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Whitley Chat
First hour guest, author
Whitley Strieber (
unknowncountry.com) discussed several topics with Art, including hurricanes, earthquakes, weather control, and a
mysterious radio signal originating from an area near Sedona, Arizona.
Recap
Chemtrails & Weather Modification
Researcher
Will Thomas talked about chemtrails, weather modification and US Air Force planes spraying a moisture-absorbing gel to break up storms off the coast of Florida. He said there was "very strong evidence" that Hurricane Frances was seeded with an absorbent material, and claimed this has been corroborated by two news stations in South Florida. Thomas also pointed to an experiment in which the government purportedly placed
Dyn-O-Gel into a thunderstorm causing it to lose moisture and dissipate.
Thomas believes the US government has been purposely attempting to modify the climate using chemtrails. He said several air traffic controllers have reported seeing on radar (and with their own eyes) chemtrails being exhausted from large military aircraft. According to Thomas, after inquiring about them, the radar operators were told by their supervisors that it was part of a government climate modification experiment.
Thomas said two independent laboratories have confirmed that chemicals are being sprayed into the skies above the United States and Canada. Using rain and snow samples collected from affected areas, the laboratories discovered elevated levels of aluminum and barium. Two scientists at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Thomas revealed, have also confirmed the government is injecting materials into the sky. Thomas claims the US government's ultimate goal is to "own the weather."
Related Articles
Project Stormfury

Project Stormfury was an experimental program run by the US government from 1962 to 1983. The project's goal was to weaken hurricanes by seeding clouds in the eyewall of the storm with silver iodide. It was thought the silver iodide would cause supercooled water in the storm to freeze, disrupting the inner structure of the hurricane.
In the mid-80s, researchers discovered that hurricanes contained too little supercooled water for seeding to be effective. They further observed that seeded and unseeded hurricanes often undergo the same structural changes, which cast doubts on the program's results. This finding eventually led to the cancellation of Project Stormfury. Read more about Project Stormfury
here.
Graphic credit: aoml.noaa.gov
Earthquake Activity

Graphic shows recent earthquake activity in California and Nevada. Click for an
enlargment.
Graphic credit: Southern California Earthquake Data Center