Nu-Wa)
The Chinese have been running the long Con upon humanity all the way back to Babylon, and before. Up until the 1800’s, Freemasonry was described plainspokenly as the “Grand Orient Freemasonry” of the only-generally-described Chinese, until it was rebranded as “Scottish Rite Freemasonry” in the early 1700’s, to muddy the tail.
Wikipedia says “The lineage of the Scottish Rite can be traced to a period from 1726, although some of its rituals may have a legacy dating to the 1600’s.”
I’d never heard of Constantine Samuel Rafinesque until today, and you’ll understand why in a moment.
Wikipedia says “He traveled as a young man in the United States, ultimately settling in Ohio in 1815, where he made notable contributions to botany, zoology, and the study of prehistoric earthworks in North America. He also contributed to the study of ancient Mesoamerican linguistics, in addition to work he had already completed in Europe”.
Where the general “prehistoric earthworks” obscures the specific burial mounds in which the Chinese, Israelites and Phoenicians buried their human sacrifice victims after they had burned them alive and cannibalized them. This unholy crew would be rebranded by history only-generally as “the mysterious mound builders”.
Where the general “mysterious”, “mound” and “builders” are all examples of the propaganda technique known as “stonewalling”.
Wikipedia goes on to say “Rafinesque was an eccentric and erratic genius.[1] He was an autodidact, who excelled in various fields of knowledge, as a zoologist, botanist, writer and polyglot. He wrote prolifically on such diverse topics as anthropology, biology, geology, and linguistics, but was honored in none of these fields during his lifetime. Indeed, he was an outcast in the American scientific community and his submissions were automatically rejected by leading journals. Among his theories were that ancestors of Native Americans had migrated by the Bering Sea from Asia to North America”.
I’ve just learned that I am an audodidact.
autodidact - noun - a self-taught person
Re: "Among his theories were that ancestors of Native Americans had migrated by the Bering Sea from Asia to North America”, the Red Record of the Lenapi people clearly states that they came over the land bridge from Siberia.
While his portrait exposes him as a bloodline Illuminist insider, Sam got addicted to telling the truth, hence “but was honored in none of those fields in his lifetime” and “an outcast in the American scientific community“.
Here’s the map of the range of the longear sunfish per the USGS table on the species.
(Longear sunfish range)
The USGS article on the longear sunfish says “The native status of Longear Sunfish in Minnesota is unclear. Eddy and Underhill (1974) mentioned records from Pomme de Terre River and Big Stone Lake from 1897 but question their validity.”
Where the general “native status is unclear” and “question their validity” are examples of the propaganda technique known as “stonewalling”. They are also waving red flags identifying something that we are not supposed to look at; ergo, In 1897, the longear sunfish was, in fact documented in Big Stone Lake and on the Pomme de Terre River in Minnesota.
Given the remote nature of the Pomme de Terre River in Minnesota, I am going to presume that, in 1820, the range of the longear sunfish was as Rafinesque described it, and that the USGS map for the species depicts the range of the species as it was in Rafinesque’s day, and not as it is in our own.
I believe that, by 1897, poisoning of the ether with Death energy had eradicated the longear sunfish from every bit of the range described by Rafinesque, except for this last outpost in Minnesota.
The Death energy campaign began with the human sacrifice mounds of the Chinese, Israelites and Phoenicians (since rebounded by history as “the mysterious Mound Builders”), continued with the graveyards of the invading Europeans, and was carried on, still later, by their telegraph, telephone and electrical wires. Leading on up to the wireless technologies of today. In the 1800’s, the killing of hundreds of thousands of native Americans and millions of buffalo added to the effort.
From 1897 to 2016, the longear sunfish is absent from the record.
The earliest documented example of the longear Sunfish is from Minnesota, from 1897.
At some point after 1897, the poisoning of the ether drove the longear sunfish out of this plane of existence.
Nobody who studied fish for a living ever mentioned that the longear sunfish had gone extinct, because doing so would show that the species had been driven out of existence via the introduction of Death energy into the ether. Wilhelm Reich called it “Dead Orgone Radiation”. And, further, the exposition of the mechanism by which the species had been driven into extinction would topple the cruel farce that is Darwin’s “theory of evolution”.
The only trouble for the miscreants running this great, ages-long Confidence game is that, if the health of the ether at a location recovers, the species “winks back into existence”, from our perspective. As you’ll see, the longear sunfish winked back into existence in Kansas in 2016.
That’s because the size, fertility, longevity and very existence of any organism vary directly with the health of its etheric environment.
The USGS table for the longear sunfish contains a total of 106 examples of the species (Arizona - 1; Connecticut - 1; Delaware - 1; District of Columbia - 4; Florida - 13; Georgia - 14; (34) Illinois - 1; Kansas - 5; Maryland - 20; (60) Massachusetts - 2; Michigan - 8; Minnesota - 3; Missouri - 1; New Mexico - 7; North Carolina; Pennsylvania - 1; South Dakota - 1; Virginia - 12; West Virginia - 9; Wisconsin - 2).
99 of 106, or 93% of the USGS’s examples of the longear sunfish are not supported by weights, lengths, anglers and photographs.
The 106 examples of the longear sunfish listed by the USGS are almost entirely fraudulent.
Just seven of the 106 examples of the longear sunfish provided by the USGS have any sort of evidence supporting them. Seven examples of the longear sunfish in the USGS table for the species which are supported by a photograph (June 2016 - Kansas; June 2018 - Georgia; February 2019 - Maryland; May 2019 - Georgia; November 2019 - Maryland; June 2020 - Kansas; July 2022 - Kansas). However, none of those examples are accompanied by a weight, or a length, or an exact location.
That’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “stonewalling”.
The USGS map for the longear sunfish shows it to be native to Illinois and Pennsylvania, and present in but not native to New Mexico.
If the longear sunfish is native to Illinois, but present in but not native to New Mexico, then why are the twenty examples of the longear sunfish in the USGS table for the species in New Mexico 1,900% greater than the single examples in Illinois and Pennsylvania?
Coupled with the fact that none of these twenty examples contains weights, lengths, anglers or photographs (not to mention contemporary media documentation) we may easily conclude that the USGS’s data for the longear sunfish in Illinois, Pennsylvania and New Mexico is fraudulent.
There are no examples of the longear sunfish anywhere in the record prior to June 2016 which are supported by photographs.
From 1897 to 2016, the longear sunfish is absent from the record, having been driven out of this plane of existence by Death energy, or what Wilhelm Reich called “Dead Orgone Radiation”.
There are five state records for the longear sunfish which are supported by lengths, weights, anglers, photographs, and contemporarry media documentation (Mississippi - May 2020; Missouri - July 2020; Missouri - July 2021; Missouri - May 2024; Nebraska - July 2024).
Five of five, or 100% of the state record longear sunfish are not included in the USGS table for the longear sunfish.
I have exposed the duplicity of the USGS by using what was known in the old days as “fact checking”.
In June 2016, the longear sunfish winked into existence in the Big Blue River in Kansas, in Tuttle Creek Lake. It is the first example of the longear sunfish since it was documented in the Pomme de Terre River and Big Stone Lake in Minnesota in 1897.
Despite being a self-described “naturalist!”, and further despite having caught the first example of the longear sunfish in Kansas in history, iNaturalist.com’s “nasag” provided a photograph of the fish, but not provide their name, nor did they provide a weight, length, or exact location for the catch.
I have exposed the duplicity of iNaturalist.com and the covert Intelligence operative known as “nasag” by using what was known in the old days as “fact checking”.
On June 5, 2016, the USGS table documents a longear sunfish in Tuttle Creek Lake on the Big Blue river in Kansas.
(The first longear sunfish documented anywhere in over one hundred years, caught, killed, cooked and eaten by iNaturalist.com’s “nasag”, Tuttle Creek Lake, Big Blue River, Kansas, June 5, 2016)
It was “observed” on June 5, 2016 and uploaded to iNaturalist.com on June 7, 2015.
As you can see from the photograph, “observed” is Mil-speak for “caught and killed by iNaturalist.com’s nasag”.
Nasag joined iNaturalist.com on May 3, 2016, and made seven observations from May 2016 to July 2018.
Those observations were Crested Wheatgrass, Small-leaved Lime, American Pokeweed, Yellow Foxtail, Coneflowers, Buffalo Grass, and - wait for it - the longear sunfish.
Coincidence theorists are going to need to assert that nasag joined iNaturalist on May 3, 2016, and then, over the next two years, made just seven observations, which were all common plants, and then somehow caught the first and only example of the longear sunfish ever caught in Kansas, and the first documented anywhere since the last examples in Minnesota in 1897.
Despite the fact that the USGS map shows the longear sunfish to be native to Kansas, there is no Kansas state record longear sunfish. Why?
If the longear sunfish is native to Kansas, as documented on the USGS map for the species, then why is there no Kansas state record longear sunfish?
The USGS map shows the range of the longear sunfish as it was documented by Constantine Samuel Rafinesque in 1820, not as it exists today.
“Nasag” did not submit the fish as the Kansas state record. Why?
The uncredited Intelligence operative known as “nasag” is a generational Satanist Freemason, under orders to use the false guise of “naturalist” to catch and destroy any new species that he can find, the moment it winks into existence. Submitting it as a state record would draw too much attention to it.
Note that not one of the five longear sunfish state records is included in the USGS’s table for the species.
On June 6, 2018, the longear sunfish winked into existence in the Big Sandy Creek on the upper Ocmulgee River in Georgia.
(The first longear sunfish ever documented in Georgia, caught, killed, cooked and eaten by iNaturalist.com’s Mathew A. Williams, aka “quiggifer”, upper Ocmulgee River, Georgia, June 2018)
Despite having 2,048 observations of 219 species, and being a self-described “naturalist!”, Mathew A. Williams, who obscures his name behind the iNaturralist.com avatar “quiggifer” , provided a photograph, but withheld the weight, length, and location of the catch.
Mathew joined iNaturalist on June 9, 2017. He has 2,048 observations of 219 species. And one of them includes the first longear sunfish ever documented in the state of Georgia, on June 6, 2018.
(Mathew A. Williams iNaturalist.com bio)
His bio says “quiggifur is a naturalist!”, where the exclamation point is a tell, trying to keep you from figuring out that he is a covert Intelligence operative.
Despite having 2,048 observations of 219 species, and being a self-described “naturalist!”, Mathew A Williams did not disclose the location of the catch, nor did he provide a weight or a length.
(Mathew A. Williams)
It was the first example of the longear sunfish in Georgia in history.
There is no Georgia state record longear sunfish.
If the longear sunfish is native to Georgia, as documented on the USGS map for the species, then why is there no Georgia state record longear sunfish?
The USGS map shows the range of the longear sunfish as it was documented by Constantine Samuel Rafinesque in 1820, not as it exists today.
Mathew did not submit the fish as the Georgia state record. Why?
Mathew A. Williams is a generational Satanist Freemason, under orders to use the false guise of “naturalist” to catch and destroy any new species that he can find, the moment it winks into existence. Submitting it as a state record would draw too much attention to it.
Note that not one of the five longear sunfish state records is included in the USGS’s table for the species.
On February 19, 2018, iNaturalist.com’s “pmk00001” caught, photographed, killed and ate the first and only example of the longear sunfish ever documented in the Middle Potomac River in Maryland.
(The first longear sunfish ever documented in Maryland, caught, killed, cooked and eaten by iNaturalist.com’s pmk00001 in the Middle Potomac River on February 19, 2018. Even though they didn’t join iNaturalist.com until 2013, the uncredited Intelligence operative falsely claims to have caught it in 2013, and then not gotten around to uploading the image to iNaturalist.com until 2018.)
The four consecutive zero’s of pmk00001’s avatar are allusions to the solar and lunar eclipses during which Illuminists most prefer to perform their ancient rituals of human sacrifice and cannibalism.
(Audi Logo)
Pmk00001 joined iNaturalist.com on March 25, 2016, which is almost three years after they had purportedly collected this historically-important example of the longear sunfish on June 24, 2013.
Coincidence theorists are going to need to affirm that, on June 24, 2013, pmk00001 took a picture of the second longear sunfish ever documented in Maryland, and then sat on that picture for over four years, prior to uploading it to iNaturalist.com on February 19, 2018, but by then they had forgotten the location where they collected the historically important example.
I’ve just busted a generational Satanist Freemason shill in the act of trying to create a false record of the longear sunfish in Maryland, going back into the past. Aided and abetted by the USGS.
shill - noun - an accomplice of a hawker, gambler, or swindler who acts as an enthusiastic customer to entice or encourage others.
But I thank them for the image, and documenting that the longear sunfish winked into existence in the Middle Potomac River in Maryland in February 2019.
(Pmk00001 iNaturalist.com data)
Their bio says “Hook and line fisherman who loves catching different species of fish. 100% amateur.”
Their bio goes on to say that they have 12,647 observations of 3158 species.
That’s some serious nature-obsession, people.
Their use of “100% amateur” is a tell, where they work to convince you that they are not, in fact, a professional covert Intelligence operative.
He’s playing the ruse that he’s just walking around with his fishing rod on his shoulder, going from fishing hole to fishing hole.
On May 13, 2019, the USGS table for the longear sunfish documents an example submitted by Bob Jacobs to iNaturalist, from Pigeon Creek on the upper Flint River in Georgia.
On May 13, 2019, the longear sunfish winked into existence in Pigeon Creek on the Upper Flint River in Georgia.
Here’s a picture of Bob and Peggy Jacobs, both in Satanic purple, against a Satanic green tent with a Satanic green “Tree of Life” background.
(Bob Jacobs and his wife, Peggy)
Despite having worked as a fisheries biologist for the state of Connecticut for 39 years, and further despite having 336,420 identifications, 1,563 observations of 626 species, and still further despite being a “curator” on iNaturalist.com, Bob omitted the weight and length of the fish, as well as the location at which he caught it.
(Longear sunfish caught, killed, cooked and eaten by Bob Jacobs and his wife, Peggy at their natty campsite in Pigeon Creek on the upper Flint River in Georgia on May 13, 2019)
Despite the fact that the USGS map shows the longear sunfish to be native to Kansas, there is no Kansas state record longear sunfish. Why?
The USGS map shows the range of the longear sunfish as it was documented by Constantine Samuel Rafinesque in 1820, not as it exists today.
Bob did not submit the fish as the Kansas state record. Why?
The Intelligence operative known as “uconnbirdfish”, aka Bob Jacobs, is a generational Satanist Freemason, under orders to use the false guise of “naturalist” to catch and destroy any new species that he can find, the moment it winks into existence. Submitting it as a state record would draw to the fact that the longear sunfish had just winked into existence into Kansas.
Note that not one of the five longear sunfish state records is included in the USGS’s table for the species.
The USGS lists the potential pathway of this example as “stocked”, and lists the longear sunfish’s status in the Flint River as “established”.
A species represented by a single example cannot be described as “established”.
If the longear sunfish is native to Georgia, as documented by the USGS, then why would stocking it ever be required?
The longear sunfish weighs 5 ounces, and is not desirable for either sport fishing or forage fishing. Why would it ever be stocked, anywhere?
If stocking took place, who did that stocking, and where did they do it, and when did they do it, and why did they do it?
The USGS’s unsubstantiated claim that the longear sunfish was stocked in Georgia is false.
On May 22, 2019, the longear sunfish winked into existence in Pigeon Creek on the Upper Flint River in Georgia. Its weight and length were not documented, however there is a photograph of the fish.
Despite having caught just the fourth longear sunfish in the history of the state of Georgia, and further despite the fact that Bob has 336,420 identifications, 1,563 observations of 626 species, and is a “curator” on iNaturalist, while Bob provided a photograph of the fish, he did not provide its weight, or its length, or the location at which he caught it.
Despite the fact that the USGS map shows the longear sunfish to be native to Kansas, there is no Kansas state record longear sunfish. Why?
The USGS map shows the range of the longear sunfish as it was documented by Constantine Samuel Rafinesque in 1820, not as it exists today.
Bob did not submit the fish as the Kansas state record. Why?
The Intelligence operative known as “uconnbirdfish”, aka Bob Jacobs, is a generational Satanist Freemason, under orders to use the false guise of “naturalist” to catch and destroy any new species that he can find, the moment it winks into existence. Submitting it as a state record would draw too much attention to it.
Note that not one of the five longear sunfish state records is included in the USGS’s table for the species.
These two successive catches of the longear sunfish in Pigeon Creek on the upper Flint River in Georgia in less than two weeks demonstrate how the species has winked back into existence there, and how any catches of any fish document whether that fish is in existence at that location, versus whether it is there, but “not biting”.
The truth is that, from our perspective, fish are flashing and flickering in and out of existence in that location.
Here, with persistent, albeit malicious effort, Bob Jacobs has demonstrated the existence of the longear sunfish just as Constantine Samuel Rafinesque was able to do in 1820. Unfortunately, he killed them as soon as they found him, as he was ordered to do. It would remain absent for up to seventeen months, until it winked back into existence there in October 2020.
On November 21, 2019, nine months after iNaturalist.com’s pmk00001 had caught, killed, cooked and eaten the first and only other example ever caught there, the longear sunfish winked back into existence in the Middle Potomac River in Maryland.
On November 21, 2019, iNaturalist.com’s Erika Mitchell documented an example of the longear sunfish somewhere in the Middle Potomac River in Maryland.
(Longear sunfish photographed by Erika Mitchell at some undisclosed location in the Middle Potomac River in Maryland on November 21, 2019. She killed it, cooked it and ate it right after taking the picture.)
iNaturalist.com’s Erika Mitchell provided a photograph, but, despite making 141,085 observations as a naturalist over a period of eleven years, Erika somehow couldn’t remember the weight or length of the fish, or the location at which she’d taken the photograph.
With a straight face, Erika claims that she took the picture on June 24, 2012, which means that she sat on it for more than seven years prior to uploading it to iNaturalist.com. What makes this wholly-false story even more spectacular is the fact that Erika joined iNaturalist on January 5, 2013, which is more than six months after the fabricated June 24, 2012 USGS table entry featuring this example of the longear sunfish.
The pointed omission of the basic scientific data on this example of the longear sunfish and the fact that she’s claiming to have taken the picture, and then sat on it for seven years prior to submitting it both clearly show Erika Mitchell as the covert Intelligence operative which she is.
I have exposed the duplicity of the USGS, iNaturalist.com and the covert Intelligence operative named Erika Mitchell by using what was known in the old days as “fact checking”.
There is no Maryland state record longear sunfish.
If the longear sunfish is present in Maryland, as documented on the USGS map for the species, then why is there no Maryland state record longear sunfish?
The USGS map shows the range of the longear sunfish as it was documented by Constantine Samuel Rafinesque in 1820, not as it exists today.
Erika did not submit her catch as the Maryland state record. Why?
Erika is a generational Satanist Freemason, under orders to use the false guise of “naturalist” to catch and destroy any new species that she can find, the moment it winks into existence. Submitting the longear sunfish as a state record would draw too much attention to it. So she killed it right after taking the picture.
Note that not one of the five longear sunfish state records is included in the USGS’s table for the species.
Here’s Erika Mitchell’s picture from iNaturalist.com, with a Satanic green “Tree of Life” background, where she’s holding the camera in her left hand, and where the image is constructed to focus attention on her left eye.
(Erika Mitchell, who purports to have taken a photograph in 2012 of the first longear sunfish ever documented in Maryland, and then sat on that photograph for seven years, prior to uploading it to iNaturalist. And then, once she did upload it, despite being “just plain curious and interested in learning about what grows where and when for as long as she can remember”, and, further despite making 141,085 observations as a naturalist over a period of eleven years, Erika somehow couldn’t remember the weight, or length of the fish, or the location at which she’d taken the photograph.)
In May 2020, the longear sunfish winked into existence in Black Creek in Mississippi, when the health of the ether improved to the point where the species could manifest within it. It weighed 6 ounces.
If the longear sunfish is native to Mississippi, as documented on the USGS map, then why are there no verifiable state records for it there prior to May 10, 2020?
The USGS map shows the range of the longear sunfish as it was documented by Constantine Samuel Rafinesque in 1820, not as it exists today.On May 10, 2020, John Merritt caught and killed the first-ever Mississippi state record longear sunfish. It weighed 6.24 ounces.
(John Merritt having just caught and killed the first-ever Mississippi state record longear sunfish, May 2020)
The USGS table for the longear sunfish does not include the Mississippi state record from May 2020. Why?
I have exposed the duplicity of the USGS by using what was known in the old days as “fact checking”.
On June 3, 2020, the Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries, and Parks said “the previous record longear sunfish weighed 0.33 pounds”.
This statement omits a date, a location, and an angler. There are no independent media accounts or photographs documenting this previous record. The USGS table for the longear sunfish does not include this claimed record. It is false, fabricated.
There are no verifiable Mississippi state records prior to May 10, 2020.
In July 2020, four years and one month since iNaturalist.com’s “nasag” had caught and killed the only previously-known example there, the longear sunfish winked back into existence in the Big Blue River in Kansas.
iNaturalist.com’s Ryan Donnelly, who goes by “rynaturralist” on the forum, provided a photograph of the fish, however, despite having 28,847 observations of 4,077 species, Ryan omitted its weight and length, along with the location at which he had caught it. Then he killed it and ate it.
There is no Kansas state record longear sunfish.
If the longear sunfish is native to Kansas, as documented on the USGS map for the species, then why is there no Kansas state record longear sunfish?
The USGS map shows the range of the longear sunfish as it was documented by Constantine Samuel Rafinesque in 1820, not as it exists today.
Ryan did not submit his catch as the Maryland state record. Why?
Ryan is a generational Satanist Freemason, under orders to use the false guise of “naturalist” to catch and destroy any new species that she can find, the moment it winks into existence. Submitting the longear sunfish as a state record would draw too much attention to it. So she killed it right after taking the picture.
Note that not one of the five longear sunfish state records is included in the USGS’s table for the species.
In July 2020, the longear sunfish winked into existence in a private lake in Missouri, when the health of the ether improved to the point where the species could manifest within it. It weighed 4 ounces, and was the first-ever Missouri state record longear sunfish.
(Robert Audrain III having just caught and killed the first-ever Missouri state record longear sunfish, July 3, 2020. The 1993 Missouri state record is not supported by a length, weight, angle, independent media verification or photographs, and is thus fabricated.)
In July 2020, the longear sunfish simultaneously winked into existence in a private lake in Missouri and back into existence on the Big Blue River in Kansas after an absence of up to four years and one month.
On July 7, 2020, iNaturalist’s Ryan Donnelly caught and killed the longear sunfish that had just manifested in the Big Blue River in Kansas. It would remain absent for two years, until it winked back into existence there in July 2022. Ryan would go on to kill and eat that example, also.
(Longear sunfish photographed, caught, killed, cooked and eaten by Ryan Donnelly in Tuttle Creek Lake on the Big Blue River in Kansas on June 7, 2020)
On September 21, 2020, just over two years after iNaturalist.com’s Mathew A. Williams, aka “quiggifer” caught and killed the first and only other example of the species there in history, the longear sunfish winked back into existence in the Big Sandy Creek on the upper Ocmulgee River in Georgia.
iNaturalist.com’s “niztub” provided a photograph, with withheld the weight, length and location of the catch.
(Longear sunfish which iNaturalist.com’s “niztub” purports to have caught in Big Sandy Creek on the upper Ocmulgee River in Georgia on June 27, 2018, but then not gotten around to uploading until September 1, 2020)
More spectacularly, still, iNaturalist.com’s “niztub” purports to have caught the example on June 27, 2018, then waited over a year to sign up to iNaturalist.com on May 19, 2019, but then did not submit it until September 21, 2020.
I have exposed the duplicity of the USGS, iNaturalist.com and the uncredited Intelligence operative known as “niztub” by using what was known in the old days as “fact checking”.
To get out of this situation without their heads exploding like the Martians in the 1998 film “Mars Attacks”, Coincidence theorists are going to need to affirm that “niztub” caught a historically important example of the longear sunfish at some obfuscated location in the big Sandy Creek on the upper Ocmulgee River in Georgia on June 27, 2018, but didn’t get the bug to become a contributor to iNaturalist.com until almost year later, when they signed up on May 29, 2019. Then, they waited another sixteen months to upload the picture that they’d taken over two years earlier. While making 145 observations of 129 species in the meantime.
(Martian with their heads about to explode in “Mars Attacks”, 1998)
There is no Georgia state record longear sunfish.
If the longear sunfish is native to Georgia, as documented on the USGS map for the species, then why is there no Georgia state record longear sunfish?
The USGS map shows the range of the longear sunfish as it was documented by Constantine Samuel Rafinesque in 1820, not as it exists today.
In addition to omitting the weight and length of the catch and the catch’s location, niztub also did not submit it as the Georgia state record. Why?
iNaturalist.com’s “niztub” is a generational Satanist Freemason, under orders to use the false guise of “naturalist” to catch and destroy any new species that he can find, the moment it winks into existence. Submitting it as a state record would draw too much attention to it.
Note that not one of the five longear sunfish state records is included in the USGS’s table for the species.
In October 2020, fourteen months after iNaturalist.com’s uconnbirdfish, aka Bob Jacobs had caught and killed the last two examples there, the longear sunfish winked back into existence in the Flint River in Georgia.
There is no data on the fish. The Georgia Department of Natural Resources collected it during standardized sampling, then killed it and disposed of it.
That’s because the Georgia Department of Natural Resources employees who collected and killed it are generational Satanist Freemasons, under orders to use the false guise of “naturalist” to catch and destroy any new species that they can find, the moment it winks into existence.
In 2020, the longear sunfish winked into existence simultaneously in Mississippi, Missouri, and on the upper Ocmulgee River in Georgia, and back into existence in the Flint River in Georgia for the first time in up to fourteen months.
On July 3, 2021, a year after his father had done the same, Robert “RJ” Audrain IV caught and killed the Missouri state record longear sunfish. It weighed 5 ounces.
(Robert Audrain IV having just killed the second-ever Missouri state record longear sunfish, July 2021)
The USGS table for the longear sunfish does not include the Missouri state records from 2020 or 2021, which are the only example of the longear sunfish ever documented in Missouri which are corroborated by weights, lengths, anglers, photographs and contemporary news accounts.
I have exposed the duplicity of the USGS by using what was known in the old days as “fact checking”.
In July 2022, two years after iNaturalist.com’s Ryan Donnelly caught and killed the only other example ever documented there, the longear sunfish winked back into existence in the Big Blue river in Kansas.
iNaturalist.com’s Ryan Donnelly, who goes by “rynaturralist” on the forum, provided a photograph, however, despite having 28,847 observations of 4,077 species, Ryan omitted the weight and length of the fish, along with the location at which he had caught it. Then he killed it and ate it.
(Longear sunfish caught, killed photographed and eaten by iNaturalist.com’s Ryan Donnelly, aka rynaturalist on July 19, 2022)
(Ryan Donnelly)
There is no Kansas state record longear sunfish.
If the longear sunfish is native to Kansas, as documented on the USGS map for the species, then why is there no Kansas state record longear sunfish?
The USGS map shows the range of the longear sunfish as it was documented by Constantine Samuel Rafinesque in 1820, not as it exists today.
Ryan did not submit his catch as the Maryland state record. Why?
Ryan is a generational Satanist Freemason, under orders to use the false guise of “naturalist” to catch and destroy any new species that she can find, the moment it winks into existence. Submitting the longear sunfish as a state record would draw too much attention to it. So she killed it right after taking the picture.
Note that not one of the five longear sunfish state records is included in the USGS’s table for the species.
On May 8, 2024, three years after Robert “RJ” Audrain IV caught and killed the last Missouri state record longear sunfish in a private farm pond in Crawford County, John Goad caught and killed the Missouri state record longer sunfish in Frieda Lake, also in Crawford County. It weighed 5 ounces.
(John Goad, 2024, having just killed the third example of the longear sunfish in the history of the state of Missouri.)
The USGS table for the longear sunfish does not include the Missouri state records from 2020, 2021 and 2024, which are the only example of the longear sunfish ever documented in Missouri.
I have exposed the duplicity of the USGS by using what was known in the old days as “fact checking”.
In July 2024, the longear sunfish winked into existence in Frieda Lake in Nebraska, when the health of the ether improved to the point where the species could manifest within it. It weighed 2 ounces and was 5 1/4 inches long. It was the first example of the longear sunfish in Nebraska in history.
On July 15, 2024, Scott Buss caught and killed the first-ever Nebraska state record longear sunfish in the Little Blue River. It weighed 2 ounces and was 5 1/4 inches long.
Nebraska Outdoors’ Daryl Bauer said that the two-ounce fish “swam upstream from Kansas”, or had been “illegally released from an aquarium”.
When, in fact, there is no Kansas state record longear sunfish. Nor are there any recorded examples of it there for which contemporary media confirmation and photographs exist, despite the USGS showing Kansas as part of the native range of the longear sunfish.
A state which a fish species is native to must have a state record for that species, or, at the very least, some verifiable example of that fish.
I have exposed the duplicity of Daryl Bauer, Nebraska Outdoor and the USGS by using what was known in the old days as “fact checking”.
Here’s a picture of Nebraska Outdoors’ Daryl Bauer, with a Satanic green “Tree of Life” background, where his left eye is emphasized, and where he is making a purportedly-secret Masonic “gesture of recognition” with his left hand.
(Daryl Bauer)
Now here’s the LinkedIn profile picture of a Chinese generational Satanist Freemason Software Engineer, in a Satanic purple jacket, where his left eye is emphasized, and where is is making the same purportedly-secret “gesture of recognition” that Daryl Bauer is in the photo immediately above.
(Software Engineer)
Their left eyes are emphasized in this way because, to followers of the Left-hand path, the left eye is the “eye of Will” or the “eye of Horus”.
‘The right eye is the Eye of Ra and the left is the Eye of Horus’.”
From “Freemasonry - Religion And Belief - The 3rd Temple”
Facebook: “Welcome to the Left-Hand-Path-Network, where Satanism is not about worship, but it’s study.”
I have included their pictures so that you could get a better idea of what generational Satanist Freemasons of varying influence look like.
They figured that the rubes would never notice the coded visual imagery.
They are all related to one another through the maternal bloodline. They comprise roughly twenty 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”.
Here’s the photo, where generational Satanist Freemason Scott Buss has his thumb extended in a purportedly-secret Masonic “gesture of recognition”.
(The first longear sunfish ever documented in Nebraska, which suddenly winked into existence in the Little Blue River in July 2024, only to be caught, cooked and eaten by a generational Satanist Freemason named Scott Buss.)
Here’s the LinkedIn profile picture of a Principal making the same purportedly-secret Masonic “gesture of recognition” that Scott Buss is in the photo above.
(Principal)
The USGS table for the longear sunfish does not include the Nebraska state record from 2024, which is the first and only example of the longear sunfish ever documented in Nebraska.
I have exposed the duplicity of the USGS by using what was known in the old days as “fact checking”.
Jeff Miller, Honolulu, HI, October 15, 2024
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