A PREDATOR HAS RETURNED. A creature unseen in Ohio for over 100 YEARS is now prowling the woods of Cuyahoga County, caught on camera by shocked officials.
Cleveland Metroparks confirmed the first fisher sighting in a CENTURY. This weasel-family hunter vanished in the 1800s, WIPED OUT by trapping and human sprawl. Its ghost is back on tape.
“This is tremendously exciting,” the park’s Instagram post declares. But ask yourself: WHY NOW? What is REALLY changing in our environment to drag a species from extinction’s memory back onto the trail cam?
These are the SAME cameras capturing grizzlies in the Yukon and leopards in South Africa. A PATTERN is emerging. Ecosystems are SHIFTING violently, and the cameras are watching. Who benefits from this “good news” story? Agencies patting themselves on the back while silent about the deeper, chaotic forces at play.
They call it a “hopeful comeback.” They say “conservation works.” But a top predator doesn’t just wander back into lands ruled by humans for ten decades without a signal. The balance is already broken.
They’re documenting the rearrangement of the natural world and calling it a victory.
Edited for Kayitsi.com



