“It is only prudent never to place complete confidence in that by which we have even once been deceived.”
― René Descartes, Meditations on First Philosophy
May 20, 2008 - Record Blue Cat Caught in Krodel Lake
August 26, 2009 - New State Record Blue Catfish Caught in Wayne County
April 30, 2014 - A new blue catfish state record
January 16, 2020 - State record for blue catfish is broken again
“If there were Some Big Conspiracy, you couldn’t keep it a secret. Someone would notice, someone would speak up.”
I’m sure you’ve all heard that one.
Did you notice how, in all four of those headlines, the authors have omitted the name of the state, under the false guise of familiarity? Down through the years, they’ve all used the exact same technique to make the subject drastically less searchable.
In the first example, as a bonus, the author also omitted the word " state ".
The people writing these headline are fellow propagandists. They are, yes, fellow conspirators , working the formula they’ve been directed to within the larger news blackout that is in place on this subject. The same techniques and verbiage are being used, down through time, regardless of author, regardless of geography,
They are unified in their efforts to block and blunt the truth, that fish are growing larger than ever in history due to the Orgonite-driven return to health of the etheric environment that those fish inhabit.
Now, a committed Coincidence theorist will have no difficulty saying " well, that’s just a coincidence! " when faced with information such as this. However I don’t believe that I should stop saying it, because there are still people alive who haven’t given up their powers of rational observation and critical thinking.
Despite the fact that we’re discussing fish, it gets, well, pretty dry from here. However I’ve bolded the important things.
The current West Virginia blue catfish state record for weight, from 2014, is 52.95 pounds, 117% larger than a prior record holder from 2005, which weighed 24.37 pounds. Has well more than doubled in size in less than ten years. That’s a baseline average annual increase in size of 5.8% over those 9 years.
The current West Virginia blue catfish state record for weight, from 2014, weighed 52.95 pounds, and was 19% larger than the previous 44.5 pound record holder from 2012. That’s an average annual increase in weight of 9.5% over those two years.
How can the rate of growth from 2012 to 2014 be so far above the baseline? The opposite should be the case, as the organism gets closer and closer to its maximum size. Here, we see the growth rate growing exponentially going forward in time.
That record holder for weight from 2012 was 38% larger than the previous West Virginia blue catfish state record for weight, a 32.28 pound fish caught in 2011.
We see a truly quantum increase in growth from 2011 to 2012, when the positive changes I’ve been documenting in these articles got underway in earnest. I began writing about them on a daily basis in 2013.
That record holder from 2011 was 34.5% larger than the previous West Virginia blue catfish state record for weight, a 24 pound fish caught in 2009. That’s an average annual increase in weight of 17.25% over those two years.
That 27.2 pound record holder from 2008 was 11.6% larger than the previous record holder, a 24.37-pound fish caught by Sam Morrison from the Ohio River in 2005. That’s an average annual increase in size of 3.9% over those three years.
How or why can this size increase be below the baseline? It’s early in the data set, and growth rates can and will necessarily be higher, earlier, because the organism’s growth will shrink as it gets closer and closer to its maximum possible size.
The current West Virginia blue catfish state record for length, from 2020, is 18% longer than a prior length record holder from 2009.
Record length increased from 40.4 inches in 2009 to 42.25 inches, also in 2009. That’s a 4.6% increase.
Record length increased 3.9% from 2009 to 2012, for an average annual increase in length of 1.3% during those three years.
The record length increased 4% from 2014 to 2020, for an average annual increase in length of .21% during those three years.
Fish, such as blue catfish in West Virginia, are growing larger than ever in history due to the Orgonite-driven return to health of the etheric environment that those fish inhabit.
A Great Big Conspiracy exists to blunt and deny this truth, and I’ve noticed, and am speaking up about it.
Jeff Miller, Brooklyn, New York, February 9, 2020
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2005 - blue cats were reintroduced to West Virginia waters in 2005.
May 15, 2008 - West Virginia - New State Record Blue Catfish and Skipjack
Two state record fish were caught on May 5, 2008, according to Frank Jezioro, Director of the Division of Natural Resources.
A state record blue catfish was caught by Chad Bright of Henderson in Mason County. He caught the 36.85-inch, 27.2-pound fish from Krodel Lake in Mason County using a live crayfish. Bright’s catch establishes a new West Virginia record for weight and length. The previous record for blue catfish was a 36.5-inch, 24.37-pound fish caught by Sam Morrison from the Ohio River in 2005.
May 20, 2008 - Record Blue Cat Caught in Krodel Lake
Excited with his massive catfish, Bright asked his dad to come over and have a look. The elder Bright noted it was a blue cat and had a regulations brochure in his truck–which revealed it was a potential state record catch.
“He said the record was only 24-pounds, so I went and got my scale and weighed it and my scale was reading 28,” said Bright. “I said ‘Man, this is nuts I’ve got a state record here!’ I called the DNR and it ended up being 27-2.”
Bright ran to his home five-minutes away, grabbed a cooler, and hauled the monster to the DNR’s district office only a few miles away at McClintic Wildlife Management Area. There, biologist Zack Brown confirmed the weight and length–both state records. The huge catfish stretched 38.85 inches and weighed officially 27lbs, 2oz.
(Under the false guise of familiarity, the headline omits the word “state”, and also the name of the state, to make the subject drastically less searchable. The author obfuscates the previous record, won’t say when it was set, or who set it. - ed)
August 26, 2009 - West Virginia - New State Record Blue Catfish Caught in Wayne County
A new state record blue catfish was caught by David Wayne Green of Wayne, W.Va. , according to Frank Jezioro, Director of the West Virginia Division of Natural Resources. Green caught the 40.4-inch, 22.3-pound fish from Twelvepole Creek in Wayne County on August 5, 2009. His catch establishes a new West Virginia record for length.
The previous record for blue catfish was a 36.85-inch, 27.2-pound fish caught by Chad Bright from Krodel Lake in Mason County in 2008. Bright’s fish still stands as the state weight record.
October 6, 2012 - W.Va. state record blue catfish caught
A state record blue catfish was caught recently from the Ohio River, according to Frank Jezioro, Director of the West Virginia Division of Natural Resources.
The record blue catfish was caught by St. Albans’ Mark A. Foster. Foster caught the 43.9-inch, 44.5-pound fish from the Ohio River while using cut bait.
Foster’s catch establishes a new West Virginia record for length and weight. His catch breaks his own 2011 record catch of a 32.28-pound blue catfish. The previous length record was a 42.25-inch blue catfish caught by Lynn Lange in 2009.
(The headline deviously uses the abbreviation " W. Va. ", to make the subject drastically less searchable. The author used the hedging generality " breaks " to describe the difference between the old record and the new, and made me do the math. It’s a 38% increase in weight and a 3.9% increase in length . Such records are usually broken by tiny margins, as the organism gets closer and closer to its maximum possible size. - ed)
April 30, 2014 - West Virginia - A new blue catfish state record
The fish weighed 52.95 pounds and measured 47.75 inches, both state records.
Hoffman’s catfish bested the previous record, also caught from the Ohio River in 2012 by Mark Foster. Foster’s fish was 44.5 pounds and 43.9 inches.
(Under the false guise of familiarity, the headline omits the name of the state, to make the subject drastically less searchable. The author used the hedging generality “bested” to describe the difference between the old record and the new, and made me do the math. It’s a 19% increase in weight and an 8.7% increase in length . Such records are usually broken by tiny margins, as the organism gets closer and closer to its maximum possible size. - ed)
January 16, 2020 - West Virginia - State record for blue catfish is broken again
Conner’s assessment turned out to be correct as the tape measure officially measured the length at 49.84 inches, good enough for a new state record for length. It eclipsed the previous record of 47.75 inches caught in 2014 by Austin Hoffman in the Ohio River.
(Under the false guise of familiarity, the headline omits the name of the state, to make the subject drastically less searchable. The author used the hedging generalities “broken” and “eclipsed” to describe the difference between the old record and the new, and made me do the math. It’s a 4% increase. Such records are usually broken by tiny margins, as the organism gets closer and closer to its maximum possible size. - ed)