As 'Henri' Barrels Towards America's Elitist Playground, We Were Warned Long Ago: 'Technology Will
- TIMES & SIGNS

- Aug 21, 2021
- 3 min read
https://allnewspipeline.com/Weather_Modification_Proven_Reality_Still_Called_Conspiracy_Theory_By_The_MSM.php via JOHN VANOS

With tropical storm/hurricane Henri now barreling up the East Coast, taking a direct shot at New England (ANP update: Now they say New York is in the line of fire!) in what would be the first significant hurricane to hit the region in many years, it's already reminding some of Hurricane Erin on September 11th of 2001, which eerily veered out to sea as the World Trade Centers were falling down.
Threatening to bring damaging winds, as much as 8 inches of rain and up to 5 feet of storm surge to parts of the region, the storm is also sparking memories of Hurricane Bob, which made landfall 30 years ago on Cape Cod, knocking out power and running water for days, the last hurricane to hit Cape Cod and the Islands. (And now New York?! Eerie coincidence all things considered?!)
And while many of the masses would never believe that Henri or Erin or any number of quite significant 'weather events' over the last few decades might have been caused by 'weather modification' systems, we've got to take a look within this story at just how real such 'systems' are in 2021, though highly censored, starting with this December 3rd of 2020 story over at the Guardian which reported none other than China had planned a 'rapid expansion of weather modification' efforts to cover an area more than one and a half times the size of the entire country of India, with that story reporting such efforts were likely to concern the country’s neighbors.
With Bloomberg asking back then "Has China Mastered Weather Modification? Should We Worry?", they then reported: using rockets and pickup trucks, Chinese officials are seeding clouds and bringing the rain. But do they have other uses in mind?
Yet according to most of the mainstream media, 'weather modification' is still a 'conspiracy theory'. As the Washington Post had reported back in 2013, "Weather control conspiracy theories are 'scientifically unjustifiable". And the Observer reported in 2018, "Why Do People Believe in Weather Control Conspiracy Theories?" Maybe because we know just how real such 'conspiracy theories' are in 2021?!
So if you still think that 'man' controlling the weather is some kind of bizarre 'conspiracy theory' only believed by out of touch lunatics, let's take a look at this December 2020 story at Bloomberg before we continue.
Last month, 16 “artificial rain enhancement rockets” were launched off the back of a pickup truck 300 miles south of Beijing. The operation, ordered up by the Juye County Meteorological Bureau in response to a local drought, was reportedly a success. Over the next 24 hours, the county received more than two inches of rain that, according to local officials, alleviated the drought, lowered the risk of forest fires and improved air quality.
It sounds like something out of a cartoon. But for decades, China has been home to one of the world's most advanced weather-modification programs. Generally, its goals have been modest: more rain in arid places, less field-destroying hail and sunny days for big national events. But that modesty is starting to give way. Earlier this month, China announced plans to expand its rainmaking capabilities to cover nearly 60% of the country by 2025. Details are sketchy, but fears are rising about the potential military uses of these capabilities, and their effects on an already changing climate. For China, and the world, these concerns need to be addressed soon.
Humans have dreamed of controlling the weather for millennia. But it wasn’t until 1946 that scientists at General Electric Co. discovered that dry ice can create precipitation when it interacts with clouds under certain conditions. By 1953, roughly 10% of the land area of the U.S. had been targeted for cloud seeding. Twelve years later, the government was spending millions of dollars on weather-modification research each year, and 15 other companies had started cloud-seeding operations in 23 states.
It wasn’t just about rainfall, however. During the Vietnam War, the U.S. military weaponized cloud seeding to inhibit enemy troop movements and reduce the effectiveness of anti-aircraft attacks, among other things. These uses so alarmed policy makers that they began seeking an international agreement to end “environmental warfare.” In 1978, the Convention on the Prohibition of Military or Any Other Hostile Use of Environmental Modification went into force.
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