In August 2016, on Don Croft’s Etheric Warriors forum, I presented an analysis of Chinook salmon counts from Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon, and demonstrated that the death energy from World War II had drastically curtailed the salmon population in the Columbia River, and that the largest salmon population ever documented on the Columbia coincided with the end of the Mayan “long count” in 2012.
Don posted a reply a short time later, saying “Jeff has been working on the following for about a week, fine tuning it. Along with the Positive Changes thread, I think this new effort is a true pioneering effort and unique.”
He went on to say “(Jeff) intuited a positive change some years before I did, by the way.”
Both of those posts are below.
2016 is the year that Don came to Pittsburgh to visit me, and we had lunch.

(Don Croft and Jeff Miller, Cranberry Township, PA, 2016)
2016 is also the year that a Mind-controlled Agency Wetworker ran a red light and hit me while I was bike riding in Pittsburgh, and I was unharmed in any way, other than a scratch on my shin.
The tires of my bike didn’t even blow.
Here, in 2026, I’ve gone through that data again and refined it a great deal. I’m sending it to the people on my mailing list, and posting it on the U.K. Orgones forum.
Then I’ll integrate it into the master Schizophrenia document.
In 1938, the year recordkeeping began, 271,799 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
From 1938, the year recordkeeping began, to 1939, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon increased by 5.3%, from 271,799 tp 286,156.
From 1938 to 2013, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon increased by an annual average of 4.2%.
From 1938 to 2013, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon increased by 315.6%, or by more than four times, from 271,799 to 1,129,664
From 1938 to 1950, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon increased by an annual average of 2.6%.
From 1938 to 1950, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon increased by 31.6%, or by almost one third, from 271,799 to 357,375.
From 1938 to 1943, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon decreased by an annual average of 3%.
In 1939, 286,156 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon, the greatest since recordkeeping began in 1938.
In 1939, the record 286,156 adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon were 5.3% greater than the 271,799 counted one year prevously in 1938, the year recordkeeping began.
From 1939 to 1940, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon increased by 36.8%, or by more than one third, from 286,156 to 391,573.
In 1940, the record 391,573 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon were 36.8% greater, or more than one third greater than the previous record of 286,196 set one year previously in 1939.
From 1939 to 1940, the 36.8% increase in the adult Chinook salmon count at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon was 594.3% greater, or almost seven times greater than its 5.3% increase from 1938 to 1939.
The Chinook salmon population in the Columbia River increased exponentially from 1939 to 1940 because the health of the ether in Oregon was improving exponentially on the way up to and through the end of the Mayan “long count” in 2012, and the size, fertility, longevity and very existence of any organism vary directly with the health of the ether.
In 1940, 391,573 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon, the greatest since recordkeeping began in 1938.
From 1940 to 1941, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon increased by 17.8%, or by almost one fifth, from 391,573, the greatest since recordkeeping began in 1938, to 461,443, the greatest since recordkeeping began in 1938.
From 1940 to 1941, the 17.8% increase in adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon was 51.6% less, or more than half again less than its 36.8% increase from 1939 to 1940.
Here, from 1940 to 1941, while the salmon population on the Columbia River is still increasing, the rate of that increase has slowed exponentially, thanks to degredation of the health of the ether by the Death energy generated by World War II, which had commenced in Europe four years previously, in 1936.
In 1941, 461,443 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon, the greatest since recordkeeping began in 1938.
The fact that the first three years after recordkeeping began in 1938 were all-time records tells me that the folks in charge knew that the great improvement in the health of the ether had begun in 1938, and that they better begin keeping tabs on it, and track their efforts to degrade its health.
From 1941 to 1947, the all-time record adult Chinook populations in the Columbia River in Oregon increased by an annual average of .66%.
From 1941 to 1947, the 4% increase between the all-time record salmon counts at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon was 77.5% less than the 17.8% increase between the all-time record counts from 1940 to 1941.
Given that the size, fertility, longevity and very existence of any organism vary directly with the health of the ether, this shows that the degredation of the health of the ether by the Death energy from World War II decreased the health of the ether at a rate greater than that at which the health of the ether is improving as a baseline on the way up to and through the end of the Mayan “long count” in 2012, and thus decreased the Chinook salmon population in the Columbia River.
From 1941 to 1942, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon decreased by 12.8%.
From 1941 to 1942, the 12.8% decrease in adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon was 171.9% less, or almost three times less than 171.9% less than its 17.8% increase from 1940 to 1940.
I’m not sure that I’m figuring out that percentage correctly…however, given that the size, fertility, longevity and very existence of any organism vary directly with the health of the ether, this shows that the degredation of the health of the ether by the Death energy generated by World War II is decreasing the Chinook salmon population in the Columbia River.
From 1942 to 1943, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon decreased by 22.1%, or by more than one fifth, from 401,998 to 313,120.
From 1942 to 1943, the 22.1% decrease in adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon was 72.7% greater, or almost three fourths greater than its 12.8% decrease from 1941 to 1942.
Given that the size, fertility, longevity and very existence of any organism vary directly with the health of the ether, this statistic shows that the degredation of the health of the ether by the Death energy generated by World War II is exponentially decreasing the Chinook salmon population in the Columbia River.
In 1942, 401,998 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 1943, 313,120 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
From 1943 to 1944, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon decreased by 23.1%, or by , from 313,120 to 240,763.
From 1943 to 1944, the 23.1% decrease in adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon was 4.5% greater than its 22.1% decrease from 1942 to 1943.
Given that the size, fertility, longevity and very existence of any organism vary directly with the health of the ether, this statistic shows that the degredation of the health of the ether by the Death energy generated by World War II is exponentially decreasing the Chinook salmon population in the Columbia River.
Here, while the salmon population in the Columbia River is still decreasing exponenitally, the rate of that decrease has slowed by a huge margin, thanks to the baseline-level, ongoing improvement in the health of the ether on the way up to and through the end of the Mayan “long count” in 2012.
From 1943 to 1944, the 23.1% decrease in the adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon was 670% greater, or almost eight times greater than their 3% average annual decrease from 1938 to 1943.
In 1944, 240,763 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon, the fewest since recordkeeping began in 1938.
From 1944 to 1980, the record for the fewest salmon ever counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon decreased by an annual average of .38%.
From 1944 to 1980, the fewest adult Chinook salmon counted in the Columbia River in Oregon decreased by 13.7%, from 240,763 to 207,770.
From 1944 to 1945, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon increased by %, from 240,488, the fewest since recordkeeping began in 1938, to 297,488.
From 1944 to 1945, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon increased by 23.5%, from 240,763, the fewest since recordkeeping began in 1938, to 297,488.
Here, right on time with the end of World War II, we see the salmon population in the Columbia River suddenly rebound.
This proves that the size, fertility, longevity and very existence of any organism vary directly with the health of the ether.
From 1944 to 1945, the 23.5% increase in salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon was 201.7% greater than its 23.1% decrease from 1943 to 1944.
I’m not sure that I’m figuring out that percentage correctly…however this shows that the improvement in the health of the ether by the cessation of the Death energy generated by World War II is increasing the Chinook salmon population in the Columbia River, because the size, fertility, longevity and very existence of any organism vary directly with the health of the ether.
In 1945, 297,488 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
From 1945 to 1946, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon increased by 49.9%, or by basically half, from 297,488 to 446,152.
From 1945 to 1946, the 49.6% increase in adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon was 111% greater, or more than two times greater than its 23.5% increase from 1944 to 1945.
Here, after the end of World War II, the health of the ether in the United States is improving exponentially on the way up to and through the end of the Mayan “long count” in 2012.
In 1946, 446,152 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
From 1946 to 1947, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon increased by 7.6%, from 446,152 to 480,276, the greatest since recordkeeping began in 1938.
From 1946 to 1947, the 7.6% increase in adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon was 84.7% less than its 49.9% increase from 1945 to 1946.
Here, while the Chinook salmon population in the Columbia river have continued to increase to the greatest in history, the rate of that increase has slowed exponentially as the low wavelength microwave radiation from the technologies of the day degrades the health of the ether at a rate exponentially greater than that at which it is improving as a baseline on the way up to and through the end of the Mayan “long count” in 2012.
In 1947, 480,276 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon, the greatest since recordkeeping began in 1938.
In 1947, the all-time record 480,276 adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon were 4% greater than the previous record of 461,443 counted in 1941.
From 1947 to 1969, the all-time record adult Chinook salmon populations in the Columbia River in Oregon increased by an annual average of .25%.
From 1947 to 1969, the all-time record adult Chinook salmon count at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon increased by 5.6%, from 480,267 to 507,588.
From 1947 to 1969, the 5.6% increase in the all-time record adult Chinook salmon count at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon was 39.9% greater, or more than one third greater than its 4% increase from 1941 to 1947.
Given that the size, fertility, longevity and very existence of any organism vary directly with the health of the ether, this shows that here, from 1947 to 1969, the improvement in the health of the ether on the way up to and through the end of the Mayan “long count” in 2012 was taking place at a rate exponentially greater than that at which low wavelength microwave radiation was able to degrade it, and thus driving an exponential increase in the Chinook salmon population in the Columbia River.
From 1947 to 1969, the .25% average annual increase in the all-time record adult Chinook salmon populations in the Columbia River in Oregon was 62.1% less, or almost two thirds less than its .66% average annual increase from 1941 to 1947.
From 1947 to 1948, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon decreased by 12.4%, from 480,276, the greatest since recordkeeping began in 1938, to 420,455.
From 1947 to 1948, the 12.4% decrease in salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon was 263.1% greater than its 7.6% increase from 1946 to 1947.
I’m not sure that I’m figuring out that percentage correctly…however, given that the size, fertility, longevity and very existence of any organism vary directly with the health of the ether, this shows that the degredation of the health of the ether by low wavelength microwave radiation is decreasing the health of the ether and thus the Chinook salmon population in the Columbia River at a rate greater than that at which the health of the ether is improving as a baseline on the way up to and through the end of the Mayan “long count” in 2012.
In 1948, 420,555 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
From 1948 to 1949, the 33.9% decrease in adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam was 173.4% greater, or almost four times greater than its 12.4% decrease from 1947 to 1948.
Given that the size, fertility, longevity and very existence of any organism vary directly with the health of the ether, this shows that the degredation of the health of the ether by low wavelength microwave radiation is decreasing the health of the ether and thus the Chinook salmon population in the Columbia River at a rate greater than that at which the health of the ether is improving as a baseline on the way up to and through the end of the Mayan “long count” in 2012.
From 1948 to 1949, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam decreased by 33.9%, or by one third, from 420,555 to 277,697
In 1949, 277,697 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
From 1949 to 1951, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon increased by an annual average of 9.75%.
From 1949 to 1951, adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon increased by 19.5%, from 277,697 to 331,788.
From 1949 to 1950 adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon increased by 28.7%, or by almost one third.
From 1949 to 1950, the 28.7% increase in adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon was 184.6% less(?) than its 33.9% decrease from 1948 to 1949.
I’m not sure that I’m figuring out that percentage correctly…however, given that the size, fertility, longevity and very existence of any organism vary directly with the health of the ether, this shows that the improvement in the health of the ether on the way up to and through the end of the Mayan “long count” in 2012 it taking place at a rate greater than that at which low wavelength microwave radiation is able to degrade it, and driving an exponential increase in the Chinook salmon population in the Columbia River.
In 1950, 357,375 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
From 1950 to 2013, the 4.2% average annual increase in adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon was 61.5% greater, or almost two thirds greater than its 2.6% average annual increase from 1938 to 1950.
Given that the size, fertility, longevity and very existence of any organism vary directly with the health of the ether, this shows that here, from 1950 to 2013, the improvement in the health of the ether on the way up to and through the end of the Mayan “long count” in 2012 was taking place at a rate exponentially greater than that at which low wavelength microwave radiation was able to degrade it, and thus driving an exponential increase in the Chinook salmon population in the Columbia River.
From 1950 to 1960, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon decreased byadult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon decreased by an annual average of 2.8%.
From 1950 to 1960, the 2.8% average annual decrease in adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon was 207.7% less than its 2.6% average annual increase from 1938 to 1950.
I’m not sure that I’m figuring out that percentage correctly…however, given that the size, fertility, longevity and very existence of any organism vary directly with the health of the ether, this shows that the degredation of the health of the ether by low wavelength microwave radiation is decreasing the health of the ether and thus the Chinook salmon population in the Columbia River at a rate greater than that at which the health of the ether is improving as a baseline on the way up to and through the end of the Mayan “long count” in 2012.
From 1950 to 1960, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon decreased by 28.3%, or by almost one third, from 357,375 to 256,049
From 1950 to 1951, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon decreased by 5%, from 357,375 to 331,788.
From 1950 to 1951, the 5% decrease in adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon was 117.4% (greater/less?) than its 28.7% increase from 1949 to 1950.
I’m not sure that I’m figuring out that percentage correctly…however, given that the size, fertility, longevity and very existence of any organism vary directly with the health of the ether, this shows that, from 1950 to 1951, the degredation of the health of the ether by low wavelength microwave radiation was degrading the health of the ether and thus decreasing the Chinook salmon population in the Columbia River at a rate greater than that at which the health of the ether was improving as a baseline on the way up to and through the end of the Mayan “long count” in 2012.
In 1951, 331,788 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
From 1951 to 1953, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon by .2%, from 331,788 to 332,479.
From 1951 to 1953, the .2% average annual increase in adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River was 97.9% less than its 9.75% average annual increase from 1949 to 1951.
Given that the size, fertility, longevity and very existence of any organism vary directly with the health of the ether, this shows that the degredation of the health of the ether by low wavelength microwave radiation is decreasing the health of the ether and thus the Chinook salmon population in the Columbia River at a rate greater than that at which the health of the ether is improving as a baseline on the way up to and through the end of the Mayan “long count” in 2012.
Salmon reproduce in a two-year cycle, and I’m going to have to figure that into this anaylysis.
From 1951 to 1952, the 26.8% increase in adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon was 636% greater/less(?) than its 5% decrease from 1950 to 1951.
I’m not sure that I’m figuring out that percentage correctly…however, given that the size, fertility, longevity and very existence of any organism vary directly with the health of the ether, this shows that here, from 1951 to 1952, the improvement in the health of the ether on the way up to and through the end of the Mayan “long count” in 2012 was taking place at a rate greater than that at which low wavelength microwave radiation was able to degrade it, and thus driving an exponential increase in the Chinook salmon population in the Columbia River.
From 1951 to 1952, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon increased by 26.8%, or by more than one fourth, from 331,788 to 420,879.
In 1952, 420,879 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
From 1952 to 1953, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon decreased by 21%, or by more than one fifth, from 420,879 to 332,479.
From 1952 to 1953, the 21% decrease adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon was 178.3% less than its 26.8% increase from 1951 to 1952.
Given that the size, fertility, longevity and very existence of any organism vary directly with the health of the ether, this shows that the degredation of the health of the ether by low wavelength microwave radiation is decreasing the health of the ether and thus the Chinook salmon population in the Columbia River at a rate greater than that at which the health of the ether is improving as a baseline on the way up to and through the end of the Mayan “long count” in 2012.
In 1953, 332,479 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
From 1953 to 1954, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon decreased by 3.6%, from 332,479 to 320,497.
From 1953 to 1954, the 3.6% decrease in adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon was 82.8% less than its 21% decrease from 1952 to 1953.
While the Chinook salmon population in the Columbia River is still decreasing, the rate of that decrease has slowed exponentially. Here, from 1953 to 1954, the improvement in the health of the ether on the way up to and through the end of the Mayan “long count” in 2012 was taking place at a rate greater than that at which low wavelength microwave radiation was able to degrade it.
In 1954, 320,947 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 1955, 359,853 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 1956, 300,917 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 1957, 403,286 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 1958, 416,419 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 1959, 345,028 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
From 1960 to 1970, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon increased by an annual average of 5%.
From 1960 to 1970, the 5% average annual increase in adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon was 278.6 greater(?) than its 2.8% average annual decrease from 1950 to 1960.
Given that the size, fertility, longevity and very existence of any organism vary directly with the health of the ether, this shows that here, from 1960 to 1970, the improvement in the health of the ether on the way up to and through the end of the Mayan “long count” in 2012 was taking place at a rate exponentially greater than that at which low wavelength microwave radiation was able to degrade it, and thus driving an exponential increase in the Chinook salmon population in the Columbia River.
From 1960 to 1970, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon increased by 50.2%, or by half, from 256,049 to 384,780.
In 1960, 256,049 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 1961, 281,980 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 1962, 286,625 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 1963, 278,560 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 1964, 342,422 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 1965, 317,956 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 1966, 340,111 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 1967, 366,153 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 1968, 341,128 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 1969, 507,588 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon, the greatest since recordkeeping began in 1938.
From 1969 to 1976, the all-time record adult Chinook salmon count at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon increased by .03%, from 507,588 to 507,773.
From 1969 to 1976, the .03% increase in the all-time record adult Chinook salmon count at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon was 99.4% less than its 5.6% increase from 1947 to 1969.
Given that the size, fertility, longevity and very existence of any organism vary directly with the health of the ether, then here from 1969 to 1976 we see the degredation of the health of the ether by low wavelength microwave radiation at a rate greater than that at which the health of the ether is improving as a baseline on the way up to and through the end of the Mayan “long count” in 2012.
From 1970 to 1980, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon decreased by an annual average of 4.6%
From 1970 to 1980, the 4.6% average annual decrease in adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon was 192% greater/less(?) than its 5% average anual increase from 1960 to 1970.
From 1970 to 1980, decreased by 46%, or by almost half, from 384,780 to 207,770, the fewest since recordkeeping began in 1938.
In 1970, 384,780 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 1971, 405,702 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 1972, 394,456 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 1973, 398,635 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 1974, 366,759 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 1975, 425,566 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 1976, 507,773, adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon, the greatest since recordkeeping began in 1938.
In 1977, 366,657 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 1978, 394,600 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 1979, 276,306 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
From 1980 to 1996, the fewest adult Chinook salmon counted in the Columbia River in Oregon decreased by an annual average of .55%.
From 1980 to 1996, the .55% average annual decrease in he fewest adult Chinook salmon counted in the Columbia River in Oregon was 44.7% greater, or almost half again greater than its .38% average annual decrease from 1944 to 1980.
From 1980 to 1996, the fewest adult Chinook salmon counted in the Columbia River in Oregon decreased by 8.8%, from 207,770 to 189,419.
From 1980 to 1990, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon increased by an annual average of 4.3%.
From 1980 to 1990, the 4.3% average annual increase in adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon was 193.5% greater than its 4.6% average annual decrease from 1970 to 1980.
From 1980 to 1990, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon increased by 42.7%, or by almost half, from 207,770, the fewest since recordkeeping began in 1938, to 296,525.
In 1980, 207,770, adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon, the fewest since recordkeeping began in 1938.
In 1980, the 207,770 adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon, 13.7% fewer than the previous record low of 240,763 set in 1944.
In 1981, 232,299 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 1982, 247,911 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 1983, 185,665, adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon, the fewest since recordkeeping began in 1938.
From 1983 to 2001, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon increased by an annual average of 36.7%.
From 1983 to 2001, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon increased by 367.3%, or by more than four and a half times, from 185,665, the fewest since recordkeeping began in 1938, to 867,728, the greatest since recordkeeping began in 1938.
In 1983, 185,665, adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon, the fewest since recordkeeping began in 1938.
In 1984, 216,465 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 1985, 296,429 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 1986, 370,729 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 1987, 468,610 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 1988, 411,896 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 1989, 373,205 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
From 1990 to 2000, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.increased by an annual average of 3.6%.
From 1990 to 2000, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon by 35.5%, or by more than one third, from 296,525 to 401,711.
From 1990 to 2000, the 3.6% average annual increase in adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon was 16.3% less than its 4.3% average annual increase from 1980 to 1990.
Here, from 1990 to 2000, while the salmon population in the Columbia River is still increasing, the rate of that increase is slowing, as low wavelength microwave radiation from what we collectively refer to as technology degrades the health of the ether at a rate greater than that at which it is improving as a baseline on the way up to and through the end of the Mayan “long count” in 2012.
In 1990, 296,525 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 1991, 226,411 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 1992, 219,688 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 1993, 259,337 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 1994, 208,196 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 1995, adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 1996, 189,419, adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon, the fewest since recordkeeping began in 1938.
In 1997, 360,673 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 1998, 248,860 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 1999, 306,981 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
From 2000 to 2010, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.by an annual average of 11.6%
From 2000 to 2010, the 11.6% average annual increase salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon was 222.2% greater, or more than three times greater than its 3.6% average annual increase from 1990 to 2000.
Given that the size, fertility, longevity and very existence of any organism vary directly with the health of the ether, this shows that here, from 2000 to 2010, the improvement in the health of the ether on the way up to and through the end of the Mayan “long count” in 2012 was taking place at a rate exponentially greater than that at which low wavelength microwave radiation was able to degrade it, and thus driving an exponential increase in the Chinook salmon population in the Columbia River.
From 2000 to 2010, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon increased by 116%, or by more than two times, from 401,711 to 809,799
From 2000 to 2001, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon increased by 116%, or by more than two times, from 401,711 to 867,728.
From 2000 to 2001, the 116% increase in adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon was 216% greater, or more than three times greater than its 36.7% average annual increase from 1983 to 2001.
Given that the size, fertility, longevity and very existence of any organism vary directly with the health of the ether, this shows that here, from 2000 to 2001, the improvement in the health of the ether on the way up to and through the end of the Mayan “long count” in 2012 was taking place at a rate exponentiallygreater than that at which low wavelength microwave radiation was able to degrade it, and thus driving an exponential increase in the Chinook salmon population in the Columbia River.
In 2001, 867,728 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon, the greatest since recordkeeping began in 1938.
In 2001, the 867,728 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon were % greater than the 507,773 adult Chinook salmon counted there in 1976.
From 2001 to 2003, the all-time record adult Chinook salmon populations in the Columbia River in Oregon increased by an annual average of 3%.
From 2001 to 2003, the all-time record adult Chinook salmon populations in the Columbia River in Oregon increased by 6.17%, from 867,728 to 921,314.
From 2001 to 2002, the all-time record salmon populations in the Columbia River in Oregon increased by .5%, from 867,728 to 871,763.
In 2002, 871,763, adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon, the greatest since recordkeeping began in 1938.
From 2002 to 2003, the all-time record salmon populations in the Columbia River in Oregon increased by 5.7%, from 871,763 to 921,314.
From 2002 to 2003, the 5.7% increase in the all-time record salmon populations in the Columbia River in Oregon was 1,040% greater, or more than eleven times greater than its .5% increase from 2001 to 2002.
In 2003, 921,314 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon, the greatest since recordkeeping began in 1938.
From 2003 to 2013, the all-time record salmon populations in the Columbia River in Oregon increased by an annual average of 2.3%.
From 2003 to 2013, the 2.3% average annual increase in the all-time record salmon populations in the Columbia River in Oregon was 23.3% less than its 3% average annual increase from 2001 to 2003.
From 2003 to 2013, the all-time record salmon populations in the Columbia River in Oregon increased by 22.6%, from 921,314 to 1,129,664.
In 2004, 846,026 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 2005, 570,413 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 2006, 493,708 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 2007, 275,954 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 2008, 518,942 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 2009, 480,284 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
From 2010 to 2020, adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon decreased by an annual average of 3.4%.
From 2010 to 2020, the 3.4% average annual decrease in adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon was 129.3% less(?) than its 11.6% average annual increase from 2000 to 2010.
Given that the size, fertility, longevity and very existence of any organism vary directly with the health of the ether, this shows that the degredation of the health of the ether by the low wavelength microwave radiation which we collectively refer to as technology is degrading the health of the ether at a rate greater than that at which the health of the ether is improving as a baseline on the way up to and through the end of the Mayan “long count” in 2012, and thus the decreasing the Chinook salmon population in the Columbia River.
From 2010 to 2020, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon decreased by 33.8%, or by one third, from 809,799 to 535,746.
In 2010, 809,799 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 2011, 677,171 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 2012, 589,937 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 2013, 1,129, 664, adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon, the greatest since recordkeeping began in 1938.
From 2013 to 2015, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon increased by an annual avarage of 9.15%.
From 2013 to 2015, the 9.15% average annual increase in adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon was 117.8% greater, or more than two times greater than its 4.2% average annual increase from 1938 to 2013.
And this right on time with the ending of the Mayan “long count” in 2012.
Given that the size, fertility, longevity and very existence of any organism vary directly with the health of the ether, this shows that here, from 2013 to 2015, the improvement in the health of the ether on the way up to and through the end of the Mayan “long count” in 2012 was taking place at a rate exponentially greater than that at which low wavelength microwave radiation was able to degrade it, and thus driving an exponential increase in the Chinook salmon population in the Columbia River.
From 2013 to 2015, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon increased by 18.3%, from 1,129,644 to 1,337,101. Both years were all-time records.
In 2014, 1,154,643, adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon, the greatest since recordkeeping began in 1938.
In 2014, the 1,154,643, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon, the greatest since recordkeeping began in 1938, were 2.2% greater than the 1,129, 664, adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam in 2013, which were the greatest since recordkeeping began in 1938.
In 2015, 1,337,101, adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon, the greatest since recordkeeping began in 1938.
In 2015, the 1,337,101, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon were 15.8% greater than the 1,154,643 adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon in 2014, which were the greatest since recordkeeping began in 1938.
From 2014 to 2015, the 15% increase in the record adult Chinook salmon populations on the Columbia River in Oregon was 581.8% greater, or almost seven times greater than their 2.2% increase from 2013 to 2014.
In 2016, 697,981, adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
On August 31, 2016, I wrote the following on Don Croft’s Etheric Warriors forum:
"Following up on my analyses of Stone Crab and Horseshoe Crabs, I hit the great big official Salmon Numbers website.
http://www.fpc.org/web/apps/adultsalmon/Q_adultcounts_annualtotalsquery.php
I created a spreadsheet, patiently compiled the numbers for Adult Chinook salmon at the Bonneville dam, 1938 to present. One can click on a bunch of counting locations (Bonneville just being one of, like, seven), and you can research different fish populations (Adult Chinook, Jack Chinook, Steelhead, etc.).
It took a ridiculous amount of time just to do what I did. Obviously, I, or another researcher, can broaden the data set, check different locations, different fish populations, see if what I’ve learned maps outward. As it does sideways and backward with stone crabs and horseshoe crabs.
Here is my analysis of the data, so far:
271,799 Adult Chinook Salmon were counted at Bonneville in 1938, the year they began keeping records.
Adult Chinook salmon numbers at Bonneville increased 152% from 1983 to 1987, up near the highest number recorded
From 1987 through 1995 there was a 59 percent decrease, to 189,419, very close to the lowest number yet recorded (185,665, from just four years previous).
As a researcher Iíd note that violent crime in the U.S. peaked in 1991, 1992, and has been decreasing steadily, since, to the lowest levels since they’ve been keeping records. And Hurricane Andrew was successfully steered and augmented ruinously in 1992.
But then we saw a 270% increase from that low in 1995 to a high of 921,314 in 2003.
That included a 116% increase in 2001, the largest year-to-year percentage increase yet seen. 2001 was roughly the year orgonite came on the scene. And in 1998 I thought to myself ìthereís some kind of big positive change, a transformation underway.î
From 2003 to 2007, there was a 70% drop in salmon numbers, down to 275,954, just 2% above the 1938 baseline. Katrina was successfully steered and augmented and made landfall in 2006. Iím guessing that the then-still-operational weather weaponry matrix that many still mistakenly presume only carries cell phone traffic and weather radar data was getting enough Death energy into the environment to negatively impact the salmon population.
Up 88% in '08. Down 7% in '09. Up 69% in 2010. Down a cumulative 29% in 2011 and 2012.
Then the drag car hooked, and took off. Adult Chinook salmon numbers at Bonneville up 126%, 2013 through 2015.
1,337,101 adult Chinook Salmon passed the Bonneville Dam in 2015, The most since counting began.
That’s 391% above the 1938 baseline of 271,799.
Next Iím going to do the Kenai river in Alaska. Same painstaking thing as these first three."
On September 1, 2016, on his Etheric Warriors forum, Don Croft said "Jeff has been working on the following for about a week, fine tuning it. Along with the Positive Changes thread, I think this new effort is a true pioneering effort and unique.
I think that ‘synchronicity’ is what lawyers call, ‘a word of art,’ which happens to be a useful tool for dogmatists. Theosophy chumps who use this new word often don’t appreciate it and might often discredit it by association, like the words made up by Freud, Jung and other questionable employees of the corporate order are/were bandied about by predatory psychiatrists as a control mechanism. I think a lot of those words of art, like, ‘paranoid,’ ‘schizophrenic,’ ‘anal,’ ‘manipulative passive aggressive,’ etc., actually work pretty well to describe the nature and personal outlook of our enemy, though. You probably know that Freud had Reich blackballed for curing mental illness rather than just ‘analyzing’ it. You might not know that after Freud moved to England to run Tavistock Institute, Jung became Hitler’s top psychiatry academic; he volunteered for the job. I don’t know who made up the word, ‘synchronicity,’ but it wouldn’t surprise me to know that it was an institutionalized academic who invented it. Lots of words that became popular because theosophists popularized them turned out to be useful in spite of the source and I love ‘synchronicity.’
It seems true enough to me that all events and trends that happen at the same time are closely related and this is probably the main operative principle behind divination. What we’ve all seen (those who have systematically done orgonite fieldwork and paid attention) is that we can each strongly create and influence positive results and trends. The way we each do that with a relatively small amount of inexpensive, humble material seems to fit a broad definition of magic Cool and another magical development is the way that all of the orgonite in the world seems to communicate together, which might explain why we’re now seeing Sylphs over regions where nobody has apparently been doing this work, yet, also perhaps why weather sabotage efforts now seems to be failing on a scale that is beyond what our own efforts can account for. I saw the first evidence, last night, that orgonite is finally spreading in China, by the way.
A recent TV episode (Carol and I buy our favorite TV series on DVD) that was recently filmed there featured an aerial daytime panning shot of the city and there wasn’t a trace of smog. I’ll be watching for similar views of other Chinese cities, all of which had been horribly smoggy, unlike most cities in the rest of the world since 2003 or so. Quiet urban gifters apparently proliferated very early in this unorganized movement.
I think that what Jeff is doing is to show us how positive trends can influence each other in an immediate way, for good or ill. In the latter case, the dramatic drop of salmon numbers at the start of WWII can’t be accounted for by poisoning because the war was on the other side of the Pacific Wink–the end of the war introduced a dramatic increase in those numbers. Maybe the operating principle of that dynamic can account for the relatively sudden explosion of Sylphs in the world. He intuited a positive change some years before I did, by the way. I didn’t feel confident that the bad guys are losing until late 2004 and I largely missed the positive significance of the birth of the internet for some years after it happened. If orgonite had shown up in a public way 30 years ago maybe it would have been ignored and if that’s the case, then timing is a big factor."
In 2017, 488,981 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 2018, 336,030 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 2019, 381,773 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
From 2020 to 2025, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon increased by an annual average of 3.6%.
From 2020 to 2025, adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon increased by 18%, or by almost one fifth, from 535,746 to 632,461.
From 2020 to 2025, the 3.6% average annual increase in adult Chinook salmon counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon was 205.8% greater(?) than its 3.4% average annual decrease from 2010 to 2020.
Given that the size, fertility, longevity and very existence of any organism vary directly with the health of the ether, this shows that here, from 2020 to 20025, the improvement in the health of the ether on the way up to and through the end of the Mayan “long count” in 2012 was taking place at a rate exponentially greater than that at which low wavelength microwave radiation was able to degrade it, and thus driving an exponential increase in the Chinook salmon population in the Columbia River.
in 2020, 535,746 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
From 2021 to 2022, adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 2021, 489,523 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 2022, 752,638 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 2023, 722,270 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 2024, 648,902 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
In 2025, 632,461 adult Chinook salmon were counted at Bonneville dam on the Columbia River in Oregon.
Jeff Miller, Honolulu, HI, April 13, 2026
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