I mean, it was just this week that a group of 125,000 “lost” gorillas were found living in Central Africa. I love it when stories like the wolf eel skull make it into the mainstream press, because it’s one of those things that evokes curiosity and has inspired a lot of people to question the “status quo” responses of the “officials.” Especially if they discover something juicy and significant. Instead, scientists are like public relations hacks sent out to deny, deny, deny and repress, repress, repress. In fact, the whole idea of discovery has pretty much been tossed out the window.
![wolf eel scientific name wolf eel scientific name](https://descna.com/images/igallery/resized/2801-2900/Lycenchelys_kolthoffi__3_-2893-1200-800-100.jpg)
There’s no longer a genuine spirit of inquiry at the heart of scientific discovery. The modern scientific cabal is one such group that uses Custodial tactics. And this time, we might go after the real controllers. After all, if humans could really see what was going on around them with 20/20 vision, they might just get into the mood to stage one of their annoying little rebellions. The bigger the lie, therefore, the more likely it is to be believed.”Īfter all, if a big, official “scientist” comes along and says something is true, then it must be true.Įven though the “wolf eel” skull looks exactly like a damned water dragon or sea serpent.Ī classic characteristic of Custodial behavior is control and manipulation of perception. “The masses indulge in petty falsehoods every day, but it would never come into their heads to fabricate colossal untruths and they are not able to believe in the possibility of such monstrous effrontery. Remember how Hitler said that telling big lies is a great strategy for manipulating what the public believes? I’m always interested in how the media and the gatekeepers of “science” are always conspiring to control the flow of information to the masses. But there was more than one report claiming that wolf eels were perfectly normal, common, and regular New Jersey visitors. My friend who lives in the state forwarded me some of the newspaper clippings at the time but I don’t feel like digging them out and scanning them today, lazy slob that I am. And suddenly New Jersey newspapers were filled with “experts” coming out of the woodwork claiming that wolf eels frequently turn up there. Yet this plucky and determined “wolf eel” found its way there, anyway. It doesn’t seem like other marine researchers have noted bumping into wolf eels on the East Coast before, and certainly not in New Jersey. Their diet consists of sea urchins, crabs, scallops - assorted crustaceans and mollusks.įull article to be found here: Wolf-eels.
![wolf eel scientific name wolf eel scientific name](https://images3.ratemyfishtank.com/photo/13/940x450h/5000/4513/Wolf-Eel-2I5qPG.jpg)
The friendly, but fierce looking wolf-eel is a favorite of Pacific Northwest divers.Wolf-eels range from southeastern Alaska to southern California typically living in rocky reef-type habitats from the intertidal zone down to about 740 feet. No mention of New Jersey – or the Atlantic Ocean, for that matter. They are found in the northern Pacific Ocean, ranging from the Sea of Japan and the Aleutian Islands to northern California.
![wolf eel scientific name wolf eel scientific name](https://www.worldlifeexpectancy.com/images/a/w/b/anguilla-australis/anguilla-australis.jpg)
Newspapers at the time provided quotes from various “officials” about how, while seeing a wolf eel 50 miles inland is uncommon, it is not unheard of.īut interestingly enough, other fish and game experts do not share their consensus view of reality. Here is a photo off the Web which is supposedly of wolf eel teeth and jaws: Here’s a photo of the skull the woman found on her property: Some official person came along and supposedly identified it as a “wolf eel.” Here’s a photo of a wolf eel at the left. The thing had huge, gnarly fangs and looked like something from another planet.
![wolf eel scientific name wolf eel scientific name](https://britishseafishing.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/RS-Wolf-Fish-Profile1.jpg)
A New Jersey woman found a bizarre looking skull near a fox den on her farm. Recently I was thinking about a weird news story from about a year ago.