The Fish of the Sea - 2018 to present

The words “mystery”, “baffled” and “puzzled” are memes, used, among numerous similar variants, whenever anyone in the wholly-controlled-and-coopted Political, Academic, Scientific and Media establishments wants to lie about, well, basically anything. That’s why a swampschool.org article from February 2018 says “Brazil - Gray Dolphin Die-Offs Puzzle Scientists”.

The women’s 20-pound line world record Barramundi increased in size by 66% from some obfuscated date to 2018, from 23 pounds, 10 ounces to 39 pounds,3 ounces.

The women’s IGFA tippet class world record blackfin seabass increased in size by 53% from some obfuscated date to 2018, from 2 pounds, 3 ounces to 4 pounds, 5 ounces.

The all-tackle Male Junior world record great barracuda increased in size by 27.5% from some obfuscated date to 2018, from 23.4 kg (51 lb 9 oz) to 29.85 kg (65 lb 12 oz).

The all-tackle world record snubnose pompano increased in size by 18.4% from some obfuscated date to 2018, from 5.05 kg (11 lb, 3 oz) to 5.98 kg (13 lb, 3 oz).

The men’s 6 kg (12 lb) line world record great barracuda increased in size by 2.8% from some obfuscated date to 2018, from 29.03 kg (63 lb 15 oz) to 29.85 kg (65 lb 12 oz).

Oregon’s wild Willamette winter steelhead run increased 75% from 2018 to 2019, from 1,829 to 3,200.

The Alaska Chum salmon catch increased 45% from 2018 to 2019, to an all-time record of 29 million.

In 2018, the 2009 Mississippi state record for the tiger shark was broken by 458% (get data).

In 2018, the women’s 20-pound line world record for Barramundi from some obfuscated prior date was broken by 66%, increasing from 23 pounds, 10 ounces to 39 pounds, 3 ounces.

In 2018, the world for record rainbow trout from some obfuscated prior date was broken by 65% (get weights).

In 2018, the Texas state record for dog snapper from some obfuscated prior date was broken by 58% (get weights).

In 2018, the women’s IGFA tippet class world record for blackfin seabass from some obfuscated prior date was broken by 53%, increasing from 2 pounds, 3 ounces to 4 pounds, 5 ounces.

In 2018, the women’s 16-pound tippet-class world record for northern pike from some obfuscated prior date was broken by 36.4%, increasing from 13 pounds, 3 ounces to 16 pounds.

In 2018, the 2012 Wyoming state record for freshwater drum was broken by 31% from 2012 to 2018, from 17 pounds, increasing from 4 ounces to 22.58 pounds.

In 2018, the all-tackle Male Junior world record for great barracuda from some obfuscated prior date was broken by 27.5%, increasing from 23.4 kg (51 lb 9 oz) to 29.85 kg (65 lb 12 oz).

In 2018, the Michigan state record for black buffalo was broken by 26%, increasing from 37.06 pounds to 46.54 pounds.

In 2018, the 1999 Washington state record for channel catfish was broken by 24%, increasing from 36.2 pounds to 45 pounds.

In 2018, the Tennessee state record for black crappie from 1985 was broken by 23%, from 4 pounds, 4 ounces to 5 pounds, 4 ounces.

In 2018, the 2005 world record for bass was broken by 19%, increasing from 8.28 pounds to 9.82 pounds.

In 2018, the all-tackle world record for snubnose pompano from some obfuscated prior date was broken by 18.4%, increasing from 5.05 kg (11 lb, 3 oz) to 5.98 kg (13 lb, 3 oz).

In 2018, the 2016 Lake Jackson, Georgia record for blue catfish was broken by 16%, increasing from 43 pounds, 11 ounces to 46 pounds.

In 2018, the South Carolina state record for gag grouper was broken by 12.3%, increasing from 48 pounds, 5 ounces to 54 pounds, 4 ounces.

In 2018, the 1968 world record for skate was broken by 11.6% (get weights).

In 2018, the 2015 rod and reel world record for the northern snakehead (Channa argus) was broken by 8.6% (get weights).

In 2018, the New York state record for black crappie was broken by 8.3%, increasing from 3 pounds, 12 ounces to 4 pounds, 1 ounce.

In 2018, the Arkansas state record for cutthroat trout from 1985 was broken by 5.8%, from 9 pounds, 9 ounces to 10 pounds, 2 ounces.

In 2018, the Ohio state bowfishing record for buffalo sucker was broken by 5.4%, increasing from 40.8 pounds to 43 pounds.

In 2018, the 2015 Michigan bowfishing state record for black buffalo sucker was broken by 4.4% (get weights).

In 2018, the 2006 world record for black crappie was broken by 3.75%, increasing from 5 pounds to 5 pounds, 4.6 ounces.

In 2018, the men’s 6 kg (12 lb) line world record for great barracuda from some obfuscated prior date was broken by 2.8%, increasing from 29.03 kg (63 lb 15 oz) to 29.85 kg (65 lb 12 oz).

Alaska’s Bristol Bay fishing season in 2018 was an all time record.

Russia’s salmon catch was at an all time high in 2018.

In January 2018, xinhuanet.com said “Norway - Seafood exports worth record-high NOK 94.5 billion in 2017”.

Where “record HIGH” is general. The international news blackout that is in place on this subject forbids the use of statistics that would provide specific insight into the magnitude of the trend I’m documenting here.

Since sixty to seventy percent of readers only read the headlines, it goes a long way toward “compartmentalizing” the phenomenon.

“WORTH” record high explains that it’s a revenue record. There’s no way to compare the number to the previous record, so your insight into the magnitude even of that increase is blunted and obscured. The volume goes completely unmentioned.

The article continues: “Norway exported 2.6 million tonnes of seafood worth NOK 94.5 billion in 2017. This is an increase in value of 3 per cent, or NOK 3 billion, and an increase in volume of 7 per cent.”

There’s a strict rule in journalism that you list the largest numbers first, and the rest in descending order. Here the author has blatantly, brazenly inverted it, in an attempt to draw your attention away from the historically unprecedented and unexplained increase in the marine harvest.

Because you’ve been conditioned to think otherwise from birth, your consciousness literally cannot accept that the marine environment is booming and burgeoning to a level not seen in our lifetimes, or perhaps ever.

In the first five months of 2018 Peruvian fish exports for human consumption rose 80% compared with 2017. In January 2018, Virginia’s Rappahanock Record said “Winter oyster harvest is booming”.

The article continues: “We are catching our limit by noon every day and they are beautiful oysters,” said oysterman David Robberecht of Cheriton on Virginia’s Eastern Shore.

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(Atlantic scallops, 2018)

In January 2018, Undercurrent News masterfully spun the headline “NOAA to open New England scallop areas, invite record harvest.”

Where “record” harvest is general. The international news blackout that is in place on this subject forbids the use of statistics that would provide specific insight into the magnitude of the trend I’m documenting here. Since sixty to seventy percent of readers only read the headlines, it goes a long way toward “compartmentalizing” the phenomenon.

The propagandist from Undercurrent News has scrupulously and deviously omitted mention of all the other record scallop harvests that have been occurring, and uses a plausible-deniability excuse at the local level to give the Feds credit for teeing this one up with “opening up closed areas”.

Remember, we learned previously that the first scallop spawn of the season in Martha’s Vineyard in 2017 was “another spectacular success”. And now, just four years later, the article I got that quote from has been scrubbed from the web.

In January 2018, NJ.com said “N.J. hatchery sets record for number of fish in 2017”. Where the terse “sets” record is general.

The international news blackout that is in place on this subject forbids the use of any statistics in headlines that would provide insight into the magnitude of the trend I’m documenting here.

Since sixty to seventy percent of readers only read the headlines, it goes a long way toward “compartmentalizing” the phenomenon.

The article continues: “The state fish hatchery in Hackettstown has been around since 1912, but it has never had a year as productive as 2017. The Hackettstown State Fish Hatchery, operated by the DEP’s Division of Fish and Wildlife, stocked more than 5 million fish in 2017. Some of the many factors that contributed to a great season included the successful collection of broodstock and their eggs, an excellent hatch and extensive on-site pond management. Modern fish diets and nutrition also played important roles, as well as ideal temperatures, sunlight and precipitation for adequate growth, proper health monitoring and avoiding the hazards of overcrowding.”

Wow. So the most fish ever, in all history, was because they collected them successfully, and because of “extensive on-site pond management”, both of which we must presume were for some reason not taking place just the year previously. Only-generally described “modern” diets and nutrition are also credited, which, once again, we’d also have to presume were for some reason not in place just the year before.

The best hatch in all history was allowed to be only “excellent” and “productive”.

Then, in journalistic parlance “buried” at the bottom of the article, we get the figures:

“In addition, some 171,788 fish of other species were raised in 2017 setting the facility’s new yearly production record at 5,082,841, far surpassing the previous high of 3,774,885 set in 2014.”

Did you notice how the author provided the numbers, but carefully hedged by omitting the far more impactful percentage increase between them? So, I had to do the math. The number of fish produced by the New Jersey state fish hatchery in Hackettstown in 2017 was the highest in history since the hatchery was built in 1912. The total was 35% above the previous record, set in 2014.

Such records are usually broken by tiny margins. Here the record is suddenly a third higher than the previous record, with no quantum change in fish management practices to attribute it to. The closest the author gets to telling the truth is “ideal temperatures, sunlight and precipitation”, although how you could claim that New Jersey experienced ideal fish raising temperatures during the third hottest year of all time is beyond me.

Actually, it’s not. The claim that 2017 was the third hottest year in all history is patently false, underscore by the data point I just illustrated.

It is over interest that the two highest production years in the facility’s history were in 2014 and 2017, during the time period I’m documenting the great positive changes occurring at every level of our reality, including at the fish hatchery in Hackettstown.

The words “mystery”, “baffled” and “puzzled” are memes, used, among numerous similar variants, whenever anyone in the wholly-controlled-and-coopted Political, Academic, Scientific and Media establishments wants to lie about, well, basically anything. One of those variants is “amazed”.

That’s why an article from Iowa’s Storm Lake Pilot Tribune from June 2018 is headlined “DNR ‘amazed’ by lake’s water clarity improvement”.

Where “improvement” is general. The international news blackout that is in place on this subject forbids the use of statistics that would provide specific insight into the magnitude of the trend I’m documenting here.

Since sixty to seventy percent of readers only read the headlines, it goes a long way toward “compartmentalizing” the phenomenon.

The article continues: “Things are looking good in the lake, thanks in part to a $50,000 donation from the Lake Preservation Association and regulation over recent years, said George Antoniou, coordinator for the Lake Restoration Program with the Iowa Department of Natural Resources.”

Where a lake that is looking great has been hedged back to looking merely “good”. And where the bullshit plausible-deniability excuses of “fifty grand” and the only-general “regulation” are put forward because the propagandist knows that many or most readers will grasp virtually any straw, no matter how thin, to remain off the hook of personal responsibility.

The article goes on to say “The Storm Lake hatchery has had an “absolutely stellar year,” Wallace said. It was second-best in the hatchery’s 32-year history with a harvest of nearly 500 quarts of eggs. “What this tells us is that the methods we’ve imposed on this lake of releasing fish 17 to 22 inches long is working, and that it takes time to see the effects of regulation and changes,” he said.

Can you see how he’s pretending that they managed to do it, themselves, and doesn’t mention record hatches taking place at other fish hatcheries in other geographies? That’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”.

The article continues: “This year, 16 million fry were released into the lake, up from the usual 14, due to the surplus. Storm Lake is one of four lakes in the state that collects eggs.”

With a straight face, the propagandist has just said, to you face “the surplus in eggs is due to the surplus in eggs”. I’m sure you noticed that they provided the numbers, but carefully hedged by withholding the far more impactful percentage increase between them. That’s another example of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”. So, I had to do the math. It’s a 14% increase, in one year.

The words “mystery”, “baffled” and “puzzled” are memes, used, among numerous similar variants, whenever anyone in the wholly-controlled-and-coopted Political, Academic, Scientific and Media establishments wants to lie about, well, basically anything. One of those variants is “amazed”. That’s why the article goes on to say “I have been amazed by the water clarity this year,” Wallace said. Antoniou echoed that sentiment, saying that water will continue to be monitored three times per year by Iowa State University to continue the good trends. He attributed the improvements in the lake to strong local leadership and support from the community.”

Where “strong local leadership” and “support from the community” are both only-general bullshit plausible-deniability excuses put forward because the propagandist knows that many or most readers will grasp virtually any straw, no matter how thin, to remain off the hook of personal responsibility.

Here’s George’s picture:

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(George Antonio, Iowa DNR)

I’ve included his photograph so you could get a better idea of what a generational Satanist in a position of marginal influence looks like.By the way, Storm Lake is a thinly-veiled reference to the storm god the folks in charge have worshipped under various guises all the way back to Babylon, and before.

In February 2018, SeafoodNews said “Record Russian Salmon Catch Expected for 2018”.

Where “RECORD salmon catch” is general. The international news blackout that is in place on this subject forbids the use of statistics that would provide specific insight into the magnitude of the trend I’m documenting here.

Since sixty to seventy percent of readers only read the headlines, it goes a long way toward “compartmentalizing” the phenomenon.

“Record catch EXPECTED” is trying to play it like they’re not stunned and dumfounded by the wholesale transformation that has taken place in the marine environment. They said “record CATCH expected” to play the ruse that it was more-assiduous fish catching led to the highest number of salmon ever harvested in Russia, in all history.

“Analysts of VNIRO predict the volume of salmon catch in Russia may exceed 500,000 tonnes this year – a record figure in the modern history of the country. The majority of catch (64 percent) will account for Kamchatka, while the most harvested species will comprise humpback and chum salmon …”

I’m sure you noticed how they didn’t mention anything about what the previous record was, or when it was set, or what the margins between the records was, or that these all-time high salmon catches in Russia were being mirrored everywhere else that there are salmon. Or that marine populations were and are growing to unprecedented levels, regardless of species or geography. Those are all examples of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”.

The author from SeafoodNews also didn’t offer any suggestion as to what was driving the never-previously-seen bounty of salmon in Russia. That’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “stonewalling”.

The ruse is bravely played that it was only a “modern” record, which is a bald-faced lie. The author said it was a “record FIGURE” to give the subconscious of the reader the green light to say “oh, someone must have figured that incorrectly!”

The propagandist knows that many or most readers will grasp virtually any straw, no matter how thin, to remain off the hook of personal responsibility.

I’m sure you noticed that the record Russian salmon harvest in 2018 had nothing to do with Aquaculture.

In March 2018, phys.org said “West Coast waters returning to normal but salmon catches lagging”. We know that’s a blatant falsehood, because we learned previously that the Hood River salmon run recorded the highest Chinook harvest in history in 2017.

I’ve exposed the duplicity of phys.org by using what was known in the old days as “fact checking”.

In 2018, Alaska’s Bristol Bay had it’s largest sockeye salmon run in history, dating back to 1893. The total run to Bristol Bay was 62.3 million sockeye. The Nushagak District also set a new record for the largest single district sockeye salmon harvest at 24.1 million sockeye, and the Togiak District also set a record for sockeye return to its district.

“Tim Sands, ADF&G area management biologist for the Togiak and Nushagak districts noted that the length of the run rather than a concentrated peak drove up those numbers. ‘It started picking up early in July. It still wasn’t anything exceptional, it just kind of went on and on and on with good catches,” Sand said, adding that he thought catch and escapement in the district could have been even higher. But mid-August storms curtailed fishing and the counting towers stopped counting, according to their seasonal schedule in early August.”

Where the area management biologist called the largest salmon run in all history “nothing exceptional”, and the best catches in all history merely “good”. Say what you will about them, there’s no quit in these people.

Here’s Tim’s picture:

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(Tim Sands, Management Biologist, Bristol Bay)

I’ve included his photo so you could get a better idea of what a scrupulously-inbred generational Satanist of marginal influence actually looks like.

Since the pathologically-lying Sands knows that they did, in fact stop counting, then he knows the number was definitively higher. “Could” is a hedge. The folks in charge stopped counting Salmon in August, and the run went on for three more months. It’s bold, it’s brazen, and it’s proof that there is, wait for it, a Great Big Conspiracy.

“By all accounts the fishing, when people were here, wasn’t that great, but we got escapement,” Sands said. He’s brazenly described the greatest salmon fishing year in all history as “not that great”.

The article goes on to say: “The pink harvest was roughly half the 20-year average. The coho harvest, while significantly lower than last year’s harvest of 240,000 silvers, was still above average. Sands said that some fishermen seemed disappointed with this year’s pink and silver fisheries. He explained that several factors likely contributed to the outcomes. The run timing to the Naknek-Kvichak, Egegik and Ugashik districts was the latest on record. Fishermen who might otherwise have fished for pinks and silvers, were still busy catching reds in those districts. Further, an oil spill from a capsized tender closed the Nushagak District for nearly a week at the end of July.”

I had to look up a separate story to learn that, on July 13, 2018 the U.S. Coast Guard received a report of a fuel spill in Gambell, Alaska. The amount releases was potentially 2,000 to 2,600 gallons of diesel or home heating oil. OR&R’s scientific support coordinator for the region was requested to discuss site characterization and potential spill response options.”

There’s no mention in the article as to what caused the fuel to spill.

I had to look up another separate story to learn that, on July 25, 2018 the U.S. Coast Guard sector in Anchorage reported that a fishing vessel had capsized in Nushagak Bay, approximately 11 miles south of Dillingham, Alaska. The vessel, FV Pacific Knight, was reported to have 800 gallons of diesel and 300 gallons of hydraulic oil onboard at the time it went down. A sheen was observed on the water.Alaska Department of Fish and Game issued an emergency fishing closure due to the 10 mile rainbow sheen that was observed during an overflight. Commercial fishing reopened on July 31.

There’s no mention in the article as to what caused the fishing vessel to capsize.

I had to look up a third separate article to learn that, on July 30, 2018: “Commercial fishing in Igushik closed due to fuel spill from F/V Pacific Knight”

Here’s a picture from the article:

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The F/V Pacific Knight sank Wednesday near Clark’s Point. (Photo courtesy Mike Jones)

The article went on to say: “F/V Pacific Knight was carrying 1,100 gallons of diesel and hydraulic fuel when it sank.”

There’s no mention in the article as to what caused the flat, heavy fuel tender to capsize, and then sink.

The words “mystery”, “baffled” and “puzzled” are memes, used, among numerous similar variants, whenever anyone in the wholly-controlled-and-coopted Political, Academic, Scientific and Media establishments wants to lie about, well, basically anything. One of those variants is “unclear”. That’s why the article goes on to say “Alaska Department of Fish and Game received a report that people in the area smelled fuel and saw a sheen on the water. How much fuel has spilled was unclear.”

There wasn’t one spill to mess with the pinks, there were THREE. One week after another. Only Tim and the author neglected to mention the other two.

Three big unexplained fuel spills right on top of the salmon run is something that a Mouth-breathing NPR-addict will have no trouble affirming was simply coincidental.

You can see how assiduous, serial fuel-spilling was used to try to negatively impact the largest salmon run in history, going all the way back to 1893, when Poor Mother Gaia was supposedly not dying, like she is now.

The catch rate for Chinook salmon in Lake Ontario from April through June 2018 was 227 percent higher than the previous five-year average.

The IGFA 12-pound tippet-class world record blue catfish increased in size by 17% from 2018 to 2021, from 26.4 pounds to 31 pounds. The average annual increase in size of the IGFA 12-pound tippet-class world record blue catfish from 2018 to 2021 was 5.6%.

The world record rainbow trout increased in size by 65% from some obfuscated date and 2018.

The Texas state record dog snapper increased in size by 58% from some obfuscated date to 2018.

The women’s 16-pound tippet-class world record northern pike increased in size by 36.4% from some obfuscated date to 2018, from 13 pounds, 3 ounces to 16 pounds.

Cod numbers in Iceland in 2018 were the highest in history.

The lobster harvest in Quebec’s Gaspe region tripled from 2018 to 2019.

Skrei Cod exports from Norway increased 27% from 2018 to 2019.

Lake trout numbers in Lake Ontario were 37% above the previous five-year average in 2018.

In 2018, skipjack tuna prices dropped to a two-year low in Bangkok, Thailand. That’s because prices drop either when supply increases, or demand decreases, or both.

Iran’s shrimp exports increased to all-time record 15,177 tons from January to October 2018.

In 2018, Alaska’s Noosa News said that “huge” number of humpback whales seen passing Noosa beaches were “consistent with trends of a booming population”, and asked if “climate change” was “forcing the leviathans farther north”.

In April 2018, sfgate.com said “Record number of killer whales show up to feast in Monterey Bay”. Well, if that’s true, why is a New York Times article from July 2018 headlined “Orcas of the Pacific Northwest Are Starving and Disappearing”?

The New York Times is a State propaganda outlet, using conscious deception while retaining the firmness of purpose that goes with complete honesty. I’m going to have to ask Coincidence Theorists in the readership to recall that we learned previously that Orca numbers off the Pacific coast of the United States were at the highest level in history in 2016.

The words “mystery”, “baffled” and “puzzled” are memes, used, among numerous similar variants, whenever anyone in the wholly-controlled-and-coopted Political, Academic, Scientific and Media establishments wants to lie about, well, basically anything. One of those variants is “unusual”. That’s why the headline of a Mercury News article from May 2018 reads “Unusual number of killer whales sighted on Monterey Bay”.

And it’s why the Illuminist talking-head shill quoted in the article says “It’s unusual for killer whales to gather in such large numbers,” said Nancy Black, a captain and marine biologist with Monterey Bay Whale Watch who has studied this species for nearly 30 years. “There is an abundance and variety of food sources available for the killer whales. In addition to gray whales there are seals, sea lions, and dolphins. Lots of activity this year.”

Nancy doesn’t mention that increased whale numbers in Monterey Bay map against a trend being seen internationally, regardless of geography. That’s an example of a propaganda technique called “compartmentalization”.

Here’s Nancy’s picture:

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(Nancy Black, Captain, Monterey Whale Watch)

I’ve included Nancy’s photograph so you could get a better idea of what a generational Satanist in a position of marginal influence looks like.

In May 2018, Australia’s Adelaide Now said “Australia – whale season has started early with more than 30,000 whales”.

The article goes on to say “A RECORD number of whales are expected to pass the Gold Coast this year as their population continues to boom”.

The subhead reads “BOATIES beware — with a record number of whales expected to swim past the Gold Coast this season, an expert is warning of the increased risk of boat strikes.”

That’s so that you’re not surprised when what we euphemistically refer to as “secret agents” deliberately run over those whales with boats.

You have to get into the article to learn “An estimated 30,000 whales will makes their migration up north past the Gold Coast, up from only 12,000 whales four years ago.”

They gave you the numbers, but carefully withheld the far more impactful percentage increase between them. So, I had to do the math to learn that whales migrating off the West coast of Australia increased 150% from 2014 to 2018. Whales migrating off the West coast of Australia well more than doubled from 2014 to 2018. Poor Mother Gaia not dying so much, oui?

The author used the terse, general “up” to obscure the 150% increase. That’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”.

In July 2018, abc.net.au said “Whale census shows healthy humpback population migrating north”.

Where “healthy” is general. As you may recall, generality is a hallmark of propaganda.

“The numbers have definitely increased as have the number of people that have been taking part in our census each year," the Organisation for the Rescue and Research of Cetaceans (ORRCA)’s president Jacqueline O’Neill said.

Jacqueline used the general term “increased” in place a far more impactful, specific statistic.

“She said compared to just 233 sightings in 2002, and 830 in 2005, the numbers of whales being recorded were positive. ‘Between 2016 and 2017 we actually had an increase of about 500. So we went up from about 1,500 in 2016 to just over 2,000 last year’.”

Jacqueline provided the numbers, but carefully hedged by once again omitting the percentage increase between them, as including it would have been much more impactful, and gone badly off-message re: Poor Mother Gaia, and all. So I had to do the math.

Humpback numbers off the coast of New South Wales, Australia increased 256% from 2002 to 2005.

Humpback whale numbers off the coast of New South Wales, Australia increased 80% from 2005 to 2015. If we use the number 2050 in place of the deliberately-vague “just over 2,000”, humpback whale numbers off the coast of New South Wales, Australia increased 36% from 2016 to 2017.

In August 2018, Discover Wildlife said “U.K. – National Whale and Dolphin Watch sees record sightings reported”

Where “reported” plays the tirelessly-utilized “increased whale and dolphin awareness” ruse to try to explain away the sudden, exponential increase in those populations to their highest level in all history.

The author has desperately tacked “reported” on the back end to give the subconscious of the reader the green light to say “oh, those people at the National Whale and Dolphin Watch would report ANYTHING!”, or “oh, but that was just one REPORT!”

The propagandist knows that many or most readers will grasp virtually any straw, no matter how thin, to remain off the hook of personal responsibility.

Sperm whales are the largest of the toothed whales and have one of the widest global distributions of any marine mammal species. They are found in all deep oceans, from the equator to the edge of the pack ice in the Arctic and Antarctic. They are named after the waxy substance, spermaceti, found in their heads.

Well, if that’s true, why does an article from the U.K.’s Guardian from November 2018 say “Sighting of sperm whales in Arctic a sign of changing ecosystem, say scientists. Rare sighting in the Canadian Arctic as a growing number of species expand their range into warming waters”?

The Guardian is a Mouthpiece of the State, using conscious deception while maintaining the firmness of purpose that goes with complete honesty.

“Io! Paean! Io! sing.

To the finny people’s king.

Not a mightier whale than this

In the vast Atlantic is;

Not a fatter fish than he,

Flounders round the Polar Sea.”

From “The Triumph of the Whale”, by Charles Lamb, 1812

In the Charles Lamb poem immediately above, you can see how whales were frolicking in the Arctic Ocean over two hundred years ago. That’s long before the purportedly coaxed up there by purportedly warming ocean water, as fraudulently alleged by the Guardian.

But, since this is the Middle Ages, and the populace has largely given up the ability to think, read and speak critically, the Guardian’s propaganda is largely accepted as veritable.

In March 2018, the Press Herald said “Landings declined 15.3 percent, from almost 131 million pounds in 2016 to 111 million pounds in 2017, and the boat value of the statewide catch fell 18.6 percent, from about $533 million in 2016 to just under $434 million in 2017, according to the Maine Department of Marine Resources, which released its annual catch data Friday at the Maine Fishermen’s Forum in Rockport. That translates into a drop of 20 million pounds of lobster and $99 million for the state’s lobster fleet.”

What they’re not telling you is that they collectively agreed to haul in less lobster, to prop up the collapsed price created by seven consecutive seasons of record lobster harvests. In the business world, it’s called “price fixing”.

The catch rate for Chinook salmon in Lake Ontario from April through June 2018 was 227 percent higher than the previous five-year average.

In June 2018, directly in the face of most vibrant lobster populations the Gulf of Maine has ever seen, in all recorded history, the New York Post widened its eyes to simulate honesty and said “America’s lobster bonanza is about to go bust”.

It’s a flexing of the “boom/bust cycles driven by Climate Change” meme that is tirelessly used to rebut the great positive changes I”m documenting here, including those taking place among lobsters and other crustaceans, all regardless of geography.

In July 2018, CNBC.com said “Maine’s lobster business booming despite record catches”.

“Record catches” of course equal “booming lobster business”. DESPITE record catches is brave, blatant negative spin.

An article from August 2018 said that there were “far more” tuna at fishing tournament in Maine, and that the tournament’s quota increase “reflects a tuna resurgence seen on the water for some time.”

Where “far more”, “resurgence” and “some time” are all general. As you may recall, generality is a hallmark of propaganda.

An article from August 2018 said that there were “far more” tuna at fishing tournament in Maine, and that the tournament’s quota increase “reflects a tuna resurgence seen on the water for some time.”

In August 2018, an AP News article described “A controversial comeback for a highly prized tuna”.

Can you see how they used the general “highly prized” to obscure the name of the fish? It’s the Atlantic bluefin tuna.

The article reads “Shana Miller, The Ocean Foundation’s program manager for global tuna conservation, said a quota increase of hundreds of thousands of pounds was a bad idea “because of a possible return to overfishing, and because of concerns that increasingly warming oceans could retard the fish’s reproduction”.

Well, if that’s true, why does a New York Times article, from just a month earlier, in July 2018, describe a “Dramatic fall in North Atlantic heat content”? The article goes on to say “surface and subsurface temperatures of the North Atlantic have fallen to their lowest levels in in more than 30 years.

It’s not true. Shana Miller, the Ocean Foundation’s program manager for global tuna conservation, is demonstrably lying bald-facedly about the temperature of the Atlantic Ocean in which bluefin tuna are booming and burgeoning to levels never seen previously. I’ve exposed her duplicity through what was known in the old days as “fact checking”.

The New York times bravely did what they could to hedge by describing a steep and sudden cooling of the North Atlantic with the Mil-speak “fall in heat content”. They said “in more than 30 years” so they could avoid saying “have decreased to their lowest level in history”.

Here’s Shana’s picture:

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(Shana Miller, the Ocean Foundation’s program manager for global tuna conservation)

I’ve included her photograph so you could get a better idea of what a generational Satanist in a position of marginal influence looks like. Did you notice that she’s wearing a natty Satanic green and purple dress?

In September 2018, NYup.com said “DEC: Lake Ontario anglers seeing record catches of salmon, trout this year”.

Where “record” catches is general. And those anglers aren’t making those catches, but are rather only SEEING them. That’s called “hedging”, or “walking it back”.

Lake Ontario has been on fire this summer for trout and salmon fishing with record catches, according to the state Department of Environmental Conservation.”

Can you see how the author hedged “this YEAR” in the headline back to “this SUMMER” in the body? They’re minimizing and compartmentalizing the phenomenon. The general “RECORD catches” is used once again.

“The New York waters of Lake Ontario provide a world-famous recreational fishery for trout and salmon, and fishing has been exceptional this summer,” said DEC Commissioner Basil Seggos. “Preliminary results from the Lake Ontario Fishing Boat Survey indicate that fishing for Chinook salmon has been outstanding along the entire New York shoreline.”

Can you see how Basil is trying to make it seem like it’s a one-time EXCEPTION? And how he doesn’t let on that record salmon catches on Lake Ontario are part of a larger, wider trend being seen wherever there are salmon? That’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”.

Here’s Basil’s picture, using a purportedly-secret Illuminist hand gesture:

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(DEC Commissioner Basil Seggos, using a purportedly-secret Illuminist hand gesture)

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(Historical depiction of the same purportedly-secret Illuminist hand gesture that Basil’s using in the image preceding this one)

I’ve included his photo so you could get a better idea of what a generational Satanist in a position of marginal influence looks like.

he article continues: “According to the DEC: “Fishing success is measured by ‘catch rate,’ which is the number of fish caught per boat trip. The catch rate for Chinook salmon during April to June 2018 set a record that was 227 percent above the previous five-year average. The catch rate for all trout and salmon species combined also surpassed the previous record high, more than 37 percent above the previous five-year average.”

The author tacked the snide “according to the DEC” on the front end to give the subconscious of the reader the green light to say “oh, that DEC will say ANYTHING”. The propagandist knows that many or most readers will grasp virtually any straw, no matter how thin, to remain off the hook of personal responsibility.

Did you notice how there’s no mention as to what led the salmon fishing to be “outstanding”? That’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “stonewalling”.

The words “mystery”, “baffled” and “puzzled” are memes, used, among numerous similar variants, whenever anyone in the wholly-controlled-and-coopted Political, Academic and Scientific establishments wants to lie about, well, basically anything.

That’s why a seafoodsource.com article from August 2018, is headlined “Bristol Bay wraps up ‘off the charts‘ sockeye season”, and why that article goes on to say “Commercial fishing in Alaska’s Bristol Bay this season has not only been fantastic, but record-breaking.”

Can you see how the author omitted the word “salmon”, to make the subject drastically less searchable?

“ ‘It’s the largest sockeye salmon run on record, the second-largest harvest on record’,” Andy Wink, executive director of Bristol Bay Regional Seafood Development (BBRSDA), told IntraFish.”

Andy didn’t offer any suggestion as to what had caused the unprecedented salmon run. That’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “stonewalling”.

He also didn’t mention that record salmon populations in Alaska mapped against record fish populations in all other locations, regardless of geography. That’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”.

In September 2018, adfg.alaska.gov said “A record number of tagged sablefish are swimming the chilly waters of Southeast Alaska”.

The article goes on to say “NOAA estimates this is the largest recruitment on record since the 1970s,” Project Leader Andrew Olson said. “Sablefish recruitment is really patchy. So we think this is great for the fishery but we don’t know what will happen in coming years, so we are taking it cautiously.”

Project leader Andrew Olson is using Mil-speak to say that he hopes that his bosses can engineer a designer virus to decimate the sablefish population in Southeast Alaska.

He’s talking about the most sablefish ever seen in all history, but has hedged by saying It’s the largest “since the 1970’s”. You can tell he’s lying out his ass because it’s general. An honest fish-tagging project manager would have said “the X thousand sable recorded during the biggest-ever recruitment year of 197x”.

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(Project leader Andrew Olson, right, with groundfish biometrician Jane Sullivan (left) and Medeia crewmember Becky Wilson with a big black cod. The orange tag is visible in the dorsal fin near the center of the image. The fish was released alive. Photo by Aaron Baldwin/ADF&G)

Are you checking out Andrew’s red hair, fair skin, and blue eyes? He’s a generational Satanist insider - it’s a bloodline thing.

October 25, 2007 - An analysis of 50,000-year-old Neanderthal DNA suggests that at least some of the ancient hominids probably had pale skin and red hair.

November 12, 2018 - Did the Neanderthal DNA give European blue eyes***?***

Most generational Satanists look “normal” to you and me. Top-ranking Satanists dress in a flashy, outre way (see: Marilyn Manson), to preserve the guise that their membership is not legion, and that they are not woven through he warp and woof of humanity in every city, town and village on Earth.

The first rule of Fight Club is that you don’t talk about Fight Club.

In September 2018, Seafood Source said of the biggest scallop season in history: “2019 scallop season will likely see big numbers”.

In October 2018, undercurrent news said of the biggest scallop season in history: “New England fishery staff optimistic about another big scallop year.”

The words “mystery”, “baffled” and “puzzled” are memes, used, among numerous similar variants, whenever anyone in the wholly-controlled-and-coopted Political, Academic, Scientific and Media establishments wants to lie about, well, basically anything. That’s why a National Geographic article from November 2018 said “Researchers suddenly see alarming spike in dolphin deaths across southwest Florida”.

Can you see how “suddenly see” plays like the environmental terrorism operations I’m documenting here have not been going on year after year, covered by the same formulaic propaganda language?

The words “mystery”, “baffled” and “puzzled” are memes, used, among numerous similar variants, whenever anyone in the wholly-controlled-and-coopted Political, Academic, Scientific and Media establishments wants to lie about, well, basically anything. That’s why the Mote Marine Lab’s Gretchen Lovewell said “It’s a very unfortunate, very unusual thing. I would hate to know that we’re dealing with something else but we just won’t know for a little while until we can get all those tests back”.

Here’s picture of Gretchen Lovewell, the lying, wheedling, two-faced shill who said she didn’t know what was happening to the dolphins:

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(Gretchen Lovewell, who’s got the impressive, Ministry-of-Truth title “Program Manager for Mote Marine Laboratory’s Stranding Investigations Program”:

Lying – making an intentionally false statement.

Wheedle - use flattery or coaxing in order to persuade someone to do something or give one something.

synonyms: coax, cajole, inveigle, lure, induce, blarney, entice, charm, tempt, beguile, flatter, persuade, influence, sway, win someone over, bring someone round, prod, talk, convince, make, get, press, prevail on, get round, argue, reason, urge, pressure, pressurize, bring pressure to bear on, coerce;

Shill - an accomplice of a hawker, gambler, or swindler who acts as an enthusiastic customer to entice or encourage others.

These are real, actual people, who are getting away with real, actual crimes, because no one will stand up and call bullshit on their practicing-Satanist asses. Well it stops with me, right here, right now. Thanks for reading.

Do you think these people want any part of anyone following up on an article like this? They’re scared shitless, because they know that they are going down.

I’m just the bellwether.

In December 2018, a record number of Chinook Salmon returned to the Mokelumne River in California for the second year in a row.

“EBMUD Fisheries manager Jose Steka said a reason for the higher returns is due to the change in release strategies in recent years. Those strategies include cold water releases from the reservoirs, better management of hatchery fish, and habitat improvements in the river. Fish and wildlife technician Jason Shillam showed CBS13 how crews added gravel to the river and made more rearing habitat for the juvenile salmon.”

Where “cold water releases” is a bald-faced ruse…it’s the great increase in rainfall that’s caused the artificial heating of the rivers via water-restriction from those reservoirs to no longer be effective. What, it’s simply that no one thought of cooling the rivers via water releases, previously? There is, indeed, a sucker born every minute. Or, more correctly, the subconscious of many or most readers will grasp virtually any straw, no matter how thin, to remain off the hook of personal responsibility.

Salmon are booming and burgeoning to unprecedented levels regardless of geography. “Added gravel to the river” is sleight-of-hand.

The words “mystery”, “baffled” and “puzzled” are memes, used, among numerous similar variants, whenever anyone in the wholly-controlled-and-coopted Political, Academic, Scientific and Media establishments wants to lie about, well, basically anything. One of those many variants is “amazed”. That’s why an IFGA article from 2021 said In 2021, IFGA.com said “Sherbovich’s Atlantic Salmon - Konstantin Sherbovich has added to his impressive angling resume with this 100-centimeter Atlantic salmon that set the new IGFA All-Tackle Length World Record for the species. On June 11, 2021, Konstantin was on a trip to the Yokanga River in northern Russia when he landed this beautiful Atlantic salmon on the fly. The fight lasted nearly 20 minutes before the young angler was able to land this beautiful salmon. After a photo and some measurements taken on his official IGFA measuring device, Konstantin released the salmon safely back into the river. Congratulations, Konstantin on another amazing fish and another IGFA World Record.

Where the propagandist from the IGFA twice called the longest Atlantic salmon ever caught “beautiful”.

As a bonus, the author, who purports to love them some fish like it’s their job, omitted any mention of what the length of the previous record was, or who set the record, or when. That’s an example of the propaganda technique called “compartmentalization”.

In December 2017, the Vietnam News Agency said “Vietnam’s Seafood Exports Up But EU’s Warning On IIU Fishing Raises Concern”.

Where “up” and “seafood” are both general. As you may recall, generality is a hallmark of propaganda.

“The Vietnam Association of Seafood Exporters and Producers (VASEP)’s aim to reach US$524 million in tuna exports this year has already been achieved with exports hitting US$541 million as of November, the Vietnam News Agency (VNA) reported.”

There’s an international news blackout in place on the subject, which is why the author substituted the general “seafood” in the headline for the tuna exports that the article is actually about. That’s an example of a propaganda technique called “compartmentalizations.

“According to the General Department of Vietnam Customs, in the 11 months, Vietnamese tuna’s three major markets were the US, EU and ASEAN. However, Vietnam had faced difficulties following a “yellow card” issued by the EU as a warning for illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing.”

Here, this “yellow card” technique is the Establishment’s “harrying the opposition” to punish the Vietnamese for breaking the rules of the Confidence Game – for upsetting the artificial scarcity which keeps prices at their highest and underpins the “Poor Mother Gaia is Dying” ruse in every nation.

In December 2017, the Calaveras Enterprise said “Hatchery sees record-breaking salmon run”.

Where, under the false guise of familiarity, the headline omits “Mokelumne”, to make the subject far less searchable. That’s an example of a propaganda technique called “compartmentalization”.

The author says “They travel upstream more than 100 miles, following a scent, to have babies made. In 2017, they’re doing so in record numbers, according to officials with the California Department of Fish and Wildlife.”

Where they put “travel”, “follow”, “make babies” and a period in between you and “record numbers”. In propaganda terms, that’s called “slow-playing”.

“Midway through the spawning year, nearly 17,000 Chinook salmon have appeared at the Lake Lodi fish ladder, which is one stop away from the Mokelumne River Hatchery just below Camanche Reservoir, said Darrick Baker, a fish manager at the hatchery. The number is well above the average number of fish – 7,000 – the hatchery usually sees each year, said Bill Smith, who also works as a manager at the hatchery.”

Darrick said that well over double the number of salmon was “well above”. That’s some powerful understatement, there. And that’s comparing a half year to a full year. Say what you will about them, there’s no quit in them.

Here’s Darrick Baker’s picture:

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(Darrick Baker, Fish Manager, Mokelumne River hatchery)

I’ve included it so you could get a better idea of what a generational Satanist in a position of marginal influence looks like. Not all hatchery managers are generational Satanists, just the one’s that get quoted in mainstream news articles. They figured the rubes would never notice.

The author says that the fish “appeared”, as if by magic, and gives no insight into what’s caused a sudden doubling of the salmon population.

They’re desperate to keep your eyes off the trend I’m documenting here.

“This year’s totals are projected to break the previous high that was set in 2011, when 18,000 salmon climbed the ladder, according to a social media post about the Mokelumne hatchery from the Department of Fish and Wildlife.”

Halfway through the year, and numbers are almost past the previous record.

The Calaveras Enterprise is an Organ of the State, trying their best to keep you from realizing that the size, fertility and longevity of any organism varies directly with the health of the Ether.

In December 2018, opb.org said “West Coast Fishery Rebounds After Years Of Conservation Efforts”.

Can you see how they’re playing that it was a slow, steady recovery, over time, versus a sudden, explosive increase in fish populations?

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(West coast ground fish trawler, 2018)

The article goes on to say “Federal fishery managers are increasing the catch limits for several West Coast species that were overfished and severely restricted for years. Surveys show depleted populations of yellow eye and bocaccio rockfish, cow cod and ocean perch — all classified as groundfish — are rebounding decades ahead of schedule. As a result, the National Marine Fisheries Service plans to double the catch limits for these fish starting Jan. 1.”

The New York state record black crappie increased in size by 9.2% from 2019 to 2021, from 4 pounds, 1 ounce to 4 pounds, 7 ounces. That’s an average annual increase in size of 4.6% over each of those two years.

The 4.6% average annual increase in size of the New York state record black crappie from 2019 to 2021 is 1,079% greater than the .39% average annual increase in size of the New York state record black crappie from 1998 to 2019.

The 9.2% increase in size of the New York state record black crappie from 2019 to 2021 is 10.8% greater than the 8.3% increase in size of the New York state record black crappie from 1998 to 2019.

The growth rate of the New York state record black crappie is increasing exponentially, going forward in time. That’s not scientifically possible according to the Orthodoxy which holds that organisms grow in ever-smaller increments to a genetically-programmed maximum size.

The Orthodoxy of mean-spirited western materialism, which holds that there is no such thing as the ether, is false.

The truth is that the size, longevity and fertility of any organism vary directly with the health of its etheric environment.

The IGFA women’s world record smallmouth bass increased in size by 7.7% from February 2019 to July 2021, from 4 pounds, 14 ounces to 5 pounds, 4 ounces.

In January 2019, NPR wrung its hands and said “Threatened Bluefin Tuna Sells For $3 Million In Tokyo Market”

It’s true that a generational Satanist in Japan stepped up and paid $3M for the tuna, as they were under strict orders to do so, as a ruse, to prop up the failing and wholly-fraudulent “Poor Mother Gaia is Dying” confidence game.

I know that because a Business Insider article from January 2019 is headlined “Why is bluefin tuna so expensive and why is canned tuna so cheap***?***”

In the article, they give a bunch of gymnastic reasons that don’t include “annual ruse fish”, the latter an example of the “Big Lie”, so favored by Hitler and Goebbels.

The IGFA women’s world record smallmouth bass increased in size by 4.9% from February 2019 to September 2020, from 4 pounds, 14 ounces to 5 pounds, 2 ounces.

In September 2019, the second-ever cisco, or lake herring, was caught on Lake Champlain in Vermont (the first having suddenly appeared on Lake Champlain in 2015).

The Vermont state record cisco, or lake herring increased in size by 106%, or more than doubled in size from 2015 to 2019, from 1.09 pounds to 2 pounds, 4 ounces.

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(Vermont state record cisco, 2019 - the second in history, and twice as large as the first, caught just four years previously)

In March 2019, CBS New York said “Scientists Examining Spike In Marine Life”. They’ve used the repugnant meme “spike” to infer that numbers have shot up, but will shoot right back down again, forming a “spike” on the graph.

The Kentucky state record saugeye increased in size by 5.3% from 2019 to 2021, from 8 pounds, 8.8 ounces to 9.05 pounds. That’s an average annual increase in size of 2.65% per year over those two years.

The 2.65% average annual increase in size of the Kentucky state record saugeye from 2019 to 2021 is 89% greater, or closing in on double than the 1.4% average annual increase documented in the species there from 1998 to 2019.

The growth rate of the Kentucky state record saugeye is increasing exponentially, going forward in time. That’s not scientifically possible according to the obviously-false and rapidly-collapsing Orthodoxy of mean-spirited Western materialism, which holds that, “there’s no such thing as the ether”, and also that organisms increase in ever-smaller increments to a genetically-programmed maximum size.

The bowfishing world record paddlefish increased in size by 3.3% from 2019 to 2021, from 89 pounds to 92 pounds. That’s an average annual increase in size of 1.65% over each of those two years.

The 1.65% average annual increase in size of the bowfishing world record paddlefish from 2019 to 2021 is 2,257% greater than the .07% average annual increase in size of the world bowfishing record paddlefish documented from 1972 to 2019.

The growth rate of the world record paddlefish is increasing exponentially, going forward in time. That’s not scientifically possible according to the rapidly-collapsing false Orthodoxy which holds that organisms grow in ever-smaller increments to a genetically-programmed maximum size.

The Orthodoxy of mean-spirited western materialism, which holds that there is no such thing as the ether, is false.

The truth is that the size, longevity and fertility of any organism vary directly with the health of its etheric environment.

In 2019, the 2012 Washington state record for bluefin tuna was broken by 152% (get weights).

In 2019, the 2015 Vermont state record for cisco, or lake herring was broken by 106%, increasing from 1.09 pounds to 2 pounds, 4 ounces.

In 2019, the 2017 Delaware state record for blue catfish was broken by 89%, increasing from 36 pounds to 47 pounds.

In 2019, the Missouri state record for brown trout from 1997 was broken by 51%, from 26 pounds, 13 ounces to 40 pounds, 6 ounces.

In 2019, the world record for oceanic puffer fish from 1991 was broken by 38%, from 7 pounds to 9.65 pounds.

In 2019, the 2007 Maryland state record for bullhead catfish was broken by 37%, increasing from 3.6 pounds to 4.94 pounds.

In 2019, the 1998 Kentucky state record for saugeye was broken by 30% (get weights).

In 2019, the 2018 Minnesota state record for sturgeon was broken by 28%, increasing size from some obfuscated weight to 120 pounds.

In 2019, the 1994 Iowa state record yellow perch record was broken by 21.3%, from 2.3 pounds to 2.79 pounds.

In 2019, the 2009 Missouri state record for brown trout was broken by 20.2% (get weights).

In 2019, the 2015 Minnesota state record for the golden redhorse sucker was broken by 20% (get weights).

In 2019, the Lake Superior lake trout record from 1955 was broken by 18.6%, from 43 pounds, 8 ounces to 51.6 pounds.

In 2019, the 2009 Montana state record for channel catfish was broken by 16.7% (get weights).

In 2019, the 2015 Vermont state record for redhorse sucker was broken by 16.5%, increasing from 9.01 pounds to 10 pounds, 8 ounces.

In 2019, the Irish Tope record from 1979 was broken by 13%, from 30.2 kg to 34.02 kg.

In 2019, the 2017 Missouri alternative method state record for gizzard shad was broken by 10.5%, increasing from 2 pounds, 6 ounces to 2 pounds, 10 ounces.

In 2019, the Colorado state record for black crappie from 1990 was broken by 8.4%, from 3.22 pounds to 3 pounds, 7.84 ounces.

In 2019, the 2010 Iowa state record for yellow perch was broken by 7.3%, increasing from 2.6 pound to 2.70 pounds.

In 2019, the 2006 Pennsylvania state record for flathead catfish was broken by 4.2%, increasing from 48 pounds, 6 ounces to 50 pounds, 7 ounces.

In 2019, the 1972 bowfishing world record for paddlefish was broken by 3.5%, from 86 pounds to 89 pounds.

In 2019, the 2006-to-2017 world record for marble grouper was broken by 1.6%, increasing in size from 30 pounds, 6 ounces to 31 pounds.

In 2019, the 2011 Texas junior state record for catfish was broken by 1.4%, increasing from 66.2 pounds to 67.1 pounds.

Twice as many salmon and steelhead returned to the Columbia River Basin in 2019 as returned the year previously.

There was a 21% increase in the volume of wild salmon exported from Scotland in the first quarter of 2019.

The world record marble grouper increased in size by 52.4% from 2019 to 2020, from 31 pounds to 47.25 pounds.

The 52.4% increase in size of the world record marble grouper from 2019 to 2020 is 4.8% greater than its 50% average annual increase in size from 2004 to 2006, 394% greater, or basically five times greater than its 10.6% increase in size from 2006 to 2017, and 3,175% greater than its 1.6% increase in size from some obfuscated date between 2006 to 2017 to 2019.

Wait, what? That’s the last data in the set, and it’s the largest one-year increase in the set. The growth rate of the world record marble grouper is increasing exponentially, going forward in time. That’s not scientifically possible, at least according to the obviously-false Orthodoxy which holds that organisms increase in ever-smaller increments to a genetically-programmed maximum size.

Witness the collapse of mean-spirited Western materialism, which holds that “there’s no such thing as the ether”. For those late to the party, the Ether is the 5th element, along with Earth, Wind, Fire and Water. The ether was removed from the picture so that the folks in charge could have that playing field to themselves.

The truth is that the size, fertility and longevity of any organism varies directly with the health of it’s etheric environment.

The size records we’re examining here are de facto longevity records, as fish don’t stop growing until they die.

In January 2019, directly in the face of the largest, most vibrant lobster populations the Gulf of Maine has ever seen, in all recorded history, the Washington Post widened its eyes to simulate honesty and said “Gone in a generation: The Gulf of Maine is warming faster than 99 percent of the world’s oceans, dramatically disrupting fishery patterns and creating new winners — and losers”. It’s desperate propaganda from the barely-closeted cabal of genetically-related generational Satanistis who are, wait for it, going to be gone in a generation.

The next month, in February 2019, heartland.org documented the largest, most vibrant lobster populations the Gulf of Maine has ever seen, in all recorded history with “Record Lobster Production Defies Alarmist Climate Scare”

In March 2019, nine months after the New York Post widened its eyes to simulate honesty and said “America’s lobster bonanza is about to go bust, glouchestertimes.com said “FishOn: A record year for lobsters —in Maine”.

The brave propagandist from the Gloucester Times put the snide qualifier “in Maine” on the back end to give the subconscious of the Coincidence theorist the out of saying “yeah, they boomed in Maine, but went bust everywhere else!” Many or most readers will grasp virtually any straw, no matter how thin, to remain off the hook of personal responsibility. That’s how the few have controlled the many, well, all the way back to Babylon, and before.

For the record, the honest reporter would have written “A record year for Maine lobsters” or “A record year for lobsters in Maine”.

The Pennsylvania state record flathead catfish increased in size by 14% from 2019 to 2020, from 50 pounds, 7 ounces to 57 pounds, 8 ounces.

The 14% increase in size of the Pennsylvania state record flathead catfish in 2020 is 4,275% greater than the .32% average annual increase in size of the species there from 2016 to 2019.

The 14% increase in size of the Pennsylvania state record flathead catfish in 2020 is 233% greater, or more than triple the 4.2% increase in size documented in the species there from 2006 to 2019.

As an aside, I’ll note that the 2020 Pennsylvania state record flathead catfish was caught by Jonathan Pierce from the Schuylkill River at Roxborough, PA. I threw a bunch of TB’s off the bridge over the Schuylkill at Roxborough when my wife was in Medical School in Philadelphia, from 2008 to 2010.

The growth rate of the Pennsylvania state record flathead catfish is increasing exponentially, going forward in time.

That’s not scientifically possible according to the Orthodoxy which holds that organisms grow in ever-smaller increments to a genetically-programmed maximum size.

The Orthodoxy of mean-spirited western materialism, which holds that there is no such thing as the ether, is false.

The truth is that the size, longevity and fertility of any organism vary directly with the health of its etheric environment.

In 2019, the largest sturgeon ever documented in the Hudson River was captured on sonar. It was 14 feet long, weighed an estimated 800 pounds and was an estimated 75 years old.

The words “mystery”, “baffled” and “puzzled” are memes, used, among numerous similar variants, whenever anyone in the wholly-controlled-and-coopted Political, Academic, Scientific and Media establishments wants to lie about, well, basically anything. That’s why University of Delaware geologist John A. Madsen told National Geographic in comment “When I first saw it, I said, "You’ve got to be kidding me.”

Despite loving him some sturgeon like it’s his job, and getting quoted by one of the world’s premier Nature magazines, University of Delaware geologist John A. Madsen obviously didn’t get the memo on the largest sturgeon in the history of the Saco river suddenly showing up there after a sixty year absence in 2013.

The words “mystery”, “baffled” and “puzzled” are memes, used, among numerous similar variants, whenever anyone in the wholly-controlled-and-coopted Political, Academic, Scientific and Media establishments wants to lie about, well, basically anything. Two of those many variants are “mythical” and “unbelievable”’.

That’s why Tom Lake, a consulting naturalist with the Hudson River Estuary Program, said in comment “I remember working… on sturgeon in the Hudson River a long time ago, when a sturgeon of this size seemed mythical. We heard stories from ‘old timers’ of sturgeon 14-feet long. Of course we never believed them.

Neither University of Delaware geologist John A. Madsen nor Hudson River Estuary Program consulting naturalist Tom Lake ventured any guess as to why or how Atlantic sturgeon in the Hudson River were suddenly the largest in history. That’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “stonewalling”. They’re desperate to keep you from recognizing that the size, fertility and longevity of any organism vary directly with the health of its etheric environment.

And, despite loving them some fish like it’s their job, neither University of Delaware geologist John A. Madsen nor Hudson River Estuary Program consulting naturalist Tom Lake mentioned that the sudden, exponential increase in the number and size of sturgeon in the Hudson River mapped against similar increases being seen across the species’ range, regardless of geography. That’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”.

The words “mystery”, “baffled” and “puzzled” are memes, used, among numerous similar variants, whenever anyone in the wholly-controlled-and-coopted Political, Academic, Scientific and Media establishments wants to lie about, well, basically anything. One of those variants is “monster”.

That’s why an mprnews.com article from February 2019 reads “Monster sturgeon pulled from St. Croix may be biggest-ever Minnesota fish”.

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(Minnesota State Record Sturgeon, February 2019)

The article says the 78-inch sturgeon was “5 inches longer than the current state catch-and-release record set last year.”

They use the general phrase “5 inches longer” to hedge, and avoid using a more-impactful percentage, which would go badly-off-message re: Poor Mother Gaia dying, and all. So I had to do the math. It’s 7% longer than the previous record holder, and its estimated weight of 120 pounds is suddenly 28% larger than the previous record holder. Nearly one third lager than the largest ever caught, previously.

In July 2019, the Christian Science Monitor said “Sturgeon population makes comeback after near extinction”.

The words “mystery”, “baffled” and “puzzled” are memes, used, among numerous similar variants, whenever anyone in the wholly-controlled-and-coopted Political, Academic, Scientific and Media establishments wants to lie about, well, basically anything. One of those many variants is “dramatic”. That’s why Greg Garman, a Virginia Commonwealth University ecologist who studies Atlantic sturgeon in Virginia’s James River, went on to say “It’s really been a dramatic reversal of fortune. We didn’t think they were there, frankly. Now, they’re almost every place we’re looking."

Virginia Commonwealth University ecologist Greg Garman is driving home the false meme that the car-sized fish, which jumps from the water in a spectacular display known as “breaching”, had been there, all along, only no one had looked for it with the proper assiduousness, previously.

In August 2019, the Vineyard Gazette widened its eyes to simulate honesty, wrung its hands and said “Once Robust, Bluefin Tuna Fishery Is In Economic Freefall”.

It’s a Satanic inversion, in which a tuna market collapsing due to excess supply is falsely claimed to be collapsing due to decreased supply. It’s the “Big Lie”, so favored by Hitler and Goebbels.

I know that, because a Seafood Source article from just three months later, in January 2020, said “Bluefin tuna prices low heading into 2020”.

Prices decrease either when supply increases, demand decreases, or both.

Well, if that’s true, why does a Mashed article from February 2020 ask “Why is bluefin tuna so expensive***?***”?

Mashed is using conscious deception while retaining the firmness of purpose that goes with complete honesty. They’re alluding to the new Japanese tradition of the annual ruse-fish, as seen in a Bloomberg article from January 2020, headlined “Bluefin Tuna Fetches $1.79 Million in Tokyo’s New Year Auction, 2nd Highest Ever”.

The tirelessly-repeated “why is bluefin tuna so expensive” meme is a social engineering tactic that has, to this point, been highly effective. It’s a reference to the annual ruse-fish that a generational Satanist insider in Japan pays way, way way more than they should for. It’s a con, a confidence game, to prop up the illusion that bluefin tuna are rare, and in dwindling supply.

When the truth is that bluefin tuna are booming and burgeoning to a level never seen previously. Along with all the other tuna. That’s why an Undercurrent News article from January of 2020 is headlined “Tuna sector eyes recovery from record low prices.”

Prices decrease either when supply increases, demand decreases, or both.

“Record” low prices means the lowest tuna prices, ever, in all recorded history.

The IGFA women’s world record smallmouth bass increased in size by 2.4% from September 2020 to July 2021, from 5 pounds, 2 ounces to 5 pounds, 4 ounces.

In 2020, the 1979 Georgia state record for blue catfish was broken by 78%, from 62 pounds to 110 pounds, 6 ounces.

In 2020, the 2019 world record for marble grouper was broken by 52.4%, increasing from 31 pounds to 47.25 pounds.

In 2020, the Texas state record for marble grouper was broken by 25.6%, increasing from 37.6 pounds to 47.25 pounds.

In 2020, the 2017 Georgia state record for blue catfish was broken by 18.6%, increasing from 93 pounds to 110 pounds, 6 ounces.

In 2020, the 2015 Virginia state record for bluefin tuna was broken by 17%, increasing from 606 pounds to 708 pounds.

In 2020, the 1998 New York state white catfish record was broken by 14.2%, (get weights)

In 2020, the 2019 Pennsylvania state record for flathead catfish was broken by 14%, increasing from 50 pounds, 7 ounces to 57 pounds, 8 ounces.

In 2020, the 2019 IGFA women’s world record for smallmouth bass was broken by 4.9%, increasing from 4 pounds, 14 ounces to 5 pounds, 2 ounces.

In 2020, after being not being seen there for twenty two years, the white catfish “winked back into existence” in New York state.

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(Chris Brockett, of Loudonville, N.Y. with his state record white catfish, which he landed from shore fishing in the Mohawk River, 2020)

In July 2021, the IGFA women’s world record smallmouth bass record from 2020 was broken by 2.4%.

The New York state record white catfish increased in size by 14.2% from 1998 to 2020, from 10.5 pounds to 12 pounds.

In regard to white catfish in New York state, As of February 2022, nas.er.usgs.gov currently says: “no record of the white catfish”.

So we now know that nas.er.usgs.gov, which purports to love it some fish like it’s its taxpayer-funded job, currently says that there is no record of the white catfish in New York, while a lay researcher with too much time on his hands such as myself was able to find two examples, albeit over a couple or three decades.

As of February 2022, dec.ny.gov’s website says this of the New York state record white catfish: White Catfish 10 lb. 5 oz. 25.5 Joe Silicato Jig & Cut Bait New Croton Reservoir, Westchester Co. 5/17/1998”.

Essay: Without using “coincidence” or “the COVID”, explain why, as of February 2022, the state of New York hadn’t updated the new state record for the white catfish from 2020.

In 2020, white catfish literally “winked back into existence” in New York state, where the etheric environment is recovering in health to a point where that organism can once again manifest there.

The size, fertility, longevity, and very existence of any organism varies directly with the health of the etheric environment.

A “Global News” article from April 2020 is headlined “Jellyfish ‘spotted’ in Venice canal as coronavirus clear-up continues”.

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(Jellyfish which “winked into existence” in the canals of Venice in 2020)

The words “mystery”, “baffled” and “puzzled” are memes, used, among numerous similar variants, whenever anyone in the wholly-controlled-and-coopted Political, Academic, Scientific and Media establishments wants to lie about, well, basically anything. One of those variants is “startling”.

That’s why the article goes on to say “A biologist in Italy recorded startling footage earlier this month of a near-transparent jellyfish swimming in the crystal-clear waters of the Venice canals as the city’s waterways continued to clear up amid the ongoing coronavirus lockdown.”

The “virus did it” meme continues: “Venice officials say the city’s canals have cleared up over the last month because boat traffic is no longer ‘stirring up sediment’ in the water. In other words, nature hasn’t ‘exactly’ “healed” from the pollution caused by humans, but it’s enjoying a ‘little’ break right ‘now’.

The “pollution” that the Covid is alleged to have alleviated is general. Not “exactly” healed is the Big Lie, told by a Trusted Authority Figure with the firmness of purpose that goes with complete honesty. An environment that is booming and burgeoning to an historically unprecedented level is flatly maintained to be “not ‘exactly’ healed”. The author hedges again that it’s only a “little” break, and that the little break is only taking place right now, and will stop in the future.

The truth of the matter is that the etheric environment in the canals of Venice, Italy has improved to the point where the species can manifest within it.

In 2021, after not being seen there for twenty three years, the white catfish suddenly “winked back into existence” in Connecticut.

Essay: Explain the statistically identical 22 and 23 year absences of the white catfish from New York and Connecticut.

The current USGS table, from February 2022, lists four observations from 1986 to 1994, and omits the fifth, the Connecticut state record white catfish from 1999, and the sixth, the largest white catfish ever caught in Connecticut, or anywhere else, in all history.

Essay: Explain how the largest white catfish ever caught, in all history (66% larger than the previous record holder) was caught in Connecticut, a state which the USGS says the white catfish is not indigenous to.

Essay: Explain why the USGS, who purport to love them some fish like it’s their taxpayer-funded job, is understating white catfish observations in Connecticut by 33%, and shortening the years that the species had been observed there by nearly 40%.

Coincidence theorist Bonus: Explain the chain of coincidences that led to the USGS omitting the current and previous Connecticut state record white catfish from their records.

The white catfish, seen just four times in Connecticut between 1986 and 1994, and not documented there in the almost thirty years since, suddenly winked back into existence there in 2021, and was two thirds larger than any white catfish ever documented, anywhere, ever.

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(Ben Tomkunus, in Connecticut, with the world’s largest white catfish, two thirds larger than any ever caught anywhere, in history, 2021. The white catfish, seen just four times in Connecticut between 1986 and 1994, and not documented there in the almost thirty years since, suddenly winked back into existence there in 2021, and was two thirds larger than any white catfish ever documented, anywhere, ever)

In September 2021, KLTV.com said “Catfish eaten before being verified can’t qualify for record”.

Essay: Explain why KLTV.com didn’t mention “white catfish”, “Connecticut”, “state record” and “world record”.

As you can see, there are many people working full-time jobs within a Great Big Conspiracy to overturn fish records and obfuscate the wider trend I’m documenting here.In November 2021, an unprecedented number of bass entered the tidal region of the River Teifi in Wales, United Kingdom.

A uncredited spokesperson for Natural Resources Wales said “The recent settled warm weather has resulted in low river flows with less freshwater entering the Teifi Estuary. These conditions can encourage marine fish such as sea bass to enter the estuary to search for sources of food. The sizes of the fish vary year by year, and some years they do see exceptionally big fish, then next year the sizes may decease. It could be that this year has been a particularly good feeding year for the species.”

The North Carolina state record blue catfish increased in size by 4.6% from 2020 to 2021, from 121 pounds, 9 ounces to 127.1 pounds.

The 4.6% increase in size of the North Carolina state record blue catfish from 2020 to 2021 is 17.9% greater than the 3.9% increase in size of the North Carolina state record blue catfish from 2016 to 2020.

The 4.6% increase in size of the North Carolina state record blue catfish from 2020 to 2021 is 379% greater, or almost five times greater, than the .96% average annual increase in size of the North Carolina state record blue catfish from 2016 to 2020.

The 4.6% increase in size of the North Carolina state record blue catfish from 2020 to 2021 is 17.9% greater than the 3.9% increase in size of the North Carolina state record blue catfish from 2016 to 2020.

The growth rate of the North Carolina state record blue catfish is continuing to increase exponentially, going forward in time.

That’s not scientifically possible according to the Orthodoxy which holds that organisms grow in ever-smaller increments to a genetically-programmed maximum size.

The Orthodoxy of mean-spirited western materialism, which holds that there is no such thing as the ether, is false.

The truth is that the size, longevity and fertility of any organism vary directly with the health of its etheric environment.

The Pennsylvania state record flathead catfish increased in size by 2.3% from 2020 to 2021, from 56 pounds, 3 ounces to 57 pounds 8 ounces.

In 2021, the Montana walleye state record from 2007 was broken by 1.5%.

The world record roving coral grouper increased in size by 88% from some obfuscated prior date to 2021, from 16-pounds, 12 ounces to 31 pounds, 7 ounces.

The IGFA Men’s 80-lb line world record black grouper increased in size by 17.5% from some obfuscated date to 2021, from 91 pounds to 107 pounds.

The women’s spearfishing world record halibut increased in size by 8% from some obfuscated date to 2021, from 66.1 pounds to 71.4 pounds.

In 2021, a sturgeon was caught on the Potomac river for the first time in decades. The truth of the matter is that the etheric environment in the Potomac has increased to a point where the species can once again manifest there.

In 2021, the world record for the roving coral grouper from some obfuscated prior date was broken by 88%, increasing from 16-pounds, 12 ounces to 31 pounds, 7 ounces.

In 2021, the 1999 Connecticut state record for white catfish was broken by 66%, increasing from 12 pounds, 12 ounces to 21 pounds, 3 ounces.

In 2021, the 1999 New Mexico State record for blue catfish was broken by 64%, increasing from 33 pounds, 8 ounces to 55 pounds.

In 2021, the 1998 Kentucky state record for saugeye was broken by 37%, from 6 pounds, 9 ounces to 9.05 pounds.

In 2021, the Georgia state record for red grouper was broken by 36%, increasing from 19 pounds, 7 ounces to 26 pounds, 6.4 ounces.

In 2021, the 2014 small fry world record for tripletail was broken by increased in size by 22.8%, increasing from “just over 15 pounds” (I used 15 pounds, 1 ounce) to 17 pounds, 24 ounces.

In 2021, the tiger trout world record from 1978 was broken by 17.7%, from 9.44 kilograms to 11.11 kilograms.

In 2021, the men’s IGFA 80-lb line world record for black grouper from some obfuscated prior date was broken by 17.5%, increasing from 91 pounds to 107 pounds.In 2021, the 2018 IGFA 12-pound tippet-class world record for blue catfish was broken by 17%, increasing from 26.4 pounds to 31 pounds.

In 2021, the Montana brown trout state record from 1966 was broken by 11.6%, from from 29 pounds to 32 pounds, 6 ounces.

In 2021, the 1993 Florida state record for peacock bass was broken by 10%, from 9.08 pounds to 9.11 pounds.

In 2021, the 2005 world record for white catfish was broken by 10% (get weights).

In 2021, the 2019 New York state record for black crappie was broken by 9.2%, increasing from 4 pounds, 1 ounce to 4 pounds, 7 ounces.

In 2021, the 2017 Idaho catch-and release state record for steelhead salmon was broken by 8.2%, increasing from 36 inches to 39.25 inches.

In 2021, the women’s spearfishing world record for halibut from some obfuscated prior date was broken by 8%, increasing from 66.1 pounds to 71.4 pounds.

In 2021, the 2019 IGFA women’s world record for smallmouth bass was broken by 7.7%, increasing from 4 pounds, 14 ounces to 5 pounds, 4 ounces.

In 2021, the 2004 IGFA world record for Pacific white snook was broken by 7.3%, increasing from 47.8 pounds to 51.3 pounds.

In 2021, the bowfishing paddlefish world record from 1972 was broken by 7%, from 86 pounds to 92 pounds.

In 2021, the 2011 Colorado state record for smallmouth bass was broken by 5.6%, increasing from 6 pounds, 11 ounces to 7 pounds, 1 ounce.

In 2021, the 2005 New Mexico state record for blue catfish was broken by 5.2%, increasing from 52 pounds, .25 ounces to 55 pounds.

In 2021, the 2013 world record for brown trout was broken by 5% (get weights).

In 2021, the 2020 North Carolina state record for blue catfish was broken by 4.6%, increasing from 121 pounds, 9 ounces to 127.1 pounds.

In 2021, the 2019 bowfishing world record for paddlefish was broken by 3.3% from 2019 to 2021, increasing from 89 pounds to 92 pounds.

In 2021, the Michigan Chinook salmon state record from 1978 was broken by 2.7%, from 46.6 pounds to 47.86 pounds.

In 2021, the 2020 IGFA women’s world record for smallmouth bass was broken by 2.4%, increasing from 5 pounds, 2 ounces to 5 pounds, 4 ounces.

In 2021, the 2020 Pennsylvania state record for flathead catfish was broken by 2.3%, increasing from 56 pounds, 3 ounces to 57 pounds 8 ounces.

In 2021, the Georgia state shoal bass record from 1977 was broken by 1.5%, from 8 pounds, 3 ounces to 8 pounds, 5 ounces.

In 2021, the 2007 Montana state record for walleye was broken by 1.46%, increasing from 17.75 pounds to 18.02 pounds.

In 2022, the South Carolina state record for jack crevalle from 1983 was broken by 54%, from 38 pounds to 58 pounds, 8 ounces.