"Trout", from "Positive Changes That Are Occurring", by Jeff Miller

TROUT

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 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 trout are growing larger than they ever have, in history, and trout populations are booming and burgeoning to unprecedented levels. That’s because the size, fertility and longevity of any organism vary directly with the health of its etheric environment.

In March 2014, a world record Lake Trout was caught on Lake Ontario. It weighed 52 pounds, 3 ounces, and was 30% larger than the previous world record holder, caught on Clearwater West Lake, Ontario, Canada, in 1987. That fish weighed 40 pounds.

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(World record Lake Trout caught in Ontario, Canada in 2014. It’s suddenly a third larger than any other Lake Trout ever caught in history. Such records are usually broken by tiny margins)

“But provincial conservation officers have now seized his prize as evidence, and the fisherman may face wildlife charges.”

“Stripping of records on technicalities to try to keep a lid on this phenomenon” represents a trackable subset of the information I’ve been collecting over the last seven years, and could easily be collected into a sub-chapter, which I may get to some day.

The folks in charge in Ontario are desperately to keep the suddenly-one-third larger Lake Trout out of the record books, and out of the public eye.

From 2017 to 2019, state records for Trout were set in Maine, Idaho, Minnesota and Missouri. The margins between the old records and the new were 60%, 11.4%, 18.6%, and 50%, respectively. That’s an average increase in trout size of 35%. Trout increasing in size by a third over the previous record holders, regardless of geography.

The Maine state record rainbow trout from June 2017 weighed 13 pounds, 7 ounces, and was 60% larger than the previous 8.42 pound record holder. The article omits any other information on the previous record. That’s an example of a propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”.

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(The current Maine state-record rainbow trout, from 2017, suddenly 60% larger, or roughly two thirds larger than the previous record holder. Such records are usually broken by tiny margins)

The author provided the weights of the old and new records, but carefully hedged by omitting the percentage increase between them, replacing it with the general “more than five pounds larger”. That’s another example of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”. As you may recall, generality is a hallmark of propaganda.

So, I had to do the math. Such records are usually broken by tiny margins. Here the record stood was broken by a gigantic, historically-unprecedented margin.

The Idaho Tiger Trout state record was broken three times on Free Fishing Day in June 2017. The record went from 17.5 inches to 17.6 inches to 18 inches to 19.5 inches. That’s an 11.4% increase.

The author provided the weights of the old and new records, but carefully hedged by omitting the percentage increases between them. That’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”. So, I had to do the math. Such records are usually broken by tiny margins. Here the record was broken three times in one day by a very large margin.

In November 2017, capradio said “Salmon And Steelhead Trout Migrating In Record Numbers”.

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 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 all trout and salmon species combined surpassed the previous record high, more than 37 percent above the previous five-year average.”

A lake trout caught in Minnesota in 2019 was 18.6% larger than the current state record holder from 1955. The author provided the weights of the old and new records, but carefully hedged by omitting the percentage increases between them. That’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”. So I had to do the math. Such records are usually broken by tiny margins. Here the record stood for over fifty years and then was suddenly broken by a huge margin.

The current Missouri state record brown trout, from 2019, is 50% larger than a prior record holder from 1997.

Missouri state record brown trout from 2019, 50% larger, or half again larger than the previous record holder from 1997. Such records are usually broken by tiny margins)

The author provided the weights of the old and new records, but carefully hedged by omitting the percentage increases between them. That’s an example of the propaganda technique known as “compartmentalization”. So, I had to do the math. Such records are usually broken by tiny margins. Here the record stood for over twenty years and then was suddenly broken by a huge, historically-unprecedented margin.

The current Idaho catch and release state record for Garrard rainbow trout, from 2019, was 36.5 inches long, and was 160% larger than the previous 14-inch record holder from 2018. more than double the size of the previous record holder, from 2018. The Idaho Statesman omitted the statistic and said the new record holder was “more than double the size”.

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(The current Idaho catch-and-release state record Gerrard rainbow trout, from 2019)

Trout records are being broken by exponential margins, and trout populations are booming and burgeoning to unprecedented levels, both regardless of geography, because the size, fertility and longevity of any organism vary directly with the health of its etheric environment.