“The world is full of obvious things which nobody by any chance ever observes.”
― From " The Hound of the Baskervilles ", by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, 1902
October 29, 2011 - A Mysterious Virus Threatens Salmon in the West
November 18, 2014 - Mystery Virus Turning Starfish Into Goo
December 14, 2016 - The fish ’ mystery ’ deepens: Scientists still baffled as to what killed tens of thousands of herring off Nova Scotia coast.
“What it is, is a bit of a mystery ,” said David Whorley, director for Fisheries and Oceans Canada in southwest Nova Scotia.
January 8, 2020 - WHO says mysterious illness in China likely being caused by new virus
Ah, the government-made designer virus, is there anything it can’t kill?
Future generations will marvel that a significant proportion of the populace currently accepts the explanation of " mystery " for each successive designer virus released into the environment.
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 story below from 2011 is headlined “A Mysterious Virus Threatens Salmon in the West.”
And that’s why the story reads “Now a study bolsters the hypothesis that a mysterious pathogen working in concert with other anthropogenic stressors may be the culprit.”
For any lingering Coincidence Theorists in the readership, I must offer this headline from 2016:
“The fish ’ mystery ’ deepens: Scientists still baffled as to what killed tens of thousands of herring off Nova Scotia coast.”
" Mystery " and " baffled " used in the same sentence, now, that’s impressive. But not nearly as impressive as getting away clean with virus-driven fish kills on both coasts, enabled by the full support of a controlled press, and, most-importantly, the slack-jawed credulity of much of the populace.
“ ‘What it is, is a bit of a mystery ,’ said David Whorley, director for Fisheries and Oceans Canada in southwest Nova Scotia."
Here’s his picture:
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That’s David Whorley, and looking as pleasant as he possibly can, mind you. I’ve included his picture so you could get a better idea of what a generational Satanist in a position of marginal influence looks like.
He purportedly loves him some fish like it’s his job. I’m being so hard on him because what’s killing tens of thousands of herring should not be a " mystery " to the director for Fisheries and Oceans Canada in southwest Nova Scotia.
He makes his living off of the people’s taxes.
Did you notice how he hedged by saying that the unexplained death of tens of thousands of fish under his care was only a bit of a mystery?
I think it’s hilarious that his name is a variant of “whore”.
One of the many meme variants we’re discussing is " insane ". That’s why a story below from 2017 is headlined “THE MOST INSANE SALMON was just caught in B.C.”
The author elaborates “Oh, and the fish looks INSANELY HUGE because it is; the Wannock River salmon have arguably the best genetics in the world and the Chinook that people catch here while fishing are the ones you often see hanging in fishermen’s living rooms. They are trophy fish.”
Here’s a picture of it:
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They’re playing the " superior genetics " ruse, and not mentioning that fish are growing to never before seen size regardless of geography. That’s a propaganda tactic called " compartmentalization ."
There’s also no mention of the fish’s weight, or of how that weight compares to the record, or what the record is, or when the record was set, or by whom. The international news blackout on this subject forbids it.
Another story below from British Columbia from 2016 is headlined " ‘Largest’ recorded chum salmon run: 2 million fish overload nets, burden boats ."
Can you see how they put ‘largest’ into quotes, to call it into question? Can you see how they twisted the word “record” to "record ed "? Can you see how they finished the headline with negative " burden boats "? That’s called “spin”. Ask any fisherman who just hauled in more fish than they ever have in their lives if they felt " burdened " while driving the boat back to the dock.
The virus-driven salmon killing ops have obviously been effective in selected locations, but can’t hold back the larger Orgonite-driven positive change being seen across the marine environment.
Eventually, perhaps after reading articles such as this, the populace will awaken, and begin keeping a tighter watch on things. “Government scientists” and “University researchers” will no longer be allowed to go poke around in their own boats, pretending to be engaged in research, while in actuality distributing designer viruses among the salmon.
Fishing boat crews will begin watching for barely-closeted generational Satanists within the ranks, and will catch them pretty quick, too. Just a quick search of everyone’s bags would do the trick. You could make David Whorley by taking one look at his evil face.
Now, that won’t stop black ops missions, where what we euphemistically call “secret agents” in black zodiac boats head out at night to distribute the same designer virii that the “official” scientists do.
The only thing that’s going to stop this practice is people within the scientific community stepping up and outing these sociopaths at the laboratory level, as took place with the “climategate” e-mail leaks. Well, that or one of them being caught in the act and hung from a fish crane on the boat they’d crewed on, and that story going, well, viral. Right after this one does.
Teach a man to identify people who kill fish.
I mean, come on. How is that not the feel-good story of the year?
It’s like the “Voight-Kampff test” from the 1982 film “Blade Runner”.
“The Voight-Kampff test was a test used as of 2019 by the LAPD’s Blade Runners to assist in the testing of an individual to see whether they were a replicant or not. It measured bodily functions such as respiration, heart rate, blushing and eye movement in response to emotionally provocative questions. It typically took twenty to thirty cross-referenced questions to distinguish a Nexus-6 replicant.”
Except that I’m identifying them by their ritual, coded language, which they cannot operate covertly without. And I can make them in one sentence. And so can you! Best of all, the Reich-Miller test works regardless of which language they’re using.
As Don Croft often noted, parasites fear exposure above all else.
So there are fish-killing Illuminists out there squirming even as this goes to press.
Please consider sending them highest love energy as you read this.
Jeff Miller, Brooklyn, New York, May 12, 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]
May 5, 2011 - Upstream Battle: What Is Killing Off the Fraser River’s Sockeye Salmon ?
A recent study suggests a mystery pathogen acting in concert with human-induced stressors may be the culprits
Since the early 1990s the numbers of Fraser sockeye have steadily dwindled, reaching a particularly troublesome nadir in 2009 when more than 11 million sockeye were forecast to return and only 1.4 million showed up. Since the mid-1990s, something began killing large numbers of returning sockeye on the Fraser—anywhere from 40 to 95 percent of fish in some years—before they could spawn.
Now a study bolsters the hypothesis that a mysterious pathogen working in concert with other anthropogenic stressors may be the culprit.
(It is both a " mystery pathogen" and a " mysterious pathogen". Repetitions such as this anchor the meme into the subconscious, which is already hungry to grasp any plausible-deniability straw, no matter how flimsy, to get off the hook of personal responsibility. At a subconscious level, people want to be deceived, and tacitly take part in the farcical game because it works out best for them. Because they get to climb off the hook of personal responsibility. - ed)
October 29, 2011 - A Mysterious Virus Threatens Salmon in the West
November 18, 2014 - Mystery Virus Turning Starfish Into Goo
November 4, 2016 - ‘Largest’ record ed chum salmon run: 2 million fish overload nets, burden boats
‘I knew guys that were having nets starting to sink there were so many extra fish’
Record numbers of chum salmon — two million fish — returned to B.C’s West Coast this year, bringing good news for fishermen fatigued by word of record lows of Fraser River sockeye.
“We’ve had significant abundances … it’s all good news,” said Jennifer Nener, Fisheries and Oceans Canada’s regional salmon director, earlier this week.
December 14, 2016 - The fish ’ mystery ’ deepens: Scientists still baffled as to what killed tens of thousands of herring off Nova Scotia coast
'We’ve made some progress and have ruled out a few things, but we haven’t found the actual cause yet ’
Scientists remain baffled by what has caused tens of thousands of dead herring to wash ashore along Nova Scotia’s southwestern coast, despite a battery of tests.
(Not ‘what killed herring?’, but rather what caused already-dead herring to simply ‘wash ashore’. - ed)
“What it is, is a bit of a mystery ,” said David Whorley, director for Fisheries and Oceans Canada in southwest Nova Scotia.
July 19, 2017 - B.C. man caught world record fish with his bare hands before eating it
What he thought was a dead rainbow trout turned out to be a record breaking, lively kokanee
The world’s largest recorded kokanee salmon was caught, smoked and eaten before anyone realized what a prize fish it was.
Government biologists recently confirmed DNA testing that shows the 5.4-kilogram fish caught in British Columbia shatters the previous record (3.9 kilograms) held since 2010 by Oregon fisherman Ron Campbell.
“We were thinking it was a big rainbow [trout]. We never even thought that it was a kokanee,” said Denis Woodcox, who landed the beast with his bare hands.
(Where, under the false guise of familiarity, the headline omits the name of the fish, and abbreviates British Columbia as “B.C.”, both to make the subject drastically less searchable. There’s no mention of what the prevoius record was, or when it was set. - ed)
November 13, 2017 - THE MOST INSANE SALMON was just caught in B.C.
Our friends at Vancouver’s Pacific Salmon Foundation aced it on Instagram this week, posting this insane photo of a Chinook salmon that was captured from the Wannock River on the Central Coast.
Ted Walkus, hereditary chief of the Wuikinuxv Nation in Rivers Inlet, B.C. holds a Chinook salmon that was captured for brood stock to raise the next generation of Wannock Chinook at the Percy Walkus Hatchery.
“Caught” is a bit of a stretch as it wasn’t caught on a fishing line, but it was captured in a net as it was heading up the river to spawn. It sounds like a bad thing but it’s quite the opposite; it was one of 94 fish that were captured as part of a conservation project by the nearby Percy Walkus Hatchery.
Oh, and the fish looks INSANELY HUGE because it is; the Wannock River salmon have arguably t he best genetics in the world and the Chinook that people catch here while fishing are the ones you often see hanging in fishermen’s living rooms. They are trophy fish.
(Plays the ruse that it’s “genetic”, while omitting mention of the fact that fish records are being broken by wide margins regardless of geography in both fresh and salt water. That’s a propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization.” - ed)
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September 4, 2019 - New viruses discovered in declining B.C. salmon populations
Researchers have found a trio of new viruses in pacific salmon, which haven’t been seen in these fish before
The researchers examined more than 6,000 salmon along B.C.'s coast.
These viruses pose no risk to people
Scientists have made a new discovery they hope will provide more insight into declining salmon populations in our province.
Researchers have found a trio of new viruses in pacific salmon, which haven’t been seen in these fish before.
“We found the new viruses widely distributed in dead and dying farmed salmon and in wild salmon,” says UBC professor Curtis Suttle. “It emphasizes the potential role that viral disease may play in the population dynamics of wild fish stocks, and the threat that these viruses may pose to aquaculture.”
The research doesn’t make a direct connection between these viruses and the decline seen in chinook and sockeye populations in the province over the past 30 years.
But Suttle says it reveals the need to learn more about a possible link.
“We really want to understand, not only these viruses, but other viruses too. So it’s kind of a little window in the world, so we are very interested in these viruses,” he says. “We don’t know the impact that they’re having on say, survival of the wild salmon populations, but it’s certainly something we need to know when we are considering aquaculture and other industrial applications as well.”
Suttle says the viruses also present a potential risk to salmon farming that are circulating in the wild.
The researchers examined more than 6,000 salmon along B.C.’s coast.
These viruses pose no risk to people.
(To date, bat and bird viruses have been found to be the most effective for engineering against human populations. - ed)
February 5, 2020 - British Columbia - Highly contagious virus found in majority of Clayoquot Sound salmon farms: report
A Norwegian strain of piscine orthoreovirus, which is strongly associated with death of Chinook salmon, was identified at 14 out of 15 farms tested
Salmon at a majority of Clayoquot Sound fish farms are infected with the Norwegian strain of a highly contagious virus, according to an investigative report released Wednesday.
(In 500 words or less, please explain the sequence of coincidental steps that brought the highly contagious salmon virus from Norway to British Columbia. - ed)