"Guard yourself from lying; there is he who deceives and there is he who is deceived.”
― Sextus
April 2, 2020 - Biloxi, MI - Lucedale man catches record fish
Where, under the false guise of familiarity, the headline omits the name of the fish, the name of the state, and the word “state”, all to make the subject drastically less searchable.
As a bonus, in the body text the author deliberately misspelled the fish’s name as "red hinbd " (versus the correct “red hind”), again to make the subject drastically less searchable. Their editor, a generational Satanist kinsman of the author’s, let it go to print.
April 16, 2020 - Lake Kaw, OK - Hybrid Striper Record Falls Twice in Two Days
Where, under the false guise of familiarity, the headline omits the correct name of the fish (“hybrid striped bass”), and the name of the lake, and the word “lake”, all to make the subject drastically less searchable.
May 1, 2020 - South Dakota - Largemouth bass caught on Rosebud Reservation breaks 20-year state record
Where, under the false guise of familiarity, the headline omits the name of the state, to make the subject drastically less searchable.
May 6, 2020 - State has new record redfish
Where, under the false guise of familiarity, the headline omits the name of the state, to make the subject drastically less searchable.
The use of the same tactics of obfuscation across widely dispersed geographies is proof of a larger, yes, conspiracy .
conspiracy - noun - a secret plan by a group to do something unlawful or harmful
I don’t believe that the populace has permanently given up the use of reason and critical thinking, so the controlled press’s stonewalling and denying of the facts I’m documenting here is not going to permanently hold back wider awareness of the Orgonite-driven return to health of the Ether, and the quantum impact that return to health is having on the organisms within that environment.
Especially in that I’ve laid it all out very plainly.
I invite the reader to review the great margins the records are being broken by below.
Jeff Miller, Brooklyn, New York, May 10, 2020
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April 2, 2020 - Biloxi, MI - Lucedale man catches record fish
Fishing with proper social distancing can be relaxing and safe during the covid-19 crisis. And Harley Havard of Lucedale is showing that it can also be record breaking.
The Mississippi Commission on Marine Resources certified Havard’s Red Hinbd fish as a state record, weighing in at 4 pounds, 7.36 ounces. Havard caught the fish with a spear.
(Under the false guise of familiarity, the headline omits the name of the fish, the name of the state, and the word “state”, all to make the subject drastically less searchable. The author omits any mention of what the previous record was, who set it, or when. As a bonus, the author deliberately misspelled the fish’s name as “red hinbd” (versus the correct “red hind”), again to make the subject drastically less searchable. Their editor, a generational Satanist kinsman of the author’s, let it go to print. - ed)
April 16, 2020 - Lake Kaw, OK - Hybrid Striper Record Falls Twice in Two Days
Last week avid black bass angler Cameron Adams was ready to call it a day on Kaw Lake when he decided to try one more spot. That one more spot landed him a 12.65 pound hybrid striped bass, breaking the current lake record.
Being a good friend, Cameron took his buddy out a couple of days later to see if they could find those hybrids again. They did and now his friend Bobby Walker holds the new Kaw Lake record with a 14.5 pound hybrid striped bass. Congrats to both anglers!
(Under the false guise of familiarity, the headline omits the correct name of the fish, and the name of the lake, both to make the subject drastically less searchable. The author provided the numbers for the old and new records, but carefully hedged by omitting the much more impactful percentage increase between them. So I had to do the math. The new hybrid striped bass record for Kaw Lake, Oklahoma is 15% larger than the previous record holder, from just two days previously. Such records are usually broken by tiny margins, as the organism gets closer and closer to its maximum possible size. The record prior to these two has been scrubbed from the web. - ed)
May 1, 2020 - South Dakota - Largemouth bass caught on Rosebud Reservation breaks 20-year state record
A largemouth bass caught on the Rosebud Indian Reservation on Monday has broken a 20-year state record.
The South Dakota Game, Fish and Parks Department announced on Wednesday that Matthew Dunham, of Rosebud, caught the largemouth bass weighing 9 pounds 5 ounces, at 8:20 p.m. Monday in Indian Scout Lake. The fish had a length of 23 inches and a girth of 19 7/8 inches.
It breaks the previous largemouth bass state record of 9 pounds 3 ounces, caught on Nov. 14, 1999 in the Rollins Game Production Area gravel pit.
(Under the false guise of familiarity, the headline omits the name of the state, to make the subject drastically less searchable. The author provided the numbers for the old and new records, but carefully hedged by omitting the much more impactful percentage increase between them. So I had to do the math. The new South Dakota state record largemouth bass, from 2020, is 1.5% larger than the previous record holder form 1999, set more than twenty years previously. - ed)
May 6, 2020 - Mississippi - State has new record redfish
Antonio Rubio of Bay Minette, Ala., set a new state record for red drum.
David Floyd of Pascagoula set a new state record for Striped Burrfish.
Todd Rosetti of Biloxi set a new state record for Smooth Puffer.
Jimmy Taylor of Biloxi established a state record for Keeltail Pomfret.
Alabama angler betters longstanding record by over 8 pounds
Mississippi has a new record for redfish, but it will be held by an Alabama angler.
On Tuesday, the state’s Commission on Marine Resources certified four new records including the massive 52-pound, 2.4-ounce redfish caught May 26 by Antonio Rubio of Bay Minette, Ala. It shattered by over 8 pounds the longstanding record of 44 pounds set in 1970.
Other records approved include:
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David Floyd of Pascagoula, striped burrfish, 1 pound, 9.65 ounces caught May 3. The previous record was 1 pound, 4 ounces set in 2008.
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Todd Rosetti of Biloxi, Smooth Puffer, 6 pounds, 6.4 ounces caught May 1. The previous record was 5 pounds, .04 ounces set in 2000.
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Jimmy Taylor of Biloxi established a state record for keeltail pomfret, 14 pounds, 3.82 ounces caught on May 30. It is the first keeltail pomfret listed.
(Under the false guise of familiarity, the headline omits the name of the state, to make the subject drastically less searchable. The current Mississippi state record redfish, from 2020, weighed 52 pounds, 2.4 ounces, 19% larger than the previous record holder from 1970. The author provided the numbers for the old and new records, but carefully hedged by omitting the much more impactful percentage increase between them. So I had to do the math. The author led with the terse “betters”, with the accurate “shattered” buried below. The author general " by over eight pounds " is put forward in place of the far more impactful “19% larger than the previous record holder.”
Such records are usually broken by tiny margins, as the organism gets closer and closer to its maximum possible size. Here the record stood unbroken for fifty years, and then was suddenly broken by a huge margin.
The current Mississippi state striped burrfish, from 2020, weighed 1 pound, 9.65 ounces, 28% larger than the previous record holder from 2008. The author provided the numbers for the old and new records, but carefully hedged by omitting the much more impactful percentage increase between them. So I had to do the math.
Such records are usually broken by tiny margins, as the organism gets closer and closer to its maximum possible size. Here the record stood unbroken for over twenty years, and then was suddenly broken by a huge margin.
The current Mississippi state smooth puffer fish, from 2020, weighed 6 pounds, 6.4 ounces, 28% larger than the previous record holder from 2000. The author provided the numbers for the old and new records, but carefully hedged by omitting the much more impactful percentage increase between them. So I had to do the math.
Such records are usually broken by tiny margins, as the organism gets closer and closer to its maximum possible size. Here the record stood unbroken for twenty years, and then was suddenly broken by a huge margin.
The keeltail pomfret record is of interest in that it documents and expansion of the territory or range of the species. - ed)