“There are thousands who are in opinion opposed to slavery and to the war, who yet in effect do nothing to put an end to them; who, esteeming themselves children of Washington and Franklin, sit down with their hands in their pockets, and say that they know not what to do, and do nothing…”
― From “Civil Disobedience and Other Essays”, by Henry David Thoreau, 1849
September 28, 2017 – Feeding Frenzy: West Coast Anchovy Boom Masks Ecosystem in Peril
June 19, 2017 – Gangs of aggressive killer whales are shaking down Alaska fishing boats
April 27, 2018 – Record number of killer whales show up to feast in Monterey Bay.
July 9, 2018 – Orcas of the Pacific Northwest Are Starving and Disappearing
As you can see, the folks in charge are not your friends, and are lying to you about basically everything, including marine life on the West coast of North America.
It’s May 2020, and Nature is booming and burgeoning to a level not seen in my lifetime. There’s an international news blackout in place on the subject, and its rules are strict.
For example, the headline “West Coast Anchovy Boom Masks Ecosystem in Peril” is using a propaganda tactic that I’ve also seen put forward as “a boom/bust cycle driven by climate change.”
It works on a subset of those who read it, but only in single articles, on a single subject. I don’t think it works nearly as well when it’s set against a larger collection of articles the same subject. Which is why I’ve appended a long list of examples from the West coast of of life that is booming and burgeoning to a level never seen previously.
Those examples include tripling sea lion populations, and quadrupling snowy plover populations. More blue whales than ever, in history. Dungeness Crab landings in Oregon more than doubled from 2012 through 2019.
(Rebuttal: The quadrupling of the snowy plover population, and the tripling of the sea lion population, and the doubling of the crab population all mask an ecosystem in peril.)
Can you see how “ecosystem in peril” is lurid, and general? While “crab landings more than doubled” is specific.
The words “mystery”, “baffled” and “puzzled” are memes, used, among numerous similar variants, whenever anyone in the wholly-controlled-and-coopted Political, Academic, Scientific and Media establishments wants to lie about, well, basically anything.
That’s why a headline below from 2017 reads “Mystery over the SEVEN-MILE long ‘super mega-pod’ of 100,000 dolphins spotted off the coast of San Diego.”
And it’s why another story, from July 2019, headlined " Superpod of dolphins gather off the California coast", reads “The ocean and its inhabitants never fail to amaze.”
A hundred…thousand…dolphins. If I ran a film of them in a continuous loop, a significant subset of the viewers would say “boom-bust cycle driven by climate change” or “100,000-dolphin megapod masks ecosystem in peril.”
Here they all are:
(Superpod of dolphins in San Diego, CA, 2017)
Perhaps most crucial to breaking the spell, is confronting fish records orders of magnitude beyond their predecessors. A current record permit pompano from California 341% larger than the previous record holder. A current record bluefin tuna from Washington 152% percent larger - well more than double the size - of a prior record holder from just seven years previously.
I honestly don’t know that the mind of a Coincidence Theorist does with statistics such as those.
Mystery, baffled, puzzled, amazed…
The same tired memes and propaganda tricks are used down through time, to hypnotize, and program.
It is my hope that an academic analysis such as this might awaken some subset of the readership to the confidence game in which they’ve become entrapped.
Teach a man to fish.
Either all these booming, burgeoning populations mask an ecosystem in peril.
Or the Orgonite-driven improvement in the Etheric environment is causing great positive changes at every level of our reality.
You’ll have to use your personal discernment to come to your own conclusions on the matter.
Jeff Miller, Brooklyn, New York, May 11, 2020
If you’d like to be added to this free mailing list, please send me a note at [email protected]
July 5, 2010 - California - Asian market helps Morro Bay fishing industry rebound
(As if ‘increased demand’ created the record number of fish in the area. - ed)
February 3, 2017 - Mystery over the SEVEN-MILE long ‘super mega-pod’ of 100,000 dolphins spotted off the coast of San Diego
(Superpod of dolphins in San Diego, CA, 2017)
February 17, 2016 - The hottest place on Earth is covered in wildflowers after heavy autumn rain
Fields of flowers are blooming in Death Valley National Park, and Park Ranger Alan Van Valkenburg says they are the first signs of a rare ‘super bloom.’
Death Valley, otherwise known as the hottest place on Earth, is awash in yellow and pink wildflowers this month. Park rangers suspect that, given the torrential autumn rainfall that Death Valley experienced, the park may be due for a rare “super bloom,” after years of drought and barren bloom seasons.
May 8, 2016 - Starfish Return In Huge Numbers On California Coast After Mass Die Off
survived the summer and winter of 2015, according to new data from Oregon State University researchers, and numbers are unprecedented.
(Where ‘mass die off’ is a reference to the engineered virus that was released to kill all the starfish. - ed)
June 28, 2016 - California - Record Number Of Rattlesnakes Making Their Way Into Yards Due To Drought
September 16, 2016 - California sea otter population reaches record high number
April 13, 2017 – Alaska - Record pink harvest predicted for Prince William Sound | Homer News
(Where, under the false guise of familiarity, the author has eliminated the word “salmon”, to make the subject drastically less searchable. - ed)
July 28, 2017 - Bristol Bay red salmon run smashes records - Alaska Dispatch News
June 19, 2017 – Gangs of aggressive killer whales are shaking down Alaska fishing boats
September 28, 2017 – Feeding Frenzy: West Coast Anchovy Boom Masks Ecosystem in Peril
(Where ‘feeding frenzy’ creates anxiety. - ed)
October 3, 2017 - Alaska - Chum salmon returned home to Alaska this year in numbers never seen before from Southeast to Kotzebue, and set catch records statewide
November 21, 2017 – California - Record breaking number of Blue Whales in the Monterey Bay - KION
July 9, 2018 – Orcas of the Pacific Northwest Are Starving and Disappearing
January 17, 2018 – California sea lion population has tripled, new study finds
(Where “study” creates a straw for the subconscious to grasp: “but that’s just one study.”
April 27, 2018 – California - Record number of killer whales show up to feast in Monterey Bay.
July 11, 2018 – Alaska – Bristol Bay’s early season already setting records
July 2018 - California - A record-breaking 27,366 small, colorful Gould’s bean clams (scientific name Donax gouldii) off the shore of El Segundo, California from July 2018.
(It’s heading toward three times as many clams as the previous record. A sudden, unprecedented, wholesale, quantum change, to the highest population level ever seen. - ed)
2019 - The snow total at the Squaw Valley Ski Area in California doubled from 2012-13 to 2018-19
2019 - The number of snowy plovers spotted on Ocean Beach in San Francisco more than quadrupled from 2018 to 2019.
2019 - This winter’s rainfall in Los Angeles is thus far 55% above average, and 603% above last year’s.
2019 - Homicides in Salinas, CA dropped 89% from 2018 to 2019.
2019 - Homicides dropped 25% in San Francisco, California in 2018
2019 - Dungeness Crab landings in Oregon more than doubled from 2012 through 2019
January 22, 2019 - Humpback whale sightings might be at a record high in January
Is it the year of the humpback whale?
The massive mammals have been showing up in stellar — possibly record-breaking — numbers since the start of the month, with one charter company experiencing at least 42 encounters.
Last January? There were only four.
The increase in encounters is “causing excitement among whale watchers and tour operators alike,” according to a news release from Capt. Dave’s Dolphin and Whale Watching Safari in Dana Point.
“It is so unusual to have multiple humpback whales in this area in the wintertime,” Capt. Dave Anderson said. “We are loving this change and wondering why these whales are here instead of off of mainland Mexico right now.”
(A tenfold increase in humback whales. - ed)
April 3, 2019 - Los Angeles, CA - San Angelo organization breaks record and drastically lowers shelter kill rate
Wilson said all of this has created the highest live release rate the shelter has ever seen — 78 percent.
Ten years ago, the shelter had one of the state’s highest kill rates at more than 80 percent.
May 22, 2019 - USDA Expects Almonds to Crack Record Yield Again
The California almond crop is on pace for another record-breaking year, according to figures the USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS). The government agency released its 2019 California Almond Subjective Forecast, which indicates a yield of 2.5 billion pounds of nuts for an increase of 8.69% above last year’s 2.3 billion-pound crop.
Thanks to more favorable growing conditions, this is the second year in a row where crop estimates show an increase in production.
(In the headline, “crack” is used, which implies that the new record just hit the old, versus the truth, that it’s a see-the-needle-moving, near-ten-percent increase above the previous largest harvest ever in history, set just last year. - ed)
July 16, 2019 - Superpod of dolphins gather off the California coast
The ocean and its inhabitants never fail to amaze.
Off the coast of Southern California, hundreds of young dolphins were recorded frolicking beneath a fogged sky over weekend.
Chuck Patterson and Trish Meyler shared the joyful scene, spotting the gathering while exploring the coast between Laguna Beach and Dana Point.
This is not the first time a pod of dolphins this size has been spotted. Though a rarity, superpod sightings have been reported all over the world. Thousands were similarly spotted in Monterey back in September.
Usually consisting of 2 to 30 individuals, pods travel and hunt together. Superpods are typically formed when multiple pods come together in an area of high food availability. Usually occurring far away from any kind of human observation, this natural phenomenon is a sight to see.
(A huge school of dolphins in synchronized leaps in Monterey Bay, 2019)
August 2019 - The pending Washington state record bluefin tuna, caught in August 2019, is 152% percent larger - well more than double the size - of a prior record holder, caught in 2012.
(The improvement in the Etheric or energetic environment leading to booming populations, and also organisms increasing to never-before-seen size. - ed)
August 22, 2019 - Return of the king: Salmon rebounds after California drought
August 7, 2019 - Two potential state-record fish caught on Friday
(Under the false guise of familiarity, the author omits the name of the state, along with the names of the fish, to make the subject drastically less searchable. - ed)
A San Clemente, California, man caught what he thinks is a state-record tarpon.
The man was trolling for tarpon near Cat Island on Friday when he hooked the 77-inch long, 185.5-pound fish. He had already caught and released one fish when he hooked the big one.
(After standing unbroken for decades, that’s suddenly 11% larger than the previous record holder. Such records are usually broken by tiny margins, as the organism gets closer and closer to its maximum possible size. - ed)
A second potential state-record fish was brought in to DMR later on Friday. Sean Cook of Pascagoula was spear fishing off shore when he got a 9-pound, 15-ounce permit, a type of pompano. That would shatter the current record of 2 pounds, 4 ounces. Cook is a member of the DeepWater Mafia dive group.
(That’s 341% larger than the previous record holder. The author’s obfuscated who set the previous record, and when. The improvement in the Etheric or energetic environment is leading not only to booming populations, but also to organisms increasing to never-before-seen size. - ed)
September 29, 2019 - Sacramento sets record low temperature ahead of thunderstorms in Northern California
December 26, 2019 - California - West Coast Fishery Rebounds in Rare Conservation ‘Home Run’
2020 - Adult Chinook salmon in the Sacramento River more than doubled from 2018 to 2020, to 473,000. They had dropped to less than 200 in 1992.
January 23, 2020 - San Luis Obispo, CA - Monarch Butterfly Numbers Double In Annual Count
BUT THEY SAY A PICTURE’S WORTH A THOUSAND WORDS:
Los Angeles, 1970’s
Los Angeles 2019
For those whose subconscious minds twisted and leapt to “he cherrypicked the photos!”, I’d offer that, when I went hiking in the Hollywood hills last year, a local in their 50’s standing next to me near the Hollywood sign said “this is the first time I’ve ever been able to see Catalina from here in my life.”
Malibu Lagoon, 1995
Malibu Lagoon, 2019
Jeff Miller, Brooklyn, New York, May 11, 2020
If you’d like to be added to this free mailing list, or know someone who would be, please send me a note at [email protected]