“The scientists of today think deeply instead of clearly. One must be sane to think clearly, but one can think deeply and be quite insane.”

“The scientists of today think deeply instead of clearly. One must be sane to think clearly, but one can think deeply and be quite insane.” 

― Nikola Tesla






July 25, 2019 - Youth Claims Species’ First Entry

September 10, 2020 - Species Added to Maryland Record Books in 2019




Both headlines above omit the word "state", the word "record", and the name of the fish, to make the subject almost completely unsearchable. 

The authors are using that standardized language and verbiage because they are desperate to keep you from realizing that the size, fertility and longevity of any organism vary directly with the health of its Etheric environment.

In the second story, the author omits the weight of the previous record holder, instead making the reader click a link, and do the math themselves. That's an example of a propaganda technique called "compartmentalization".

But don't try telling any of that to a committed Coincidence Theorist as proof that there is, indeed, Some Big Conspiracy.

It's October 2020, and great positive changes are underway at every level of our reality. They began in earnest in 2012, and have been increasing in speed and magnitude. I began writing this series of articles, entitled "Positive Changes That Are Occurring", in July of 2013.

These historically-unprecedented positive changes are being driven by the general distribution of many hundreds of thousands, if not millions of simple, inexpensive Orgonite devices. The American Don Croft first fabricated simple, inexpensive tactical Orgonite in 2000, building upon the previous groundbreaking work of Wilhelm Reich and Karl Hans Welz, both Austrians.

Over the last twenty years, Orgonite's widespread, ongoing and ever-increasing distribution has been unknitting the ancient Death energy matrix built and expanded by our dark masters, well, all the way back to Babylon, and before. And, as a result, the Ether is returning to its natural state of health and vitality.

For example, the Maryland state record Florida pompano, from 2020, weighed 5.05 pounds, and was 49% larger than the previous 3.375-pound record holder from 2019. Now, it must be allowed that this gigantic margin, this tremendous increase in size of the fish can in part be attributed to the fact that any Florida pompano would do for the first record. But a wider study of the species will tell the tale.

 This is also a data point regarding the expansion of the range of the Florida pompano, which shows that the environment is improving, or the pompano's numbers are increasing, or both.

The Maryland state record for mahi mahi stood unbroken for almost forty years, and then was suddenly broken twice in rapid succession in 2019, the same year the Florida pampano showed up in Maryland waters.

The Maryland state record mahi mahi from July 2019 weighed 72.8 pounds, and was 7.3% larger than the previous 67.8 pound record holder from 1985.

The new record is significantly larger than the old. There's clearly been some great positive change in the environment of the mahi mahi in Maryland. That change is energetic. The size, fertility and longevity of any organism varies directly with the health of its Etheric environment.

A month later, a 74.5-pound mahi mahi was landed to take the new Maryland state record. That's another 2.2% increase. And a 9% increase from 1985 to 2019.

And now, because two examples are never enough for a Coincidence Theorist, I'm going to have to research a third. A story below from March 2020 is headlined "Prehistoric fish caught in Maryland is new state record".

Where the general "prehistoric fish" was used in place of the fish's actual name, to make the subject almost completely unsearchable.

As you may recall, generality is a hallmark of propaganda.

The author continues with the chicanery by saying that the new record "barely beat" the old, and then made me do the math. It's a 2.2% increase, which is statistically large in this context. 

Such records are usually broken by tiny margins, as organisms grow in progressively smaller increments as they approach the maximum possible size dictated by their genetics, or so maintains the rapidly-collapsing farce of mean-spirited Western materialism.

The record holder from January 2019 was 5% larger than the previous record holder from 2011. 

Such records are usually broken by tiny margins, as organisms grow in progressively smaller increments as they approach the maximum possible size dictated by their genetics, or so maintains the rapidly-collapsing farce of mean-spirited Western materialism.

The state record longnose gar in Maryland increased in size by 7% from 2011 to 2019. While we learned previously that the mahi mahi increased in size by 9% 1985 to 2019.

A story below about the 2011 record is headlined "17-pound longnose gar sets Md. record".

Where the author omitted the word "state" and abbreviated Maryland as "Md." to make the subject drastically less searchable. 

Then they said tersely only that the new record "broke" the old, and withheld any information on when the previous record was set, or who set it. So I had to do the math. It was 6% larger than the previous record holder, which I'm now going to have to research a separate article on. That's an example of a propaganda technique called "compartmentalization."

Every single story from 2011 omits the date of the previous record holder. 

But don't try showing that to a committed Coincidence Theorist as proof that there is, indeed, Some Big Conspiracy.

An article below from the summer I began writing these articles, in 2013, is headlined "Kid Breaks 30-Year Maryland Bass Record".

Where the author omitted the word "largemouth" under the false guise of familiarity, to make the subject far less searchable.

After standing for nearly 30 years, the record was suddenly broken by 2.2%. The same 2.2% margin seen on the longnose gar record that the author said "barely beat" the old.

Such records are usually broken by tiny margins, as organisms grow in progressively smaller increments as they approach the maximum possible size dictated by their genetics, or so maintains the rapidly-collapsing farce of mean-spirited Western materialism.

They're desperate to keep you from realizing that the size, fertility and longevity of any organism vary directly with the health of its Etheric environment.







Jeff Miller, Brooklyn, New York, October 1, 2020




August 27, 2011 - 17-pound longnose gar sets Md. record

POCOMOKE CITY — A Westover man caught a 17-pound, 49-inch longnose gar on July 31, setting a new Maryland record. Justin Kelly, 20, was fishing on the Pocomoke River on the lower Eastern Shore when he made the record catch, using steel leaders and live bluegill for bait.

The center measured and weighed the fish, then checked the Maryland Fishing Guide to find that it exceeded the 36-inch minimum angler award size and broke the previous record of 16 pounds.



August 29, 2013 - Kid Breaks 30-Year Maryland Bass Record

According to the Maryland Department of Natural Resources, Colton Lambert, 12, caught a Maryland record largemouth bass while fishing at a farm pond in his hometown of Huntingtown on July 31. The fish was 11 pounds, 6 ounces and measured 26 inches in length with an 18-inch girth.

The previous record of 11 pounds, 2 ounces was held for nearly 30 years by Rodney Cockrell.



January 28, 2019 - Eastern Shore Angler Catches Record Longnose Gar

A Dorchester County man set a state record for catching a 17.9-pound longnose gar. Secretary resident David Confair, 44, caught the fish Jan. 23 a few miles above the historic Brookview Bridge along Marshyhope Creek.

Confair’s catch surpassed the state’s previous record holder, Justin Kelly, who caught a 17-pound longnose gar in the Potomac River back in 2011



July 20, 2019 - 2019 Report Shows 60 Percent Increase in Blue Crab Population




July 25, 2019 - Youth Claims Species’ First Entry

Photo of  Scott Hartzell Jr. with his state record Florida pompano. The Maryland Department of Natural Resources has officially recognized 14-year-old Scott Hartzell Jr. of Easton as the first official state record holder for a Florida pompano. Hartzell caught the 3.375-pound fish on Stone Rock near Tilghman Island.

(The headline carefully omits the word "state", the word "record", and the name of the fish, to make the subject completely unsearchable. - ed)



July 30, 2019 - Maryland state record mahi mahi caught in Ocean City

For nearly 35 years, Kim Lawson’s catch of a 67.8-pound mahi mahi sat atop the Maryland state record book.

But on Monday, the historic catch was finally dethroned.



August 20, 2019 - Maryland state record mahi mahi caught in Ocean City fishing tournament

On July 28, Jeff Wright did something no other angler had been able to accomplish in nearly 35 years.

He broke the Maryland state record for heaviest mahi mahi, reeling in a catch of 72.8 pounds.

But less than a month later, another massive dolphinfish was caught, and the Maryland Department of Natural Resources declared a new record had been set in the mahi mahi division.

Kristy Frashure of Pasadena boated a 74.5-pound dolphinfish on board the Haulin N’ Ballin as a participant in the Poor Girls Open fishing tournament. The catch gave Frashure first place in the dolphin category, weighing nearly 35 pounds more than the runner-up.





March 4, 2020 - Prehistoric fish caught in Maryland is new state record

The whopping 18.3 pound catch just barely beat Dorchester County man David Confair's January 2019 longnose gar catch of 17.9 pounds.



April 1, 2020 - CHESAPEAKE BAY BLUE CRABS ARE AT THEIR MOST PLENTIFUL IN SEVEN YEARS, SCIENTISTS SAY





September 10, 2020 - Species Added to Maryland Record Books in 2019

(Where the headline omits the word "record", the word "state", and the name of the fish, to make the subject virtually unsearchable.

The Maryland Department of Natural Resources has officially recognized 26-year-old David Schrock of Woolford as the second official state record holder for the Florida pompano (Trachinotus carolinus) in the Chesapeake Division. Schrock caught the record-breaking 5.05-pound fish on Tilghman Island during the Labor Day weekend. The pompano had a fork length — measured from the tip of the snout or jaw to the end of the middle caudal fin rays, or “fork” — of 18.5 inches.

While fishing from shore with multiple rods in the Black Walnut Point area, Schrock noticed one rod was taking off. One companion guessed that the fish might be a large bluefish.

After nearly a 10-minute fight, Schrock pulled up the catch and quickly called some friends to help identify the fish. “We had no idea what it was at first,” said Schrock. The pompano was caught using a piece of peeler crab on a traditional Chesapeake two-hook top-bottom rig.

Schrock immediately reached out to the department for verification. Recreational Outreach Coordinator Erik Zlokovitz verified the species as a Florida pompano – Trachinotus carolinus. Its weight was certified by Wittman Wharf Seafood.

“Wow … I think I need to play the lottery,” Schrock said after his record was confirmed.

Schrock’s record Florida pompano breaks the year-old record held by Scott Hartzell Jr., whose catch marked the first time the species was recognized in Maryland records.

(The author omits the weight of the previous record holder, instead making the reader click a link, and do the math themselves. That's an example of a propaganda technique called "compartmentalization".

The Maryland state record Florida pompano, from 2020, weighed 5.05 pounds, and was 49% larger than the previous 3.375-pound record holder from 2019. Such records are usually broken by tiny margins, as organisms grow in progressively smaller increments as they approach the maximum possible size dictated by their genetics, or so maintains the rapidly-collapsing farce of mean-spirited Western materialism.

The new record is exponentially larger than the old. There's clearly been some great positive change in the environment of the Florida pompano in Maryland. That change is energetic. The size, fertility and longevity of any organism varies directly with the health of its Etheric environment.

 This is also a data point regarding the expansion of the range of the Florida pompano, which shows that the environment is improving, or the pompano's numbers are increasing, or both. - ed)




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