MORE THAN FIFTY SPECIES OF FISH CIRCLING AND SPINNING UNTIL THEY DIE Several of my subscribers have
called my attention to this. In February 2023, in the middle of the
Florida Keys -- a long, narrow string of islands hooking down into the
ocean from Miami -- many different kinds of fish, both common and rare,
began spinning round and round, or swimming frantically in circles,
until they beached themselves and died. This has continued, and as of
April 5, 2024 has been observed
in more than 50 species, including: sharks, rays, snappers, pilchards,
grunts, blue runners, squid, Goliath grouper, tarpon, snook, redfish,
leatherjacket, yellowfin mojarra, scaled sardine, toadfish, mullet,
permit, ballyhoo, jack crevalle, yellow jack, bonefish, pinfish, bigeye
scad, sand perch, needlefish, spadefish, and the critically endangered
smalltooth sawfish, which is pictured above. No
cause for this has been found. There is no evidence of a red tide, low
oxygen levels, high temperatures, or parasites in the dead fish. I
was skeptical that RF radiation from cell towers could be causing this
because water reflects the radiation and it shouldn’t be killing fish
like it is killing birds. But I decided to investigate. Because the
greatest number of reports have come from a 10-mile-long stretch of the
Keys between Big Pine Key and Sugarloaf Key, I wondered if there is a
military facility in that area, and there is, or was. On Cudjoe Key,
located between Big Pine Key and Sugarloaf Key, there was an Air Force
Base that is now operated by the Department of Homeland Security. And
above Cudjoe Key floats a radar blimp, called an “aerostat”, that is
part of U.S. border surveillance and scans an area around it for 200
miles in every direction. Powerful radar can injure fish when they swim
to the surface in these shallow waters, called the Florida Keys flats,
where the water is only a few feet deep. Local residents call this blimp
Fat Albert.
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