The author called the 260,000 additional salmon in the Columbia River from 2019 to 2020 "a slight increase". The Special Assistant to the Director of the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife said the 2020 return was "very poor".bill

“If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it. The lie can be maintained only for such time as the State can shield the people from the political, economic and/or military consequences of the lie. It thus becomes vitally important for the State to use all of its powers to repress dissent, for the truth is the mortal enemy of the lie, and thus by extension, the truth is the greatest enemy of the State.”

- Joseph Goebbels

"Let me control the media and I will turn any nation into a herd of pigs."

- Joseph Goebbels




July 27, 2020 - Migratory river fish populations plunge 76% in past 50 years 

Decline in species such as salmon harms entire ecosystems and livelihoods, say researchers.


The number of Chinook salmon on the Klamath river nearly tripled from 2018 to 2019. 

Sockeye salmon on the Columbia river nearly tripled from 2019 to 2020.

The folks in charge are not your friends, and are lying to you about basically everything, including the salmon.

You can see in the current salmon statistics that I have provided that the author talking about the "plunge" in salmon populations is telling a Big Lie with the firmness of purpose that goes with complete honesty. 

It's how the few have controlled the many, well, all the way back to Babylon, and before.

It gets really boring and repetitive from here, so you can stop reading now if you like.

The Klamath river fall-run Chinook salmon harvest increased 197% from 2018 to 2019

The 2020 Sacramento River fall-run Chinook salmon harvest is projected to be 25% higher than 2019's.

The Columbia river salmon return for 2020 is projected to be 28% higher than 2019's

Bill Tweit, Special Assistant to the Director of the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, told the Council not expect a good return in 2020." The author of the article called salmon numbers in the Columbia that increased by amost a third from 2019 to 2020 as "a slight increase". They're working together, telling Big Lies with the firmness of purpose that goes with complete honesty. 

Here's Bill's picture:

image

(Bill Tweit, Special Assistant to the Director of the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife)

Remember, Bill called 260,000 additional salmon in the Columbia from 2019 to 2020 "a slight increase."

Can you see how he's trying to form his face into an appearance of earnestness and honesty? I've included a photograph of him so you could get a better idea of what a generational Satanist in a position of marginal influence looks like.

The author of the article that features Bill refers to a 289% increase in Sockeye salmon on the Columbia as the only bright "spot" in an otherwise terrible salmon season. It's a brazenly false claim. It's a bald-faced lie.

Sockeye salmon on the Columbia river nearly quadrupled from 2019 to 2020, which the author described as a salmon return that was "low, again". Another gigantic, bald-faced lie.

The Columbia river article states "Otherwise, all of the Columbia and Snake river runs with the exception of upriver summer steelhead and fall Chinook are predicted to return in numbers similar to or lower than last year."

Those uncomfortable with the fact that there is, indeed a Great, Big Conspiracy are going to want to stop reading right now. In that only one type of salmon showed a decrease, and only two were "similar to last year's". Every other Columbia and Snake river salmon run showed an increase.

The lies are huge, and they are continuous.

Again, if you're bored, there's no reason to continue from here. I'm going to cotinue to break down the lying about the salmon on the Columbia and Snake rivers:

Fall Chinook - a 17% increase from 2019 to 2020 - increase - Fall Chinook, 438,300, an increase over the 2019 return of 375,800". This is the first of two salmon types that the author actually admitted increased from 2019 to 2020.

Upriver bright Fall Chinook - a 14% increase from 2019 to 2020 - "Of these, the prediction for upriver bright Fall Chinook, which spawn primarily in the Hanford Reach, is 233,400, compared to 200,000 in 2019."

Tule fall Chinook - a 2% increase from 2019 to 2020 - "and the number of tule fall Chinook, which primarily return to hatcheries in the lower Columbia region, is predicted to be roughly the same as last year -- 51,000 fish compared to 50,000 in 2019."

This is our first "similar to last year's" data point.

Spring Chinook - , 81,700, compared to the 2019 run of 73,101. The upper Columbia part of the run, an ESA-listed threatened species, is predicted to number 13,600 (2,300 wild). The 2019 run was 14,651 fish (1,668 wild).

Coho - a 31% decrease - "144,800, compared to 210,885 in 2019."

The lone decrease in the data set, which the author described as "all of the Columbia and Snake river runs with the exception of upriver summer steelhead and fall Chinook are predicted to return in numbers similar to or lower than last year."

Upper Columbia summer Chinook - a 17% increase from 2019 to 2020 - "Upper Columbia summer Chinook, 38,300 fish; the 2019 return was 34,619."

Upriver summer steelhead - a 32% increase from 2019 to 2020 - "199,700 fish, an increase over the 2019 return of 151,201."

We've now covered the only two examples of increasing Columbia river salmon populations, according to the author.  So everything from here on should be a decrease, or a count similar to the year previous.

Wild winter steelhead, an ESA-listed threatened species - a 12% increase from 2019 to 2020 - "10,100 fish compared to 9,000 in 2019." That's a double-digit increase, versus the claimed "numbers similar to or lower than last year". Lying author.

For the Snake River, Christine Kozfkay of the Idaho Department of Fish and Game, provided these forecasts, by species:

Natural-origin Spring/Summer Chinook - a 70% increase from 2019 to 2020 - "7,065 fish, compared to the 2019 return of 4,152".

Natural-origin Spring/Summer Chinook salmon on the snake river are heading toward doubling, which does not map against "numbers similar to or lower than last year. The author is lying bald-facedly.

I need you to focus with me and remember that the article documenting these figures is headlined "2020 Columbia River Salmon And Steelhead Forecast: Low, Again".

Hatchery Spring/Summer Chinook - a 35% increase from 2019 to 2020 - "30,069, compared to the 2019 return of 19,529". A 35% increase does not map against "numbers similar to or lower than last year". Lying author.

Natural-origin Fall Chinook - a .5% increase - "6,590, compared to the 2019 return of 6,558". This is our second "similar to last year" data point.

Hatchery Fall Chinook - a 16% increase from 2019 to 2020 - "11,560, compared to the 2019 return of 9,950". That's a double-digit increase, versus the claimed "numbers similar to or lower than last year". The author is lying.

Natural -origin Summer Steelhead - a 95% increase from 2019 to 2020 - "17,630, compared to the 2019/20 return of 9,014".  Obviously, a doubling of natural-origin summer steelhead is not "a number similar to or lower than last year". Lying author. Did you notice how the author didn't mention a doubling of wild-origin summer steelhead as a "bright spot"?

I need you to focus with me and remember that the article documenting a doubling of natural-origin summer steelhead is headlined "2020 Columbia River Salmon And Steelhead Forecast: Low, Again".

Hatchery-origin Summer Steelhead - a 38% increase from 2019 to 2020 - "32,040, compared to the 2019/20 return of 23,182". That's a double-digit increase, versus the claimed "numbers similar to or lower than last year", nor is it "low, again". Lying author.

Natural-origin sockeye - a 178% increase from 2019 to 2020 - "114 compared to the 2019 return of 41". A near-tripling of natural-origin sockeye on the Snake river is not "numbers similar to or lower than last year", nor is it "low, again". The author is lying continuously throughout the article.

Hatchery-origin sockeye - from 2019 to 2020 - "1,327 compared to the 2019 return of 9".

Sockeye, held to the last, were said by the author to be "the only bright spot" in the season.

Another article below from March 2020 is headlined "Fisheries biologists present California's ocean salmon forecast for 2020".

Where "biologists present forecast" is completely neutral. You have no idea what the forecast will be. That's an example of a propaganda technique called "compartmentalization".

The article reads "In 2020, state and federal scientists predict there will be more fall-run Chinook salmon in the Sacramento River than there were in 2019, while the Klamath River is predicted to have less fall-run Chinook salmon in 2020 than there were in 2019, according to the California Dept. of Fish & Wildlife."

Where "more Chinook" and "less Chinook" are both general. 

"The CFDW said it expects about 473,000 fish will be harvested from the Sacramento River in 2020, which is more than the 2019 forecast predicted. In 2019, the CDFW projected 379,000 adult salmon for the Sacramento River."

The author provided the numbers, but carefully hedged by omitting the far more impactful percentage increase between them. 

The 2020 Sacramento River fall-run Chinook salmon harvest is projected to be 25% higher than 2019's.

"For the Klamath River, the CDFW predicts 186,000 adult Chinook salmon in 2020. The forecast in 2019 predicted 274,200 adult salmon, which was an improvement over low forecast numbers seen the years prior, according to the CDFW."

In 2018, 92,300 Chinook salmon returned to the Klamath basin, compared to 274,200 in 2019. That's a 197% increase. The number of Chinook salmon on the Klamath river tripled from 2018 to 2019. The Illuminist fish counters called it "an improvement", then played doom and gloom because of the 50% decrease from 2019 to 2020, and shut down the fishery, to "rebuild the stock" which had just tripled, in one year.

They figured the rubes would never notice.

You can see how having teams of propagandists and on-the-take pseudo-scientists on the payroll to fix the books only makes things worse for the Conspirators when someone such as myself points it out.

The lie can be maintained only for such time as the State can shield the people from the political, economic and/or military consequences of the lie.

Big Lies, while effective, at times, are not some sort of all-powerful force. And propaganda has a lifespan. This is a process that we're all going through, together. Us and the folks working the propaganda. Their organization exists. It is finite, and it is pyramidally constructed. What new 3D map of the organization awaits? 

What is required for humanity to fix the wagon is taking control from the top of the pyramid and moving it suddenly, immediately and irrevocably to the bottom of the pyramid in some non-jukable way. 

We're going to develop a new, and as-yet-unimagined way of living together that will be better for those of us holding 1% of the world's assets.

The weather today was beyond amazing here in Brooklyn, New York. There's a quality to the light, a clarity to the air that I've never seen. I thought to myself "perhaps the gods themselves will manifest among us once again, and we'll all have to deal with that." Would it be because the Etheric environment could once again support them, or that an improved Etheric environment would improve the mental health of the populace back to a place it had forgotten it had. Our minds calming down and clarifying to a point where we can see them once again, when they've been there all along.

Spirits returning to the woodland springs, that sort of thing. Maybe more extinct species "winking back into existence", from our perspective. I think the next thing I'm going to do is review all of the most ancient science world view stuff that I can find. You know, like flies grow out of excrement, and all the other ways people used to view things that are supposedly now "wrong". 

The air is certainly alive again in a way it hasn't been since I was a kid. I can remember the play of leaves on the ground, and on the trees, when I was in elementary school. It's like that again now. The gentle play of living zephyrs, that sort of thing.

Going off on a tangent: when I was young, it was said you can't live on "Astronaut food", food in tubes. Yet mean-sprited Western Rationalism demands that you should simply be able to consume vitamins, and minerals, and fluids, in some way that agreed on a documented Chemistry level with the chemicals inside your body. I think it points up the lie that food is just chemicals that react with other chemicals in the "furnace" of your gut.

Food isn't simply about the chemistry, which is a real thing that exists, but is rather also about the life energy that's in the things we eat. The life energy Wilhelm Reich called "Positive Orgone Radiation". 









Jeff Miller, Brooklyn, New York, September 12, 2020






February 27, 2019 - 2018 Preliminary results/findingsThe 2018 Klamath Basin fall Chinook run estimate is 83% of the 40-year average. The adult Chinook returns to the basin were 100% percent of the projected forecast (91,900 pre vs. 92,300 post).




March 3, 2020 - Fisheries biologists present California's ocean salmon forecast for 2020

SANTA ROSA, Calif. — In 2020, state and federal scientists predict there will be more fall-run Chinook salmon in the Sacramento River than there were in 2019, while the Klamath River is predicted to have less fall-run Chinook salmon in 2020 than there were in 2019, according to the California Dept. of Fish & Wildlife.

Fishery scientists presented the California's fall Chinook salmon forecast at the annual Ocean Salmon Informational Meeting in Santa Rosa on Feb. 27, according to the California Dept. of Fish & Wildlife.

The CFDW said it expects about 473,000 fish will be harvested from the Sacramento River in 2020, which is more than the 2019 forecast predicted. In 2019, the CDFW projected 379,000 adult salmon for the Sacramento River.

For the Klamath River, the CDFW predicts 186,000 adult Chinook salmon in 2020. The forecast in 2019 predicted 274,200 adult salmon, which was an improvement over low forecast numbers seen the years prior, according to the CDFW.



April 17, 2020 - 2020 Columbia River Salmon And Steelhead Forecast: Low, Again

Bill Tweit, Special Assistant to the Director of the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, told the Council not expect a good return in 2020.
 
“We expect the return to be very poor,” he said at the Council’s April meeting.

Overall, the states predict a total 2020 return to the mouth of the (Columbia) river of about 1.2 million fish, a slight increase from 940,000 fish in 2019. The bright spot in 2020, the sockeye forecast, is for about 246,300 fish, compared to about 63,222 last year.

 Otherwise, all of the Columbia and Snake river runs with the exception of upriver summer steelhead and fall Chinook are predicted to return in numbers similar to or lower than last year. Here are the forecasts:

Fall Chinook, 438,300, an increase over the 2019 return of 375,800. Of these, the prediction for upriver bright Fall Chinook, which spawn primarily in the Hanford Reach, is 233,400, compared to 200,000 in 2019, and the number of tule fall Chinook, which primarily return to hatcheries in the lower Columbia region, is predicted to be roughly the same as last year -- 51,000 fish compared to 50,000 in 2019.
Spring Chinook, 81,700, compared to the 2019 run of 73,101. The upper Columbia part of the run, an ESA-listed threatened species, is predicted to number 13,600 (2,300 wild). The 2019 run was 14,651 fish (1,668 wild).
Coho, 144,800, compared to 210,885 in 2019.
Upper Columbia summer Chinook, 38,300 fish; the 2019 return was 34,619.
Upriver summer steelhead, 199,700 fish, an increase over the 2019 return of 151,201.
Wild winter steelhead, an ESA-listed threatened species, 10,100 fish compared to 9,000 in 2019.
For the Snake River, Christine Kozfkay of the Idaho Department of Fish and Game, provided these forecasts, by species:

Natural-origin Spring/Summer Chinook: 7,065 fish, compared to the 2019 return of 4,152 (10-year average 16,031)
Hatchery Spring/Summer Chinook, 30,069, compared to the 2019 return of 19,529 (10-year average 55,798)
Natural-origin Fall Chinook, 6,590, compared to the 2019 return of 6,558 (10-year average 10,893)
Hatchery Fall Chinook, 11,560, compared to the 2019 return of 9,950 (10-year average 27,277)
Natural -origin Summer Steelhead, 17,630, compared to the 2019/20 return of 9,014 (10-year average 25,539). The A run forecast is 16,650; the B Run forecast is 980.
Hatchery-origin Summer Steelhead, 32,040, compared to the 2019/20 return of 23,182 (10-year average, 91,225); A Run: 26,300, B Run: 5,740.
Natural-origin sockeye, 114 compared to the 2019 return of 41 (10-year average 186)
Hatchery-origin sockeye, 1,327 compared to the 2019 return of 9 (10-year average, 764).



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