I am not sure how to upload the video.... HOWEVER, some lady in Vermont (not near any commercial / industrial buildings) had her snow tested because her dogs were having trouble walking in the snow after awhile. The snow fell into her bowl and she sent the water to the lab for testing a few weeks ago and just got the results. The results came back: While there was also some sulfur detected the most eye opening result was the level of aluminum which was listed as 5x the “average reporting level”. This is a big deal for a few reasons:
- How is aluminum this small?
- Aluminum does a great job of cooling down. Could this have to do with temperature changes in Texas?
- I’m no water expert but I don’t think this matches the periodic table. H2O!
Note: there is a detection level and reporting level. Once the level hits reporting it is worth noticing in the results. So 5x reporting is really high...
I could see the DS wanting to manipulate weather to lessen the chances of states like TX from succeeding .
I encourage other Patriots to get their snow tested to confirm this. Let’s prove not everything is as it seems
For those of us that know chemtrails this comes as no surprise. They are filled with heavy metals.
Hence the rise of Altzheimer's and Parkinson's ?
Agreed. But oh no, we don't wanna do any studies on that.
As a bonus blocking out our biggest source of Vitamin D increases disease risk. No matter what people think about chemtrails, how can anyone justify secretly dousing us from high in the sky everyday with ANYTHING. smh
It's supposedly to "save the earth" ! It deflects the light from the Sun to prevent the sun's rays from causing global warming. But the real reason is to cause us bodily harm!
True dat. And there it is again. Hiding evil behind righteous causes. I mean who doesn't wanna go easy on the planet right ? They use our best attributes as humans against us. Eerily similar to what an enemy would do against their foe right ?
And autism, cancer, and all sorts of other maladies.
Picking my jaw up from the floor...my dad had dementia, I have Parkinson's (early onset), my brother has MS and my son has autism. WTF?
And sometimes they don't...just like clouds, which is what they are. Don't be assuming what you need to prove. And, by the way, aluminum is not a "heavy metal." You have to ask yourself what the natural level is and why it is a Natural Level. Don't forget we had to take the lead out of gasoline, in order to prevent us from breathing it. No chemtrails there.
And don't forget the sharp rise in cancers of all kinds. When I was a kid, we knew only 1 man with cancer, now its something like 1 in 3 people? Shame DMSO is banned in the US, I believe it cures dementia and much more besides.
The elite can't make money when people aren't sick....
And sick people are not as able to notice what is going on or fight back.
Dmso?
Dimethyl sulfoxide, widely used in E Europe but only known as an industrial solvent where big pharma is in control. You need to read up on it to use it safely as it is very powerful. Restored post op nerve damage and has helped my arthritis (with magnesium "oil").
Came here to rant but just ended up voting up basically everyone in the comment threads. Thanks anons. Now I wonder what u/Catsfive thinks about this. :)
Yeah that’s a touchy subject for Catsfive
Yeah, like that hasn't already happened! Lol
I would need to see the entire analysis report. There are many sources of aluminum in the environment. It is a lot more common then most people realize. Btw, I am very familiar with water testing and treatment. For one, I'm a former aquarium professional at the high end, second I'm a test and measurement professional, and third my step dad is a water quality specialist who has trained me. One year he gave me a very expensive Hatch test kit for Christmas!
The report is shown in the video. If you are on Telegram I will send it to you for your review.
The lady doesn’t seem very tech savvy at all but does attempt to show the report. She focuses more on reading it.
My handle is @wisp17 if you wanna see it.
Thanks for the info. I'm at work right now and don't have time to investigate. I'll look into this tonight.
Based on your expertise, curious how you'd rationalize a metal like aluminum atop a depth of snow. Say, for example, snow is 12" deep on the ground and a person scoops the top 4 inches into a bowl for analysis. Where could such a high level of aluminum come from if we assume nothing thrown on the snow and it's "virgin" snow, meaning not plowed or shoveled yet?
I don't have the experience in the field to suggest I know the answer. I believe metallic particulates are sprayed often into the atmosphere and accumulate on the surface of the earth over time. However, in a snow I'm curious how to estimate an amount of metals that "should" be there versus the amount that should not.
I'll try to design and write up a testing methodology later tonight. I have actually been planning on doing this for awhile, though I was thinking more about testing rain and surface water. This would be the best way to determine what is being introduced into the atmosphere. As for aluminum, it is very common in the environment. For example it is one of the main elements found in clay and dust.
:)
How can we test the water ourselves?
Good test kits like from Hatch, are very expensive. They are also limited. In a home laboratory, a lot of things can be tested for, but not everything. For some things, samples need to be sent to a laboratory specializing in testing water.
There are some basic rules that need to be followed for collecting valid samples. The collection containers should by Pyrex. They need to be rinsed three times in water from the same source as the water being sampled. The sample should not be agitated and preferably the sample should completely fill the collection container. The volume of the sample should be 10 times the volume needed for all of the tests. The temperature of the source should also be recorded along with the date, time, and location. If testing water from a stream, the location needs to be fairly accurate.
Btw, when I was testing wild water, I would perform all tests that I could in the field. Don't dump the water used in testing back into the wild! Put it in a waste container for proper disposal. Many of the chemicals used are toxic.
Don't they seed clouds with that stuff?
Is any snow 100% H20? How many contaminants does it pick up along the way?
Was the bowl an aluminum dog bowl?
Good question, I’m not sure. I hope this post gets a few more people to test their snow for confirmation on if it’s true or not. Also we could get an idea of the levels per area. I don’t know if it’s normal or not to be honest.
I wrote a comment above describing a proper water sample collection method. Its mostly applicable to snow also.
Not absolutely ideal but not bad either.
Looks like the chemtrails have been rebooted!
Geoengineeringwatch.org
Aluminum oxide powder commonly used to increase snow fall.The metal becomes the nucleus for the snow flake or hail pellet.Soil contents in affected state will determine if it was a deliberate act.
Aluminum oxide is a major component of the dust that nucleates snow naturally. It is also a major chemical in many soils. This will make deterministic testing to identify human agency a bitch.
Wouldn't there be an edge or a border transition to the snowfall area.Also will oxidization remove the aluminum quickly?Can it be identified atomically as to it's mine origin?Nomenclature poor,not educated in metallurgy or meteorology.
does everyone that posts this magically not know how to use video? gtfo.
I didn’t see a video option. The video I have is on telegram and I also downloaded it. If you’d like to see it I will gladly send it to you. I am @wisp17 there.
It's in everything now. So is selenium sulfide, silver oxides and other harmful metals and chemicals. Thats why they're called chemtrails.
It is estimated that 44 metric tons (tonnes) of meteoric dust settle on the Earth every day. Go look up the composition of meteors. When a meteor streaks through the sky, it is being vaporized. Welcome to cosmic air pollution.
Be advised china as well may be involved in weather engineering. They do it at home.
Probably bad news for Texans who were melting and drinking snow
I saw another post from a guy who measured the chem composition with a spectrometer. He said there was aluminum and plastic in the snow.
Now I understand why it was so heavy this morning. Badger State
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abundance_of_elements_in_Earth%27s_crust
Aluminum is #3. Its pretty much everywhere like water. I'm not saying there isn't something to be found. I'm just saying everyone should be aware that of all things to find a little extra of Aluminum is the least strange.
Have you tried seeing if maybe a volcano half way around the world threw it up into the air and it didn't fall into that arctic blast somehow messed with the air flows up high etc etc??? Air current patterns? Eruptions?
Bill Gates is already trying to do some project where they put particles out into the atmosphere to keep the planet cool. It’s probably just another thing to poison us with. Maybe he started early this year, and they messed up Texas on purpose. I wouldn’t be surprised.
They are weaponizing HAARP to control weather.
So write a book about it with footnotes. What you claim is nonsense. The lowest level of the ionosphere (60 km) is far above any level of the atmosphere that contains weather. There is no reasonable connection, and no physical mechanism to suspect weather control.
You think you are alerting us to important information, but unfortunately you are just repeating junk mythology.
Huh? Aluminum doesn't "cool things down."
You can't just make up nonsense.
I updated the post to reflect that Aluminum itself cools down.
If a substance is introduced into an environment that is at a higher temperature then the environments ambient temperature, it will lose that heat to the environment which increases the temperature of the environment.
Another point is that it is highly doubtful that the aluminum is metallic. It is most likely Al2O3. Metallic aluminum oxidizes very rapidly. That is why aluminum objects have a dull appearance.
Cold air gets Aluminum really cold. This lowers the average ground temperature. Not really nonsense. Go touch metal outside I bet it’s colder than wood.
wood and aluminum outside would be the same temperature... metals.. and aluminum transfer heat away at a much faster rate than does wood.. that's why it feels colder... if you disagree... take a piece of wire and a twig of the same diameter and put the end of each in a flame... see which one makes you cuss first!
^ this
Metal roofs shed heat at night more than they can accumulate in the day. Seems like a metallic snow would melt faster, as water conserves heat better.
Oh man, stop it. Stupid is contagious, and you've got it bad.
Absent a heat source acting on one or the other, the metal and the wood are exact the same temperature as the air (read: thermal equilibrium).
Just learn about thermal conductivity.
And science.
https://www.engineeringtoolbox.com/thermal-conductivity-d_429.html
No they're not, they're hypothetically so; but aluminum is always the coolest material in a given room.
I can't believe an adult believed everything in a room is identical in temperature.
Why? Because you are a child? The only things that would be different would be sources of heat (air vents, radiators, human beings) or heat sinks (windows, iced drinks).
Oh fuck off, retard flat-earther.
My degree's in electronic engineering. Knowing the amount of energy in aluminum, is as important as for copper and steel in my business; we use a lot of aluminum to dissipate heat due to it's light weight.
The name calling isn't needed, I told you about something that's a core knowledge in materials usage, and design; and all the aggression you can generate doesn't change it.
Your degree is in "electrical engineering" but you were comically, completely ignorant of thermal equilibrium, thermal capacity, and thermal conductivity... and so in flailing response to learning of these basic foundational principles of physics.... you, uh, "looked on google of all places and one of the websites on the first page, is for a place that sells aluminum decking."
Ok, sure. ??
I'll leave you alone now to keep screeching nobody in the aluminum industry, knows about thermal handling by aluminum.
Nope. When you're done you can go ahead and admit, that you've never worked in thermal management in materials, ever.
I looked on google for your sake.
And sure enough there's a long list of aluminum industry websites, verifying what I told you. Since you didn't know how to check for yourself.
Knowing if you believed it you'd squeal for me to prove it, I looked on google of all places and one of the websites on the first page, is for a place that sells aluminum decking.
One of the selling points states this well known materials-handling & design parameters fact about aluminum:
"Some of our biggest fans are actually the smallest.
Kids and pets love aluminum deck surfaces!
Aluminum decks stay cooler to the touch than wood or composite decking when exposed to extreme temperatures
because aluminum decking reflects and dissipates heat much better than more dense wood and composite decking materials."
Aluminum is always the coolest common material in a room.
Stop it, retard.
You're getting terribly confused lower thermal density, and lower thermal conductivity coefficient.
Outdoors, differing albedo and reflectivity will affect a material's ability to absorb radiating sunlight, but that's an example of a external energy source introduced into the system, and one that will heat dark materials beyond the ambient air temperature, not cool any materials below ambient temperatures. And this all started off with someone claiming that aluminum "cool things down".
Still doesn't. Never will. Just has a lower heat density, and thermal conductivity.
Sorry to keep ruining your hair-brained nonsense with the basic fundamental principles of our universe.
No, you're wrong, no matter how many times you keep repeating the words proving I'm right. We're no longer discussing what I told you, there's practically an infinity of links from the aluminum industry itself for you to check.
Aluminum is cooler to the touch than nearly everything else within the same temperature strata, which is why people use that more expensive aluminum decking. It simply won't take in as much energy.
You're not a professional in this, fren, I actually went back and checked to see how hard you'd have to hide from even Google telling you I'm right, to keep saying what you're saying.
There are multiple places on the very first Google search return page for
''Is aluminum cooler to the touch than wood?'' saying what everybody in the industrial materials business knows.
For you not to know it is really, just proof you've never worked with aluminum and other materials in thermal design.
I’m stupid because my Computer Science degree didn’t touch much on this subject? Bitch please. I saw a interesting video and wanted to share it.
Regardless of what you say. When I go outside and touch something metal it’s colder than a tree. Actually, I just used a temperature gun and confirmed metal is colder than wood outside. Probably because i The source of heat would be idk...the sun? I guess if there was no heat like you say they would be the same temperature.
Oh good grief. Just apologize, learn, and move on. Dumb bitch.
You and your temperature gun have disproved thermal equilibrium? ?
Ok, buddy. Just please wear two, actually three, layers of mittens on your hands, to stop spreading whatever brain-rotting disease you've evidently got.
It feels colder.
It’s not colder.
Eventually, if they stack right...you may get a skyscraper back there. :)