The white catfish, seen just four times in Connecticut between 1986 and 1994, suddenly winked back into existence there in 2021, was the largest in history, and two thirds larger than the previous record holder

Getting more and more of a stranglehold on it, now. You can clearly see the species “winking into existence”, from our perspective, where it had never been observed previously.

And growing, and growing, larger and larger, once the ether had improved to a point where the species could manifest there.

And that growth rate increasing exponentially, going forward in time, with the peak of that growth being documented from 2004 to 2007.

WHITE CATFISH

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 on the subject, entitled “Positive Changes That Are Occurring”, in July of 2013.

These historically-unprecedented positive changes are being driven by many hundreds of thousands, if not millions of simple, inexpensive Orgonite devices based on the work of Wilhelm Reich and Karl Hans Welz.

Since Don Croft first fabricated tactical Orgonite in 2000, its widespread, ongoing and ever-increasing distribution has been unknitting and transforming 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.

One of those changes is that white catfish are reappearing in waters where they haven’t been seen in decades, and appearing in other waters for the first time in history. They’re also growing to unprecedented size.

The New Jersey state record white catfish increased in size by 30% from 1976 to 2004, from 10 pounds, 14.88 ounces to 14 pounds, 4 ounces.

There were three documented sightings of the white catfish in New Jersey (1976, 1994, 2004). What led to the exceedingly rare white catfish to increase in size by nearly a third from 1976 to 2004?

The South Carolina state record white catfish increased in size by 22.5% from 1986 to 2014, from 9 pounds, 15 ounces to 12 pounds, 2.9 ounces.

The Kentucky state record white catfish from 2007 weighed 5 pounds, 3 ounces, and was 184% larger, or close to twice as large as a previous 1 pound, 13.2-ounce record holder from 2004.

The Kentucky state record white catfish increased in size by 2.2% from 2002 to 2004, from 1.78 pounds to 1.82 pounds.

from 2004 weighed 1 pound, 13.2 ounces, and was 2.2% larger than the previous 1.78-pound record holder from 2002.

We’ve just learned that the growth of the Kentucky state record white catfish is increasing exponentially, going forward in time. That’s not scientifically possible, at least according to the obviously-false Orthodoxy which holds that organisms grow in increasingly smaller increments to a genetically-determined maximum size.

The truth is that the size, fertility, longevity and very existence of any organism are determined by the relative health of its etheric environment.

94% of the 196% increase in size of the Kentucky state record white catfish from 2002 to 2016 took place from 2004 to 2007.

The 61.3% average annual increase in size of the Kentucky state record white catfish from 2004 to 2007 is 5,636% greater than the 1.1% average annual increase in size of the Kentucky state record white catfish from 2002 to 2004

The world record bullhead white catfish increased in size by 10% from 2005 to 2021.

In 2013, the year I began writing this series of articles, entitled “Positive Changes That Are Occurring”, the white catfish suddenly “winked into existence” in Maryland.

The Kentucky state record white catfish increased in size by 42.4% from 2007 to 2016, from 3.7 pounds to 5.27 pounds.

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

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

The white catfish, seen just four times in Connecticut between 1986 and 1994, suddenly winked back into existence there in 2021, was the largest in history, and almost double the size of the previous record holder.

Five of the thirteen, or 38%, or over one third of the states that the nas.er.usgs.gov map indicates in yellow as the indigenous range of the white catfish do not, in fact have state records for the white catfish.

11 of the 23, or 49%, or half of all the states where the nas.er.usgs.gov table documents the white catfish as “nonindigenous” have state records for the white catfish.

The USGS lists the white catfish as nonindigenous to California, where it has been observed 21 times from 1874 to present.

The USGS lists the white catfish as indigenous to New Jersey, where it has been observed just once, in all history.

STATES OVERVIEW

First, let’s review the states where the Feds admit that the white catfish exists, and has always existed, for all history.

As of February 2022, nas.er.usgs.gov lists the white catfish as native to twelve states, 1. Delaware, 2. Florida**, 3.** Georgia, 4. Maryland, 5. New Jersey, 6. New York, 7. North Carolina, 8. Pennsylvania, 9. South Carolina, 10. Vermont, 11. Virginia, and 12. West Virginia.

This map of the United States, from the nas.er.usgs.gov from February 2022 shows the areas the white catfish is indigenous to in yellow, and the areas that the Feds list as “nonindigenous occurrences” of the white catfish are in brown:

[image]

(nas.er.usgs.gov map showing the indigenous range of the white catfish in yellow, and the “nonindigenous occurcences” of the white catfish in brown)

Four of the twelve, or 33%, or one third of the states that nas.er.usgs.gov map shows in yellow as being within the indigenous range of the white catfish do not, in fact have state records for the white catfish. That’s Delaware, Pennsylvania, Vermont and West Virginia.

That’s because the folks in charge are not your friends, and are lying to you about basically everything, including the range of the white catfish.

There are a tortuous 23 states listed as “Nonindigenous Occurrences” of the white catfish in a table in the same article, and I’m here to tell you, we’re going to study them.

Now, “nonindigenous occurrences” is Mil-speak for “areas where the ether is recovering in health to the point where the white catfish can manifest there”.

It’s going to be fun to research list, because we’re going to get to see who established state records for the purportedly-non-idigenous white catfish, and when.

Table 1. States with nonindigenous occurrences, the earliest and latest observations in each state, and the tally and names of HUCs with observations†. Names and dates are hyperlinked to their relevant specimen records. The list of references for all nonindigenous occurrences of Ameiurus catus are found here.

The 24 states where the white catfish is listed as nonindigenous are 1. Alabama, 2. Arkansas, 3. California, 4. Connecticut, 5. Florida, 6. Illinois, 7. Indiana, 8. Kentucky, 9. Maine, 10. Maryland, 11. Massachusetts, 12. Missouri, 13. Nevada, 14. New Hampshire, 15. New Jersey, 16. North Carolina, 17. Ohio, 18. Oregon, 19. Pennsylvania, 20. Puerto Rico, 21. South Carolina, 22. Tennessee, and 23. Washington.

Wait, what? 11 of the 23 states, where the nas.er.usgs.gov table documents the white catfish as “nonindigenous”, or 49%, or half of those states do, in fact, have state records for the white catfish.

Those states are Alabama, California, Connecticut, Florida, Indiana, Kentucky, Maine, Maryland, New Jersey, North Carolina and South Carolina.

State First Observed Last Observed Total HUCs with observations† HUCs with observations†

AL 1960 1999 16 Cahaba; Guntersville Lake; Lower Choctawhatchee; Lower Coosa; Lower Tallapoosa; Lower Tombigbee; Middle Coosa; Middle Tallapoosa; Mobile Bay; Mobile-Tensaw; Pea; Perdido; Pickwick Lake; Upper Choctawhatchee; Upper Coosa; Wheeler Lake

AR 1973 1988 8 Big; Bodcau Bayou; Illinois; Lake Conway-Point Remove; Lower Ouachita-Smackover; Lower White; Lower White-Bayou Des Arc; Upper Saline

CA 1874 2021 21 California; California Region; Central California Coastal; Coyote; Lower Eel; Lower Sacramento; Lower Sacramento; Middle San Joaquin-Lower Chowchilla; Monterey Bay; Newport Bay; Pajaro; San Diego; San Francisco Bay; San Joaquin; San Joaquin Delta; Santa Clara; Suisun Bay; Tulare-Buena Vista Lakes; Upper Cache; Upper Sacramento; Upper Yuba

CT 1986 1994 4 Housatonic; Lower Connecticut; New England Region; Thames

FL 1954 2020 7 Blackwater; Choctawhatchee Bay; Florida Southeast Coast; Lower Choctawhatchee; Pensacola Bay; St. Andrew-St. Joseph Bays; Yellow

IL 1965 1991 5 Copperas-Duck; Lower Illinois-Lake Chautauqua; Middle Kaskaskia; Upper Illinois; Upper Mississippi-Cape Girardeau

IN 1968 1992 1 Blue-Sinking

IA 1980 1980 1 Copperas-Duck

KY 1970 1986 5 Little Sandy; Little Scioto-Tygarts; Lower Ohio-Little Pigeon; Middle Ohio-Laughery; Ohio Brush-Whiteoak

ME 1980 2019 3 Lower Kennebec; Lower Penobscot; St. George-Sheepscot

MD 2019 2019 1 Tangier

MA 1986 2005 4 Charles; Lower Connecticut; Merrimack; Middle Connecticut

MO 1975 1991 3 Lower Missouri-Moreau; South Grand; Upper Mississippi-Cape Girardeau

NV 1877 2001 11 Black Rock Desert-Humboldt; Carson; Carson Desert; Central Lahontan; Central Nevada Desert Basins; Great Basin; Great Basin Region; Lower Humboldt; Middle Carson; Middle Humboldt; Truckee

NH 1996 1996 1 Merrimack River

NJ 1994 1994 1 Raritan

NC 1991 2013 3 French Broad-Holston; Upper New; Upper Tennessee

OH 1939 1994 7 Lake Erie; Little Miami; Middle Ohio-Laughery; Muskingum; Tuscarawas; Upper Ohio; Upper Ohio-Wheeling

OR 1880 1989 5 Lower Columbia-Clatskanie; Lower Willamette; Middle Willamette; Pacific Northwest Region; Willamette

PA 1979 1983 3 Lake Erie; Upper Ohio; Youghiogheny

PR 1972 2007 4 Cibuco-Guajataca; Eastern Puerto Rico; Puerto Rico; Southern Puerto Rico

RI 1992 1992 1 New England Region

SC 2019 2019 1 Calibogue Sound-Wright River

TN 1993 1993 1 Upper Clinch

WA 1880 2003 6 Banks Lake; Lower Columbia-Clatskanie; Lower Cowlitz; Pacific Northwest Region; Queets-Quinault; Skykomish

(List appearance orders, both first and last, chronologically, see if it shows anything)

ALABAMA

As of February 2022, nas.er.usgs.gov lists the white catfish as nonindigenous to Alabama, with 16 observations from 1960 to 1999.

As of February 2022, Alabama listed the state record white catfish as “Catfish, White, 10 lbs 5 oz, 4/3/1981, Chambers Co. Public Lake, Roy T. Britton, Opelika”.

Essay: Explain why Alabama has a state record white catfish when nas.er.usgs.gov lists the species as nonindigenous to Alabama.

ARKANSAS

As of February 2022, nas.er.usgs.gov lists the white catfish as nonidigenous to Arkansas, with six observations between 1973 and 1988.

Essay: Explain the mechanisms by which the white catfish got to Arkansas in 1973, and then explain how and why it disappeared from the state just just 16 years later.

While New Jersey is one of thirteen U.S. states which nas.er.usgs.gov’s map says that the white catfish is indigenous to. Yet, in February 2022, nas.er.usgs.gov said of the white catfish in New Jersey: “NJ 1994 1994 1 Raritan”. While a lay researcher with too much time on his hands such as myself was able to find three examples (1976, 1994, 2004).

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 was no record of the white catfish in New Jersey prior to 1994, and there has been one white catfish observation in New Jersey in all history.

Essay: Explain why New Jersey, with three historical observations of the white catfish from 1976 to 2004, is listed as part of the indigenous range of the white catfish, while Arkansas, with twice as many observations, is not.

There is no state record for the white catfish in Arkansas.

Essay: Explain why there is no white catfish state record in Arkansas within the context of six observations of the species there from 1973 to 1988.

CALIFORNIA

As of February 2022, nas.er.usgs.gov lists the white catfish as nonidigenous to California, with 21 observations from 1874 to 2021.

Essay: Define the term “nonindigenous”, and then explain how a fish that’s been observed continuously in California from 1874 to present is not, in fact, indigenous to California, as the USGS clearly states.

Essay: Explain why New Jersey, with three historical observations of the white catfish from 1976 to 2004, is listed as part of the indigenous range of the white catfish, while California, with eight times as many observations of the species over nine times as many years, is not.

1874 is the earliest appearance of the white catfish in the nas.er.usgs.gov’s list of states where the white catfish is claimed to be nonindigenous.

Essay: Explain why Rhode Island, which is in the midst of the purported indigenous range of the white catfish, had only one observation of the species in history, in 1992, while California, all the way across the continent, had 16 from 1874 to present.

Bonus: Explain why Rhode Island, a state with an observation of the white catfish could or would be listed as nonindigenous by the USGS.

The California state record white catfish weighed 22 pounds, and was caught by James Robinson in Sacramento, California’s Land Park pond on March 21, 1994.

Essay: Explain why California has a state record for the white catfish, when the white catfish is not indigenous to California, at least according to the USGS.

CONNECTICUT

As of February 2022, nas.er.usgs.gov lists the white catfish as nonidigenous to Connecticut, with 5 observations from 1986 to present.

The current USGS table, from 2022, lists four observations from 1986 to 1994, and omits the fifth, the largest white catfish ever caught, in all history.

Essay: Explain how the largest white catfish ever caught, in all history (70% larger than the previous record holder) was caught in Connecticut, a state which the USGS says the white catfish is not indigenous to.

In September 2021, whiskyriff.com said “Connecticut Man Hooks World Record White Catfish”.

The author, Brett Stayton, goes on to say “The most recent record breaker is a white catfish that was caught by Ben Tomkunas in Connecticut. The 21-pound 3-ounce fish smashed the previous state record of 12-pounds 7.5-ounces.”

Where Brett provided the weights of the old and new record holders, but omitted the far-more impactful percentage increase between them, replacing it with the general “smashed the previous state record”. That’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”.

They also made no mention of the what the previous record was, or who set it, or when. That’s another example of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”.

I had to look up another website, nas.er.usgs.gov, which says: White Catfish, CT first observed 1986, last observed 1994 4 Housatonic; Lower Connecticut; New England Region; Thames”.

Wow, that’s interesting! This is the fifth white catfish ever documented in Connecticut, and it’s the largest in the history of the world.

And we’ve learned that the previous state record was sometime between 1986 and 1994. So the Connecticut state record white catfish, from 2021, weighed 21 pounds, 3 ounces, and was 70% larger than the previous 12-pound, 7.5 ounce record holder from between 1986 and 1994.

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 almost twice as large as ever, and was the biggest in the history of the world.

Stayton’s whiskyriff article continues: “Now that the Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection (DEEP) has confirmed the fishes weight and verified it as a state record, the angler will now be applying to have the fish certified as a world record. The previous world record for a white bullhead was caught in California in 2005 and weighed 19-pounds 5-ounces.”

Where Brett provided the weights of the old and new record holders, but omitted the far-more impactful percentage increase between them. That’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”.

The world record bullhead white catfish, from 2021, weighed 21 pounds, 3 ounces, and was 10% larger than the previous 19-pound, 5-ounce record holder from 2005.

The world record bullhead white catfish increased in size by 10% from 2005 to 2021.

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

There are many people working full-time jobs to overturn fish records to obfuscate the wider trend I’m documenting here.

DELAWARE

As of February 2022, nas.er.usgs.gov’s map lists the white catfish as indigenous to Delaware.

As of February 2022, the state of Delaware does not list a white catfish state record.

Essay: Explain why the state of Delaware does not list a white catfish state record when nas.er.usgs.gov lists the white catfish as indigenous to Delaware

FLORIDA

As of February 2022, nas.er.usgs.gov’s map lists the white catfish as indigenous to Florida.

Yet nas.er.usgs.gov’s table in the same 2022 web page containing the map says that the white catfish is nonindigenous to Florida.

Essay: Without using the words “doublespeak” or “doublethink”, explain how and why the white catfish could at once be indigenous and nonindigenous to Florida, according to the same US agency, in the same article.

The nas.er.usgs.gov table says that the nonindigenous white catfish has been observed seven times in Florida from 1954 to 2020.

As of February 2022, Florida listed the state record white catfish as “White Catfish, 18.88 pounds, 9/21/1991, Jim Miller, Withlacoochee River, Marion County”.

GEORGIA

As of February 2022, nas.er.usgs.gov’s map lists the white catfish as indigenous to Georgia.

As of February 2022, Georgia listed the state record for white catfish as “Catfish, White, 8 lb, 10 oz, James D. Sanders, Savannah River, June 10, 1996“.

ILLINOIS

As of February 2022, the nas.er.usgs.gov table says that the nonindigenous white catfish has been observed five times in Illinois from 1965 to 1991.The nas.er.usgs.gov table says that the nonindigenous white catfish has been observed seven times in Florida from 1954 to 2020.

Essay: Explain why the white catfish was first observed in Illinois in 1965, and last observed there in 1991. Cross reference against continuous observation of the white catfish in California from 1874 to present.

INDIANA

The nas.er.usgs.gov table from February 2022 says that the nonindigenous white catfish has been observed just twice in Indiana, in 1968 and 1972. Actually, their official table says “one”, and lists both of those dates. That’s not very, er, Scientific.

Indiana’s state record white catfish weighed 9.72 pounds, and was caught in Wabash pond by Melissa Grimes in 1985.

Essay: Explain why the USGS lists just one observation of the white catfish, when it appears there have been three, from 1968 to 1985? Further, explain why the official USGS data omits the Indiana state record from 1985, and also why a state in which the white catfish is nonindigenous would have a state record for the species.

KENTUCKY

The nas.er.usgs.gov table from February 2022 says that the nonindigenous white catfish has been observed five times in Kentucky from 1970 to 1986.

The Kentucky state record white catfish weighed 5.27 pounds, and was caught by Ethen Vest in Guist Creek Lake on October 11, 2016.

Essay: Explain why the USGS data omits Kentucky’s 2016 state record for the white catfish, and then explain why Kentucky would have a state record for a species that the USGS says is nonindigenous.

In November 2016, odumagazine.com said “Kentucky state record white catfish”.

The article is uncredited. Whenever an article is uncredited, it was, by definition, written by an Intelligence operative.

The article goes on to say “it weighed 5.27 pounds. The old state record of 3.7 pounds had stood since 2007 and also came out of Guist Creek Lake.”

Where the Intelligence operative writing the article did what little they could to hedge by omitting the name of the person who caught the previous record holder, along with omitting the far more impactful percentage increase between the records that I was forced to do the math to learn.

The Kentucky state record white catfish from 2016 weighed 5.27 pounds, and was 42.4% larger than the previous 3.7-pound record holder from 2007.

The Kentucky state record white catfish increased in size by 42.4% from 2007 to 2016, from 3.7 pounds to 5.27 pounds.

Thanks to the magic of the internet, I was able to find a video of the 2007 record holder being caught.

Here’s a captured still from the video, where the one generational Satanist says to the other “you, my friend…we have to run to Frankfurt and talk to a state biologist and find a certified scale… may have a new state record holder!”

[image]

(At 4:48 in the Video, the generational Satanist flashing the sign of Satan in the photo above, says “you have a new state record…by three ounces!” He took care not to mention when the previous record was set, or by whom, or the margin between the records.)

Thanks to the magic of the internet, continued, Wikipedia said “Record fish[edit]

Two Kentucky state record fish were taken from Guist Creek Lake:[2]

Bullhead catfish, 5 lb 3oz, caught by Harry Case on October 18, 1992

White catfish, 1 lb 9oz, caught by Charles Crain on May 3, 2004White catfish, 1 lb 9oz, caught by Charles Crain on May 3, 2004”

And southeasternoutdoors.com said “Crain’s record white catfish weighed 1.82 pounds. It was 16 inches long with a girth of 8.6 inches. It bested the old record of 1.78 pounds caught by Stephen Daisey from Guist Creek Lake in August, 2002.”

Now we’re on the trolley!

The Kentucky state record white catfish from 2016 weighed 5.27 pounds, and was 196% larger, or triple the size of a previous 1.78-pound record holder from 2002. That’s a baseline average annual increase in size of 14% per year over each of those 22 years.

Essay: Explain the precise biophysical and genetic mechanisms by which the Kentucky state record white catfish tripled in size from 2002 to 2016.

Oh, did I mention that wikipedia said “1 lb, 9 oz”? The earlier article says “1.82 pounds”. That means that the 2004 record holder is 1 pound, 13.2 pounces. Wikipedia’s “clerical error” would result in the margin for the records from 2002 to 2004 would be 15% smaller than it should be. That’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”. I’ve exposed Wikipedia’s duplicity by using what was known in the old days as “fact checking”.

Now let’s do some math:

”The Kentucky state record white catfish from 2007 weighed 5 pounds, 3 ounces, and was 3.75% larger than the previous 5-pound record holder from sometime between 2004 and 2007.

In retrospect, the generational Satanists fishing video was put out to say “see, a tiny increase in the state record!”…it’s a smoke screen for the huge increase I’m about to document for you:

The Kentucky state record white catfish from 2007 weighed 5 pounds, 3 ounces, and was 184% larger, or close to twice as large as a previous 1 pound, 13.2-ounce record holder from 2004.

That’s an average annual increase in size of % per year over each of those three years.

The Kentucky state record white catfish from 2004 weighed 1 pound, 13.2 ounces, and was 2.2% larger than the previous 1.78-pound record holder from 2002.

We’ve just learned that the growth of the Kentucky state record white catfish is increasing exponentially, going forward in time. That’s not scientifically possible, at least according to the obviously-false Orthodoxy which holds that organisms grow in increasingly smaller increments to a genetically-determined maximum size.

The truth is that the size, fertility, longevity and very existence of any organism are determined by the relative health of its etheric environment.

The 61.3% average annual increase in size of the Kentucky state record white catfish from 2004 to 2007 is 5,636% greater than the 1.1% average annual increase in size of the Kentucky state record white catfish from 2002 to 2004

94% of the 196% increase in size of the Kentucky state record white catfish from 2002 to 2016 took place from 2004 to 2007.

Here we can clearly see the white catfish going from small, when it “winked into existence” in Kentucky when the etheric environment improved to a point where it could manifest there, and then growing larger and larger, as the etheric environment continued to improve.

MAINE

The nas.er.usgs.gov table from February 2022 says that the nonindigenous white catfish has been observed three times in Maine from 1980 to 2019.

The Maine state record white catfish weighed 6.69 pounds, and was caught by Danny Shores on 7/7/2015.

Essay: Explain why there are no media accounts documenting Danny Shores catching of the Maine state record white catfish.

MARYLAND

In June 2017, an uncredited news.maryland.gov said “Record White Catfish Caught in Lower Potomac River”.

Where, under the false guise of familiarity, the unnamed author omitted the word “state” from “state record”, and “Maryland” (the name of the state), both to make the subject far less searchable. That’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”.

Whenever an article is uncredited, it was by definition written by an Intelligence asset.

The subhead reads “Lexington Park Resident Sets Standard with 8.27-Pound Catch”.

[image]

(Jacob Vosburg, with the first-ever Maryland state record white catfish. The species winked into existence in Maryland for the first time in history in 2013)u

The article goes on to say “The Maryland Department of Natural Resources confirmed a St. Mary’s County man has set a new state fishing record for white catfish. The fish was recognized as a game fish a few years ago, but until now nobody had broken the seven-pound minimum weight to be eligible for state records.”

That’s more than curious. In that, in February 2022, nas.er.usgs.gov said of the white catfish in Maryland: “MD First observed, 2019, last observed 2019 1 Tangier”.

Ah, wow, this is a key breakthrough. Here, we can see the Feds putting the white catfish record in place in Maryland “a few years” prior to a record being established, and nine years later, their official Fed version is “there was only one white catfish seen in the history of the state of Maryland, and it was on Tangier Island, in 2019”.

So, why, pray, was the Maryland state record for white catfish only established in 2017, when they’d been seen there since 2013? The reason is that white catfish suddenly showed up in Maryland waters in 2013. The establishment of the record slow-plays the public’s awareness of the sudden appearance of the new species within the ecosystem, and then the ruse is played “oh, that record’s been on the books for years!”

Rather it is simply that the species “winked into existence” in Maryland waters in 2013, and four years later, was large enough to be counted as a mature fish.

The white catfish winked into existence in Maryland waters in 2013 because the etheric environment reached a level of health where that species could manifest there.

As you can see, the folks in charge are not your friends, and are lying to you about basically everything, including the white catfish in Maryland.

The news.maryland.gov article continues: “Jacob Vosburgh, 20, of Lexington Park, caught the fish recorded at 8.27 pounds June 1 in the lower Potomac River. The white catfish was 23 inches in length.”

In June 2018, an uncredited proptalk.com said “Cecil County Angler Breaks Maryland White Catfish Record”.

Any time an article is uncredited, it was by definition written by an Intelligence asset.

Here, the uncredited author used the general “breaks record” in place of the far more impactful percentage increase between the records. That’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”.

The article goes on to say “According to the Maryland DNR, a North East man broke the Chesapeake Division state record for white catfish in the early morning hours of June 3. Brian Dvorak, an avid night angler, caught the fish off Turkey Point near the mouth of the Elk River.

A Maryland Department of Natural Resources biologist confirmed the species and the fish was weighed on a certified scale at local grocer. Coming in at 9.61 pounds, Dvorak’s catch beat the previous record of 8.27 pounds, set in 2017, by 1.34 pounds. 2017 was the first year for the record in Maryland.”

In February 2022, nas.er.usgs.gov said of the white catfish in Maryland: “MD First observed, 2019, last observed 2019 1 Tangier”.

Wait, what? How come a lay person with too much time on their hands such as myself knows that there are at least two records of the white catfish in Maryland (the state records of 2017 and 2018), yet the folks at nas.er.usgs.gov, who purport to love them some fish like it’s their job, are saying there aren’t any white cafish in the state, at all?

The folks in charge are not your friends, and are lying to you about basically everything, including white catfish in Maryland.

In this case, they’re trying to cover up the fact that, from our perspective, the white catfish in Maryland suddenly “winked into existence” there in 2013.

Essay: explain why nas.er.usgs.gov says that the white catfish is indigenous to Maryland, when it was not documented there until 2013.

Essay: explain why the State of Maryland classified a state record for the white catfish in Maryland in 2017, when nas.er.usgs.gov says as of 2022 that the white catfish is not indigenous to Maryland.

MASSACHUSETTS

As of February 2022, nas.er.usgs.gov lists the white catfish as indigenous to Massachusetts.

As of February 2022, mass.gov does not list a white catfish state record.

Essay: explain why mass.gov does not list a white catfish state record when nas.er.usgs.gov lists the white catfish as indigenous to Massachusetts.

MISSOURI

The nas.er.usgs.gov table from February 2022 says that the nonindigenous white catfish has been observed three times in Missouri from 1975 to 1991.

There is no state record in Missouri for the white catfish.

NEVADA

The nas.er.usgs.gov table from February 2022 says that the nonindigenous white catfish has been observed eleven times in Missouri from 1877 to 2001.

Essay: Explain how a fish seen continuously in Nevada for well over one hundred years could be nonindigenous to Nevada according to the USGS.

The Nevada state record white catfish weighed 16.15 pounds, and was caught by Jean Bianchi in the Humboldt river in 1982.

Essay: Explain why a state where the white catfish has been seen continuously for well over one hundred years has a state record for the species.

NEW HAMPSHIRE

The nas.er.usgs.gov table from February 2022 says that the nonindigenous white catfish has been observed just once in New Hampshire, in 1996, in the Merrimack River.

The New Hampshire state record white catfish from 1996, weighed 5 lbs., 11 ozs., and was caught in Big Cub Pond in Danville by Zachary Cross on August 4, 1996.

Essay: Explain why New Hampshire, a state to which the white catfish is nonindigenous, has a state record for the species.

Bonus: Explain why the only white catfish caught in the history of the state of New Hampshire, and which was awarded a state record, did not receive a single media story covering it.

NEW JERSEY

New Jersey is one of twelve U.S. states which nas.er.usgs.gov’s map says that the white catfish is indigenous to.

In December 2004, the New Jersey Division of Fish and Wildlife said “State Record White Catfish Caught”.

Where, under the false guise of familiarity, the uncredited author omitted the name of the State, New Jersey, to make the subject far less searchable. That’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”.

Whenever an article is uncredited, it was by definition written by an Intelligence operative.

The article goes on to say “The New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection’s Division of Fish and Wildlife has certified a new state record white catfish that was caught from Dallenbach Pond in East Brunswick, Middlesex County on August 14. Timothy Jasko of Monroe Township, New Jersey caught a 14 pound, 4 ounce white catfish (228 ounce) that weighed 3 pounds 15 ounces (175 ounces, 10 pounds, 14.88 ounces) more than the previous record taken from the Raritan River in 1976!”

While the author provided the weights and dates of the old and new records, they carefully hedged by omitting the far more impactful percentage increase between them. That’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”.

So, I had to do the math to learn that the New Jersey state record white catfish, from 2004, weighed 14 pounds, 4 ounces, and was 30% larger than the previous 10 pound, 14.88-ounce record holder from 1976.

The New Jersey state record white catfish increased in size by 30% from 1976 to 2004, from 10 pounds, 14.88 ounces to 14 pounds, 4 ounces.

In February 2022, nas.er.usgs.gov said “NJ 1994 1994 1 Raritan”.

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 was no record of the white catfish in New Jersey prior to 1994, while a lay researcher with too much time on his hands such as myself was able to find three examples (1976, 1994, 2004).

Essay: We’ve determined that the white catfish is exceedingly rare in New Jersey, with just three documented examples in 1976, 1994 and 2004. What led to the species increasing in size by nearly a third there from 1976 to 2004?

Essay: explain why the State of New Jersey classified a state record for the white catfish in 1976, when nas.er.usgs.gov says as of 2022 that the white catfish is not indigenous to New Jersey.

NEW YORK

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 an uncredited USA Today article from September 2020 said “White catfish record has experts baffled, prompts DNA test”.

Whenever an article is uncredited, it was by definition written by an Intelligence operative.

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 article goes on to say “A fisherman in New York who was told he had caught a state-record white catfish now doesn’t know what to think after several experts were left puzzled over the identity of the catfish, prompting them to send the fish in for DNA analysis.”

One of the unstated things that the person who caught the largest white catfish in the history of New York state is “the people doing the DNA analysis are bloodline-linked generational Satanists operating within a much larger conspiracy.”

The article goes on to say “Fishing in the Mohawk River, Chris Brockett of Loudonville landed what was originally thought to be a white catfish, which are relatively rare in New York. The catfish weighed 12 pounds and measured 30.5 inches, New York Upstate reported.”

[image]

(Chris Brocket, with the largest white catfish in the history of the state of New York, 2020 - the first seen in New York in over twenty years)

We’ll get back to “relatively rare” later in this feature on the white catfish.

The article continues: “Brian Canzeri, a state conservation officer, witnessed the catfish being weighed on a certified scale and noted it beat the current white catfish record of 10.5 pounds, caught by Joe Silicato in 1998 at New Croton Reservoir in Westchester County.”

Where both Brian Canzeri, who professes to love him some fish like it’s his job, used the general hedge “beat the current record” in place of the far-more impactful percentage increase between them.

So I had to do the math to learn that the New York state record white catfish, from 2020, weighed 12 pounds, and was 14.2% larger than the previous 10.5-pound record holder from 1998.

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

In regard to white catfish in New York state, 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.

And we’ve learned that the uncredited author from New York Upstate, who professes, albeit anonymously, to love them some fish like it’s their job, was lying when they were saying that white catfish were “relatively rare” in New York state. They’re not relatively rare, they are fantastically rare.

That’s because the folks in charge are not your friends, and are lying to you about basically everything, including white catfish in New York state.

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 existence of any organism is determined by the relative health of the etheric environment.

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

NORTH CAROLINA

As of February 2022, nas.er.usgs.gov lists the white catfish as indigenous to North Carolina.

As of February 2022, ncwildlife.org says “White Catfish,13 lbs, Lake James, 05/21/1990, Night Crawler, Jerry Wayne Bentley”.

OHIO

The nas.er.usgs.gov table from February 2022 says that the nonindigenous white catfish has been observed seven times in Ohio from 1939 to 1994.

Essay: Explain why the white catfish is listed by the USGS as nonindigenous to Ohio, when it’s been observed seven times there over almost sixty years, when the USGS lists the white catfish as indigenous to New Jersey, where, according to the USGS, where it has been observed only one time in history?

There is no Ohio state record for the white catfish.

OREGON

The nas.er.usgs.gov table from February 2022 says that the nonindigenous white catfish has been observed 5 times in Oregon from 1980 to 1989.

Essay: Explain why the white catfish is listed by the USGS as nonindigenous to Oregon, when it’s been observed five times there over almost more than a century, when the USGS lists the white catfish as indigenous to New Jersey, where, according to the USGS, where it has been observed only one time in history?

The Oregon state record white catfish weighed 15 pounds, and was caught by Wayne Welch on the Tualatin River in 1989.

Essay: Explain why Oregon would list a state record for the white catfish, when the species is nonindigenous to Oregon according to the USGS.

PENNSYLVANIA

As of February 2022, nas.er.usgs.gov’s map listed the white catfish as indigenous to Pennsylvania. Yet their table below lists it as nonindigenous, with just three observations from 1979 to 1983.

Essay: Explain how the USGS, who loves them some fish like it’s their taxpayer-funded job, can list the white catfish as both indigenous and nonindigenous to Pennsylvania. In the former case, compare with non-indigenous California, where the species has been documented continuously from 1874 to present, versus Pennsylvania, with just three observations in just three years from 1979 to 1983.

Bonus: Explain why all three white catfish observations in Pennsylvania occurred within a span of just four years.

Answer: The folks in charge are not your friends, and are lying to you about basically everything, including the white catfish in Pennsylvania.

PUERTO RICO

The nas.er.usgs.gov table from February 2022 says that the nonindigenous white catfish has been observed 4 times in Puerto Rico from 1972 to 2007.

Essay: Explain why the white catfish is listed by the USGS as nonindigenous to Puerto Rico, when it was observed four times there over almost forty years, when the USGS lists the white catfish as indigenous to New Jersey, where, according to the USGS, where it has been observed only one time in history?

Bonus: Explain how the white catfish got to an Island in the middle of the Caribbean Sea.

SOUTH CAROLINA

In February 2022, nas.er.usgs.gov listed the white catfish as indigenous to South Carolina.

In February 2022, dnr.sc.gov said “White Catfish 12-2.9 Lake Murray 2014 Charles Earp West Columbia, SC”

In July 2014, dnr.sc.gov said “Charles Earp of West Columbia, SC can take pride in his record breaking white catfish caught June 23, 2014 on Lake Murray.”

The article doesn’t make any mention of what the previous record was, or when it was set, or who set it. That’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”.

In July 2014, outdoorlife.com said “A 12-pound 2.9-ounce white catfish caught near Spence’s Point last week is in the process of being certified as a state record, according to the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources.

[image]

(Charles Earp with the South Carolina state record white catfish from 2014.

The previous white catfish record of 9 pounds 15 ounces has stood for nearly 30 years. That fish was caught in 1986 by Jim Schwietert.”

Where author Clayton Helms provided the weights and dates of the old record holder and the new, but carefully hedged by omitting the far more impactful percentage increase between them. That’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”.

So, I had to do the math to learn that the South Carolina state record white catfish, from 2014, weighed 12 pounds, 2.9 ounces, and was 22.5% larger than the previous 9-pound, 15-ounce record holder from 1986.

The South Carolina state record white catfish increased in size by 22.5% from 1986 to 2014, from 9 pounds, 15 ounces to 12 pounds, 2.9 ounces.

TENNESSEE

The nas.er.usgs.gov table from February 2022 says that the white catfish is nonindigenous to Tennessee, and has been observed there just once, in 1993.

Tennessee does not list a state record for the white catfish.

VERMONT

In February 2022, nas.er.usgs.gov listed the white catfish as indigenous to Vermont.

As of February 2022, fishingnortheast.net does not list a current state record holder for the white catfish.

Essay: explain why there is no documented white catfish state record in Vermont, which nas.er.usgs.gov lists as one of the states the white catfish is indigenous to.

VIRGINIA

In February 2022, nas.er.usgs.gov listed the white catfish as indigenous to Virginia.

The Virginia state record white catfish from 1992 weighed 7 pounds, 6 ounces.

WASHINGTON

The nas.er.usgs.gov table from February 2022 says that the white catfish is nonindigenous to Washington, and has been observed there six times from 1880 to 2003.

Essay: Explain why the USGS would list the white catfish as nonindigenous to Washington, when the species has been observed there continuously for over one hundred years. Cross reference against the USGS listing the white catfish as indigenous to New Jersey, where they state it has been observed just once in history.

Note: There are three documented observances of the white catfish in New Jersey, not one, as falsely alleged by the USGS.

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WEST VIRGINIA

In February 2022, nas.er.usgs.gov listed the white catfish as indigenous to West Virginia.

As of February 2022, the State of West Virginia does not list a white catfish record.

Essay: Explain why West Virginia does not list a white catfish record, within the context of nas.er.usgs.gov listing the white catfish as indigenous to West Virginia.