2018
From 2018 to 2021, the blue catfish in Nebraska increased in size by an annual average of 6.8%.
From 2018 to 2021, the blue catfish in Nebraska increased in size by 20.3%, from 113 pounds to 136 pounds.
From 2018 to 2020, the number of days with one or more reports of strong cyanobacteria blooms each month across all Yahara lakes decreased by an annual average of 34%.
In 2018, strong evidence of cyanobacteria blooms on Lake Kegonsa in Wisconsin decreased by 3.6% (average).
In 2018, the swordfish in the Pacific Ocean off Australia increased hyper-exponentially in size.
In 2018, prices of Atlantic salmon, kingfish, king salmon, bluefin tuna and yellowfin tuna in Adelaide, Australia decreased.
In 2018, prices of skipjack tuna in Bangkok, Thailand decreased to a two-year low.
In 2018, heat content in the North Atlantic Ocean decreased to its lowest level in thirty years.
From 2018 to 2019, the size of the verified West Virginia state record blue catfish increased by 1% (average).
From 2018 to 2019, the Delaware state record blueline tilefish increased in size by 4.1% (average)
From 2018 to 2019, the Georgia state record blue catfish increased in size by 6.2% (average).
From 2018 to 2019, the blue catfish in Nebraska increased in size by 6.8% (average).
From 2018 to 2019, the respective 6.2% (average) and 6.8% (average) increases in size of the blue catfish in Georgia and Nebraska were statistically very similar.
From 2018 to 2019, the water clarity of Lake Wingra in Wisconsin increased by 11.3% (average).
From 2018 to 2019, water quality in Lake Tahoe increased by 17%, to the highest level in history. It was the biggest one-year improvement since they began keeping records there 50 years ago.
From 2018 to 2019, the 17% increase in water clarity in Lake Tahoe, the greatest one-year improvement in history, was 21.4% greater, or more than one fifth greater than its 14% increase from 2017 to 2018, which was the greatest one-year increase in history.
From 2018 to 2019, the Delaware state record blue catfish increased in size by 18% (average).
From 2018 to 2019, the Mexican wolf population in Arizona and New Mexico increased by 20% (average).
From 2018 to 2019, blue catfish caught per five hour day in the Chesapeake Bay increased by 20% (average).
In 2018, the largest sturgeon ever caught in the Chesapeake Bay increased in size by 29%.
From 2018 to 2019, the number of days with one or more reports of strong cyanobacteria blooms each month across all Yahara lakes decreased by 34% (average), or by more than one third.
In 2018, the Idaho catch and release state record Garrard rainbow trout more than doubled in size.
(document)
By 2018, after just a year or two in existence, the white marlin disappeared from the Atlantic Ocean off North Carolina, having been once again driven out of existence by the low-wavelength microwave radiation from what we collectively refer to as technology.
The Carolina Sportsman’s Dan Kibler said that they had been (sic) “Blown out of the area by Hurricane Michael.”
In 2018, in October, per the Carolina Sportsman’s Dan Kibler, Ryan Keany caught the first verifiable swordfish in the history of fishing in North Carolina. It weighed 528 pounds.
It was not eligible for the state record because it was caught using an electric reel.
The article goes on to say “Ryan Keany of Manteo was sort of planning on fishing for white marlin when he left the dock on Oct. 14, heading offshore out of Oregon Inlet, but he’d also heard talk that Hurricane Michael had blown all of those popular billfish out of the area.”
The white marlin had just reappeared in the Atlantic Ocean off North Carolina just three years earlier, in 2015, and Dan is yawning and pretending that they’ve always been there.
Indeed, after manifesting there for just a short time, they had alread disappeared once again, obscured by Kibler’s ruse “that Hurricane Michael had blown all of those popular billfish out of the area”.
For those keeping score, the winds above the surface of the ocean do not influence the gigantic fish that swim in the waters below them.
And those in the Punch and Judy crowd who believe him think that the hurricane didn’t blow the blue marlin away because it was bigger and stronger.
Kibler’s insane claim that Hurricane Michael blew the white marlin away and left the swordfish behind is an example of the propaganda technique known as “the big lie”.
It’s part of a larger Confidence game to obscure the fact that the white marlin has been driven out of existence by the low-wavelength microwave radiation from what we collectively refer to as technology.
Dan has put it forward at the behest of his employer, the Carolina Sportsman, because they know that the key to any successful Confidence game is misdirection.
insane - adjective - Lacking the ability to think and behave in ways considered to be normal, especially on account of serious mental illness
The article goes on to say “He decided to target swordfish, however, and that turned into a capital decision. That day, fishing in 180 fathoms of water north of Oregon Inlet, Keany won a 2 1/2-hour battle with a swordfish that bettered the North Carolina state record by 87 pounds.”
Where Dan redacted the name of the person who caught the fish, and then redacted the weight of that fish, and then replaced the margin between the records with the general “by 87 pounds”.
Those are all examples of the propaganda technique known as “stonewalling”.
Dan omitted those details because there is no verifiable North Carolina state record blue marlin prior to 2018.
That fake state record fish is part of a larger Confidence game to obscure the fact that the white marlin has been driven out of existence by the low-wavelength microwave radiation from what we collectively refer to as technology.
Here’s a picture of the Carolina Sportsman’s Dan Kibler, who is insane.

(The Carolina Sportsman’s Dan Kibler)
Dan works at the Carolina Sportsman because he loves to lie, and he loves to write about killing things.
For those struggling with Cognitive Dissonance, pathological lying and a deep love of killing other creatures are both behaviors of an insane person.
You’ve just been conditioned over literally Millennia not to notice.
I have included Dan’s picture so that you could get a better idea of what an insane generational Satanist Freemason of marginal influence looks like.
They are all related to one another through the maternal bloodline. Generational Satanists comprise between twenty and thirty percent of the populace, and are hiding in plain sight in every city, town and village on Earth. It’s how the few have controlled the many all the way back to Babylon, and before.
But they say that the hardest part of solving a problem is recognizing that you have one.
Don Croft used to say “Parasites fear exposure above all else”.
In 2018, the two largest swordfish in the history of Australia were caught in the Pacific Ocean.
In 2018, the largest sturgeon in the history of Maryland was caught in the Chesapeake Bay.
In 2018, the largest bluefin tuna in the history of North Carolina was caught in the Atlantic Ocean.
In 2018, after an absence of over seventy years, the ivory-billed woodpecker reappeared in the environment in Louisiana for the first time since 1944, as the health of the ether improved to the point where the species could once again manifest within it.
In 2018, after an absence of some indeterminate period of time, the blue catfish reappeared in Nebraska in the Missouri River at a weight of 113 pounds, as the health of the ether improved to the point where the species could once again manifest within it.
Mike Ohara caught a blue catfish with setlines. It weighed 113 pounds. It is the first example of the blue catfish in Nebraska in history for which independent media verification and photographs exist.
The USGS table for the blue catfish does not include Mike Ohara’s catch in the Missouri River in Nebraska in 2018. Why?
In 2018, after an absence of some indeterminate period of time, the blue Marlin reappeared in the Pacific Ocean off Australia, as the health of the ether improved to the point where the species could once again manifest within it.
In 2018, after an absence of some indeterminate period of time, the yellowfin tuna reappeared in the Atlantic Ocean off South Carolina, as the health of the ether improved to the point where the species could once again manifest within it.
In 2018, after an absence of some indeterminate period of time, the bluefin tuna reappeared in the Atlantic Ocean off Florida, as the health of the ether improved to the point where the species could once again manifest within it.
In 2018, after an absence of some indeterminate period of time, the freshwater drum reappeared in Wyoming in (location), as the health of the ether improved to the point where the species could once again manifest within it.
In 2018, after an absence of some indeterminate period of time, the swordfish reappeared in the Atlantic Ocean off New Hampshire, as the health of the ether improved to the point where the species could once again manifest within it.
In 2018, after an absence of some indeterminate period of time, the swordfish reappeared in the Pacific Ocean off Australia, as the health of the ether improved to the point where the species could once again manifest within it.
In 2018, the catches of the largest swordfish in the history of North Carolina, the two largest swordfish in the history of Australia, and the second-largest swordfish in the history of the world occurred simultaneously.
In 2018, the size of the sturgeon in the Chesapeake Bay, the swordfish in the Pacific Ocean off Australia and the Garrard rainbow trout in Idaho all increased exponentially.
In 2018, the catches of the first freshwater drum ever caught in Wyoming, the first swordfish ever caught in the Atlantic Ocean off New Hampshire and the first yellowfin tuna ever caught in the Atlantic Ocean off South Carolina all occurred simultaneously.
In 2018, the reappearances in the Atlantic Ocean of the bluefin tuna off Florida, the yellowfin tuna off South Carolina, and the swordfish off New Hampshire all occurred simultaneously.
From June 2018 to June 2020, the number of days with one or more reports of strong cyanobacteria blooms each month across all Yahara lakes decreased by 68%, or by more than two thirds, from 25 to 8.
2018 SUMMARY
In 2018, after just a year or two in existence, the white marlin disappeared from the Atlantic Ocean off North Carolina;
the size of sturgeon in the Chesapeake Bay, swordfish in the Pacific Ocean off Australia and Garrard rainbow trout in Idaho all increased exponentially;
the swordfish in the Pacific Ocean off Australia increased hyper-exponentially in size;
prices of Atlantic salmon, kingfish, king salmon, bluefin tuna and yellowfin tuna in Adelaide, Australia decreased;
prices of skipjack tuna in Bangkok, Thailand decreased to a two-year low;
heat content in the North Atlantic Ocean decreased to its lowest level in thirty years;
the size of the verified West Virginia state record blue catfish increased by 1% (average);
strong evidence of cyanobacteria blooms on Lake Kegonsa in Wisconsin decreased by 3.6% (average);
the Delaware state record blueline tilefish increased in size by 4.1% (average);
the Georgia state record blue catfish increased in size by 6.2% (average);
the blue catfish in Nebraska increased in size by 6.8% (average);
the respective 6.2% (average) and 6.8% (average) increases in size of the blue catfish in Georgia and Nebraska were statistically very similar;
the water clarity of Lake Wingra in Wisconsin increased by 11.3% (average);
water quality in Lake Tahoe increased by 17%, to the highest level in history. It was the biggest one-year improvement since they began keeping records there 50 years ago;
that 17% increase was 21.4% greater, or more than one fifth greater than its 14% increase from 2017 to 2018, which was the greatest one-year increase in history;
the Delaware state record blue catfish increased in size by 18% (average);
the Mexican wolf population in Arizona and New Mexico increased by 20% (average);
blue catfish caught per five hour day in the Chesapeake Bay increased by 20% (average);
the largest sturgeon ever caught in the Chesapeake Bay increased in size by 29%;
the number of days with one or more reports of strong cyanobacteria blooms each month across all Yahara lakes decreased by 34% (average), or by more than one third;
the Idaho catch and release state record Garrard rainbow trout more than doubled in size;
the two largest swordfish in the history of Australia were caught in the Pacific Ocean;
the largest sturgeon in the history of Maryland was caught in the Chesapeake Bay;
the largest bluefin tuna in the history of North Carolina was caught in the Atlantic Ocean;
the first freshwater drum in Wyoming, the first swordfishin off New Hampshire and the first yellowfin tuna ever off South Carolina all occurred simultaneously;
after an absence of over seventy years, the ivory-billed woodpecker reappeared in the environment in Louisiana;
after an absence of some indeterminate period of time, the swordfish reappeared in the Pacific Ocean off Australia;
the swordfish reappeared in the Atlantic Ocean off New Hampshire,
the freshwater drum reappeared in Wyoming in (location);
the bluefin tuna reappeared in the Atlantic Ocean off Florida;
the yellowfin tuna reappeared in the Atlantic Ocean off South Carolina;
the blue Marlin reappeared in the Pacific Ocean off Australia;
the blue catfish reappeared in Nebraska in the Missouri River;
Jeff Miller, Honolulu, HI, May 29, 2026
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