“What the ancients called a clever fighter is one who not only wins, but excels in winning with ease.”
― From “The Art of War”, by Sun Tzu, 5th Century B.C.
It’s February 2020, and great, epochal positive changes are underway at every level of our reality.
One of those changes is animals growing to unprecedented size, regardless of geography. That’s because the size of any organism is directly connected to the relative health of its energetic or Etheric environment.
The positive changes began in earnest in 2012 and have been increasing in speed and magnitude since. I’ve subjectively concluded that they are being driven by untold thousands of simple, inexpensive Orgonite devices based on Wilhelm Reich’s work.
Those devices are collectively unknitting and transforming the ancient Death energy matrix that’s been patiently built and expanded by our about-to-be-former Dark masters, well, all the way back to Babylon and before. And the Ether is returning to its ages-long natural state of health and vitality.
May 2, 2013 - Duluth man catches world-record lake trout
Bruce Sederberg had caught enough big lake trout that he knew he had something special on his line that January afternoon. He had caught 15- to 20-pounders on Ontario’s White Otter Lake before. But after playing this one for about 20 minutes, he thought it might be different.
“The longer and longer it went, I kept saying, ‘My word, what do I have?’” said the Duluth angler.
What he had was the catch-and-release ice-fishing world-record lake trout, a 46-incher that likely weighed more than 40 pounds.
Sederberg received word Feb. 8 that the fish had been certified by the National Freshwater Fishing Hall of Fame in Hayward, Wis., as the record. Sederberg’s big lake trout topped the previous catch-and-release ice-fishing record of 44 inches, according to the Hall of Fame.
(The author provided the numbers of the old and new records, but hedged by omitting the percentage increase between them. So I had to do the math. It’s 4.5% longer than the previous world record holder. Such records are usually broken by tiny margins. Did you notice how they cropped the picture so you couldn’t see how huge it was? This sort of thing doesn’t get past a photo editor, period. Unless they’re working in concert with the international news blackout that’s in place on the subject. - ed)
July 10, 2019 - Utah man sets spearfishing record with 51-inch fish
FISH LAKE, Utah — A Tooele man set a spearfishing record for Tiger Muskellunge with a 51-inch catch on June 13, according to the Utah Division of Wildlife Resources.
Jacob Hansen caught the fish, which weighed 32 pounds and had a 21-inch girth.
The previous record was set in 2013 at Fish Lake when a 46-inch, 28-pound Muskellunge was caught.
The catch-and-release record for the Tiger Muskellunge was set in 1998 with a 53.25-inch catch at Pineview Reservoir.
(The headline omits the name of the fish, to make the subject drastically less searchable. The author provided the numbers of the old and new records, but hedged by omitting the percentage increase between them. So I had to do the math. It’s 11% longer than the previous record holder. Such records are usually broken by tiny margins. - ed)
January 13, 2020 - Record-breaking smallmouth bass caught in Fort Gibson lake
(The story makes no mention of the previous record. - ed)
February 12, 2020 - Angler catches state record yellow perch on her first-ever day of ice fishing
“It” was a state record yellow perch that weighed 2.12 pounds and was 16 inches long. But neither Drugovich nor Harrington viewed it as anything more than a meal. Their dog, Moose, also thought the perch looked pretty tasty.
Harrington said he wasn’t initially impressed by the size of the perch.
“ Neither of us had a clue ,” he said. “We’re both from Ohio and we’re used to seeing bigger perch come out of Lake Erie. I sent [photos] to a couple of buddies and they said, ‘You should get it weighed. It looks like it could be close to a state record.’”
It was better than close. It topped the existing record by nearly a quarter of a pound .
According to The Maine Sportsman magazine, which maintains the list of state record fish, Drugovich’s perch tops a 1.88-pounder caught by Daniel Baty of Round Pond in 2017. Baty’s perch came from Damariscotta Lake.
(The author provided the numbers of the old and new records, and used the general hedges of " tops ", " topped " and " by nearly a quarter of a pound " to describe the margin between the records. Then they hedged again by omitting the percentage increase between them. So I had to do the math. It’s 12.7% larger than the previous record holder . Such records are usually broken by tiny margins. - ed)
"Harrington said he wasn’t initially impressed by the size of the perch . “Neither of us had a clue ,” he said.
That’s straight-up bullshit. That perch is freaking enormous. He’s a generational Satanist being quoted in a mainstream news article. - ed)
Jeff Miller, Brooklyn, New York, February 17, 2020
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