The current Pennsylvania state record flathead catfish, from May 2020, was almost a third larger than a prior record holder from 1985. And its growth rate is increasing going forward in time

“You must live in the present, launch yourself on every wave, find your eternity in each moment. Fools stand on their island of opportunities and look toward another land. There is no other land; there is no other life but this.”

― Henry David Thoreau

(May 2020 - Jonathan Pierce, of Roxborough, PA, cradles the 56.3-pound flathead catfish that likely will be the largest fish on record with the Pennsylvania Fish and Boat Commission.)

It’s June 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 are being driven by the collective influence of untold thousands of inexpensive Orgonite devices based on Wilhelm Reich’s work.

Since Don Croft first fabricated tactical Orgonite in 2000, its widespread, ongoing and ever-increasing distribution 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 state of health and vitality.

One of those positive changes is fish growing to sizes never seen previously. For example, the current Pennsylvania state record flathead catfish, from May 2020, weighed 56.3 pounds, and was 29% larger than a prior 43-pound, 9-ounce record holder from 1985. It’s a baseline average annual increase in size of .8% over those 35 years. That’s almost a third larger.

It was caught in the Schuylkill River in Philadelphia by a dude from Roxborough. If, 40 years ago, in 1980, when I was 16, you had told me, or anyone, that the 2020 Pennsylvania state record flathead catfish would come from the Schuylkill River in Roxborough, you’d have been laughed out of the room. It was a dead, stinking, terrifying river at that time, in that part of the world.

I grew up about an hour and a half away, in Emmaus, Pennsylvania, but Philadelphia’s been in my life since I was a kid. My dad’s side has cousins in Philly.

There’s a black comedy scene in Martin Scorcese’s “the Irishman” where the protagonist, mob hit man Robert DeNiro , throws a succession of used guns into a particular spot in the Schuylkill.

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(Robert DeNiro dumping a used weapon into the Schuylkill River in Martin Scorcese’s “the Irishman”, 2019)

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(Guns on the bottom of the Schuylkill River in Philadelphia, in Martin Scorcese’s “the Irishman”, 2019)

There’s obviously been some major change for the better in the environment of the flathead catfish in Pennsylvania, and particularly in the Schuylkill River in Philadelphia.

Long after starting this article, I remembered that I gifted the Schuylkill in numerous places in 2008 and 2009, including off the bridge at East Falls, heading over to Roxborough. At least two, maybe three TB’s, off that bridge, into the Schuylkill. Splash. Splash. Splash.

I’m all about water gifting, and it’s such a quaint little slow-speed bridge. It was on the way from our place in Merion Station to Drexel’s med school campus, where my wife was studying at the time.

The next record holder, from September 2006, weighed 47 pounds, and was 7.9% larger than that previous record holder from 1985.

That’s an average increase in size of .38% over those 21 years. That’s less than half the baseline. That’s not supposed to be scientifically possible. This is the front half of the data set. An organism will grow in progressively smaller increments as it approaches its maximum possible size.

The next record holder, from April 2007, weighed 48 pounds, 6 ounces, and was 3% larger than the previous record holder from September 2006. Seven months separated these records, so seven tenths of 3% is an annualized growth rate of 2.1%. That’s over four times the baseline.

The growth rate is increasing, going forward in time . That’s not supposed to be scientifically possible, as an organism will grow in progressively smaller increments as it approaches its maximum possible size.

The next record holder, from May 2019, weighed 50 pound, 7 ounces ,and was 7.7% larger than the previous record holder from April 2007.

Such records are usually broken by tiny margins, as an organism will necessarily grow in ever-smaller increments as it approaches its maximum possible size. Here, the record has been broken by a very large margin.

It’s an average increase in size of .64% per year over those 12 years. That’s below the baseline. The growth rate of the organism is decreasing moving forward in time, as it must. Because an organism will grow in progressively smaller increments as it approaches its maximum possible size.

The current record holder, from May 2020, weighed 56.3 pounds, and was 11.8% larger than the previous record holder from May 2019.

That’s almost a 12% increase, in just one year. And it’s the largest margin between records in the data set. Neither of those are supposed to be scientifically possible. Such records are usually broken by tiny margins, as an organism will grow in progressively smaller increments as it approaches its maximum possible size.

This number is exponentially above the baseline, and it’s the last unit in the data set. That’s not supposed to be scientifically possible, as an as an organism will grow in progressively smaller increments as it approaches its maximum possible size.

The growth rate of the flathead catfish in Pennsylvania is increasing exponentially, going forward in time. That’s not supposed to be scientifically possible, as an organism will grow in progressively smaller increments as it approaches its maximum possible size.

That unstated, unmentioned change is the Orgonite-driven improvement in the Etheric environment.

The same folks who earnestly assure us all that there is no such thing as the Ether are desperate to stop research into fish records because that research so easily proves that the primary driver of the size and longevity of any organism is the health of its Etheric environment.

The highly-repetitive linguistic tricks used by the controlled press to blunt research into fish records are broken out below.

The Orgonite-driven improvement of the Etheric environment in the Schuylkill river in Philadelphia has caused flathead catfish there to grow larger than ever in history.

Jeff Miller, Brooklyn, New York, June 2, 2020

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May 28, 2020 - River monster is the new largest fish on record in Pennsylvania

A likely new Pennsylvania record for flathead catfish – a monster weighing 56.3 pounds – was pulled from the Schuylkill River in the Philadelphia area on Sunday night.

Jonathan Pierce, a 34-year-old father of four from Roxborough, connected with the fish while casting trout heads as bait. He regularly uses parts of trout he has caught as bait for flatheads.

When certified by the Pennsylvania Fish and Boat Commission, Pierce’s flathead will top the existing record by almost 6 pounds. That 50-pound 7-ounce fish was caught in the Susquehanna River, near the Muddy Creek public access in York County, on April 6, 2019, by Jeff Bonawitz, of East Lampeter Township.

(The headline omits the name of the fish, as well as the word " state ", to make the subject drastically less searchable. - ed)

May 7, 2019 - NEW STATE RECORD FLATHEAD CATFISH RECORDED

(Under the false guise of familiarity, omits the name of the state, to make the subject drastically less searchable. The story omits any mention of the previous record. - ed)

May 8, 2019 - Man catches Pa. record 50-pound flathead catfish — an invasive species

It took Bonawitz 25 minutes to land the 50-pound, 7-ounce fish. It measured 45.25 inches long. Its girth was 31.25 inches.

The previous state record was 48 pounds, 5 ounces for a flathead catfish caught in Berks County . Pennsylvania state record fish are judged by weight.

(Under the false guise of familiarity, the headline uses the abbreviation “Pa” instead of “Pennsylvania”, and the word “state”, to make the subject drastically less searchable. The date and weight of the previous record are obfuscated. - ed)

May 8, 2019 - Lancaster County man breaks 13-year-old record with 50-pound flathead catfish catch
After a 25-minute fight with the fish, Bonawitz managed to reel in a 50-pound, seven-ounce flathead catfish, toppling the previous record-holder, a 48-pound, six-ounce fish caught in 2006 in Berks County:

(Under the false guise of familiarity, the headline omits the name of the state, and the word “state”, to make the subject drastically less searchable. They also made sure to enter the wrong year, 2006. The record was set in 2007. - ed)

April 12, 2007 - Record flathead taken at Blue Marsh

And what a fish it was. Not a walleye or a striper, or even the

muskie Shabrach thought it might be. This was a flathead catfish,

44.75 inches long and 30 inches around. When weighed on a certified

scale – a full four days after being caught – the fish weighed 48

pounds, 6 ounces.

That makes it a new state record.

Shabrach’s fish bettered by almost a pound and a half the

existing record, a 47-pound flathead pulled from the Ohio River by

Vic Zendron, of West Sunbury, in Butler County.

Ironically, Zendron just caught his fish last September, so his

time as the official record holder lasted only a few months. Prior

to that, Seymore Albramovitz, of Pittsburgh, had held the state

flathead record since 1985 with a 43-pound, 9-ounce fish from the

Allegheny River.

(Under the false guise of familiarity, the headline omits the name of the state, as well as the word “catfish”, to make the subject drastically less searchable. " By almost a pound and a half " is a hedging generality put forward to obscure the far more impactful 7.9% increase between the old record and the new, which I had to do the math to learn. Such records are usually broken by tiny margins, as the organism will necessarily grow in progressively smaller increments as it approaches its maximum possible size. - ed)

The current 46-inch Idaho catch and release state record Northern Pike, from 2018, was 163% longer than a previous 17.5-inch record holder from 2016.

The current 36.5-inch Idaho catch and release state record Gerrard Rainbow Trout, from 2019, was 160% longer than a previous 14 inch record holder from 2018.

The current 30.5-inch Idaho catch and release state record Bull Trout, from 2020, was 293% longer than a previous 18.25 inch record holder from 2016.

The current 22-inch Idaho catch and release state record Brook Trout, from December 2016, was 183% longer than a previous 7.75 inch record holder from April 2016.

The current 37-inch Idaho catch and release state record Steelhead, from 2018, was 37% longer than a previous 27inch record holder from 2016.

The current 119.5-inch Idaho catch and release state record White Sturgeon, from 2019, is 49% longer than a previous 80 inch record holder from 2016.

Brook Trout 22 Henrys Lake Kazen Cromar 12/11/2016

Brook Trout 21 Henrys Lake Kordin Miller 12/2/2016

Brook Trout 8.5 Pass Creek Lafe Gamett 11/26/2016

Brook Trout 7.75 Thorn Creek Scott Turner 04/22/2016

Bull Trout 30.5 Kootenai River Sawyer Livesey 04/08/2020

Bull Trout 29 Lake Pend Oreille Aaron Fox 07/16/2019

Bull Trout 27.5 St. Joe River Tom Weadick 07/12/2019

Bull Trout 27 East Fork Salmon River Max Gustin 07/20/2018

Bull Trout 23.5 Salmon River William Templeton 02/13/2016

Bull Trout 18.25 Salmon River Charlie Crousser 02/11/2016

Gerrard Rainbow Trout 36.5 Lake Pend Oreille Sophie Egizi10/11/2019
Gerrard Rainbow Trout 14 Lake Pend Oreille Miles Landis 11/04/2018

Northern Pike 46 Coeur d’Alene Lake Mark Mills 11/3/2018

Northern Pike 44 Hayden Lake Scott Kerns 03/3/2017

Northern Pike 17.5 Benewah Lake Michael Friedrich 04/9/2016

Steelhead 38 South Fork Clearwater River Samuel Brumbaugh 4/19/19

Steelhead 37 South Fork Clearwater River Tucker Young 12/25/2018

Steelhead 36 South Fork Clearwater River Scott Turner 04/10/2017

Steelhead 34.7 North Fork Clearwater River Gary Hardesty 01/30/2017

Steelhead 33 South Fork Clearwater River Thomas McLeod 02/07/2016

Steelhead 27 Salmon River Spencer Hagen 01/23/2016

White Sturgeon 119.5 Snake River Rusty Peterson, Russell Pottenger, Robert Seiler, Robert Seiler Jr., Kristina Seiler, Mark D’Amico, Max D’Amico 07/09/2019

White Sturgeon 117 Snake River Kirk Fairchild, Lawaine Fairchild, Seamus Fairchild, Jeffry Fairchild, Homer Brown 08/16/2016

White Sturgeon 113.5 Snake River Bryce Jones, Robert Winward, Kirk Winward, Homer Brown 04/30/2016

White Sturgeon 111 Snake River Natalie Hodson, Homer Brown, Kurt Killgore 04/08/2016

White Sturgeon 98.5 Salmon River Josh Bransford 03/12/2016

White Sturgeon 94 Snake River Thomas McLeod, Tyler and Josh Bransford 03/05/2016

White Sturgeon 83 Snake River Michael Elliot 03/03/2016

White Sturgeon 80 Snake River Jordan Chapman 02/06/2016