The current Missouri state record (and new world record) Spotted Sucker fish, from 2020, is well more than twice as large as a previous record holder from 1992

“I like the scientific spirit—the holding off, the being sure but not too sure, the willingness to surrender ideas when the evidence is against them: this is ultimately fine—it always keeps the way beyond open—always gives life, thought, affection, the whole man, a chance to try over again after a mistake—after a wrong guess.”

― From " Camden Conversations ", by Walt Whitman, first published in 1973

It’s May 2020, and great positive changes are underway at every level of our reality. They began in earnest in 2012, and have been increasing in speed and magnitude since. I’ve been writing articles on the subject since 2013.

These positive changes collectively driven by many thousands of inexpensive Orgonite devices based on Wilhelm Reich’s work. Since the early 2000’s, simple Orgonite has been collectively unknitting and transforming the ancient Death energy matrix built and expanded by our dark masters, well, all the way back to Babylon and before. And as a result the Ether is returning to its natural, ages-long state of health and vitality.

One of those changes is wildlife is booming and burgeoning to a level never seen previously.

For example, the current Missouri state record (and new world record) Spotted Sucker fish, from 2020, is 69% larger than the previous record holder from 2014. That’s an average annual rate of growth of 11.5% per year over those six years.

Such records are usually broken by tiny margins, as the organism gets closer and closer to its maximum possible size.

Since the lifespan of the Spotted Sucker fish is approximately six years, we know that the positive environmental change in its environment in Missouri that led to this quantum growth must have occurred in 2009 or later.

That record holder from 2014 was 56% larger than the previous record holder from 1992. That’s an average annual rate of growth of 2.5% over those 22 years.

Such records are usually broken by tiny margins, as the organism gets closer and closer to its maximum possible size. Here, the record was suddenly broken by a huge margin, after standing for over twenty years.

And, since we know that the lifespan of the Spotted Sucker fish to be only six years, we can see that one generation of Spotted Sucker in Missouri was suddenly 70% larger than the one that preceded it. Which was itself over 50% larger than the generation before it.

We’ve also just learned that the growth rate of the Spotted Sucker fish in Missouri is increasing exponentially going forward in time. That’s not supposed to be scientifically possible. The increments of growth will necessarily become smaller and smaller as the organism gets closer and closer to its maximum possible size. Or so the Orthodoxy goes.

The current Missouri state record (and new world record) Spotted Sucker fish, from 2020, is 154% larger than a previous record holder from 1992. It’s well over twice as large. That’s not supposed to be scientifically possible.

After over twenty years, the Missouri state record Spotted Sucker fish from 2014 was over 50% bigger than the previous record holder from 1992. Then, just six years later, the record was broken again, by almost 70%. The species more than doubled in size in two generations of fish. With the current record holder the largest Spotted Sucker fish ever seen on Earth, in all history.

That’s because the primary driver of the size, health and longevity of any organism is the relative health of the Etheric environment it inhabits.

And that’s because the Ether is returning to its ages-long, natural state of life and vitality, due to the widespread distribution of Orgonite devices based on Wilhelm Reich’s work.

Jeff Miller, Brooklyn, New York, May 5, 2020

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May 14, 2020 - Missouri - Poplar Bluff man sets new state record with Spotted Sucker fish

Tyler Goodale of Poplar Bluff reeled in this record setting Spotted Sucker fish at Duck Creek Conservation Area (CA).

A new state record was set April 3 when Tyler Goodale of Poplar Bluff reeled in a Spotted Sucker fish at Duck Creek Conservation Area (CA). Goodale’s sucker fish weighed 3.65 lbs. and measured 18.2 inches. The former state record Spotted Sucker was caught in 1992 at Wappapello Lake and weighed 2 lbs., 1 ounce, according to the Missouri Department of Conservation (MDC).

(Under the false guise of familiarity, the headline omits the name of the state, to make the subject drastically less searchable. The author provides the numbers of the old and new record, but deliberately omits the much more impactful percentage increase between them. So I had to do the math. The weights of the fish are given in two different systems, English and metric, to make doing the math more difficult. The new record is 56% above the old. Such records are usually broken by tiny margins, as the organism gets closer and closer to its maximum possible size. - ed)

April 30, 2020 - Missouri angler catches world-record size fish

Tyler Goodale, of Poplar Bluff, recently caught a new state-record spotted sucker. The 5-pound, 4-ounce fish not only breaks the previous state-record — which was a 3-pound, 10-ounce fish caught in 2014 also by Goodale — but also qualifies for the world record.

(Where the headline omits the name of the fish, to make the subject drastically less searchable. The author provides the numbers of the old and new record, but deliberately omits the much more impactful percentage increase between them. So I had to do the math. The new record holder is 69% above the old. Such records are usually broken by tiny margins, as the organism gets closer and closer to its maximum possible size. - ed)