Yes. That's exactly what they look like. They look similar to contrails, but the difference is, CONTRAILS disappear after a couple minutes, while CHEMTRAILS do not. CHEMTRAILS turn into clouds.
Depending on the temperature and humidity, contrails can last for a very long time. I have seen them do this on occasion ever since the early 60s, back when the only jets in the sky in my part of the country were Marine aircraft.
The sites that claim to have photographic proof showing the equipment inside a plane are actually showing pictures from an airliner brochure showing the tanks in a test plane. They pump water from one part of the plane to another to test how the plane handles.
There are photos of skies crisscrossed with trails, but I've never seen that in my entire life either here in NC or in any other state of the eastern US that I've visited over the years.
I would like to see GPS'd photos from all over the US to rule out all the photos being from areas near cities that would naturally be congested with air traffic.
Logic would dictate that releasing an aerosol from so high up in the air would give little chance of actually landing on a particular populated area. Also, the aerosol would be so spread out and diluted that there could be no possible effect on us. Germs might, but chemicals wouldn't. There is no chemical that could be spread out over thousands of square miles and still be harmful. It might even be hard to even detect. One of the elements posited to be in the aerosols is aluminum. Seeing as how aluminum is the most common metal on the face of the earth, you will necessarily find it everywhere you test for it. The most common sources of aluminum in human brains is aluminum cookware and deodorants containing aluminum chlorhydrate. That's why I don't use those deodorants and try to use stainless steel and cast iron for cooking.
People nowadays don't look up at the sky enough, so when they do, almost everything they see is something that's "never happened before" or is sinister. I saw where someone had posted a photo of lumpy looking clouds covering the sky and was afraid of what it might mean. It was merely what we used to call a "buttermilk sky." It's nothing new. There was even a song written about it many decades ago.
Yes, I've done research, and I've found the "chemtrail" farce to be illogical and unproven. Yes, there are contrails that last longer than usual because of the temperature and humidity. But if they contained anything other than condensed water, it would never reach the ground in appreciable quantities.
Yes. That's exactly what they look like. They look similar to contrails, but the difference is, CONTRAILS disappear after a couple minutes, while CHEMTRAILS do not. CHEMTRAILS turn into clouds.
Been seeing these all day. I thought that's what they were, but wasnt sure.
Depending on the temperature and humidity, contrails can last for a very long time. I have seen them do this on occasion ever since the early 60s, back when the only jets in the sky in my part of the country were Marine aircraft.
the spray programs started before 1950. contrails are different from stratospheric aerosol injection and you should search the latter.
in the meantime: https://www.geoengineeringwatch.org/the-contrail-lie/
We didn't have jet airliners in 1950 to do the "spraying."
Aspie, you've done exactly ZERO research on the matter.
I've done a ton of research.
Commercial jet airliner flights started in 1953.
The sites that claim to have photographic proof showing the equipment inside a plane are actually showing pictures from an airliner brochure showing the tanks in a test plane. They pump water from one part of the plane to another to test how the plane handles.
There are photos of skies crisscrossed with trails, but I've never seen that in my entire life either here in NC or in any other state of the eastern US that I've visited over the years.
I would like to see GPS'd photos from all over the US to rule out all the photos being from areas near cities that would naturally be congested with air traffic.
Logic would dictate that releasing an aerosol from so high up in the air would give little chance of actually landing on a particular populated area. Also, the aerosol would be so spread out and diluted that there could be no possible effect on us. Germs might, but chemicals wouldn't. There is no chemical that could be spread out over thousands of square miles and still be harmful. It might even be hard to even detect. One of the elements posited to be in the aerosols is aluminum. Seeing as how aluminum is the most common metal on the face of the earth, you will necessarily find it everywhere you test for it. The most common sources of aluminum in human brains is aluminum cookware and deodorants containing aluminum chlorhydrate. That's why I don't use those deodorants and try to use stainless steel and cast iron for cooking.
People nowadays don't look up at the sky enough, so when they do, almost everything they see is something that's "never happened before" or is sinister. I saw where someone had posted a photo of lumpy looking clouds covering the sky and was afraid of what it might mean. It was merely what we used to call a "buttermilk sky." It's nothing new. There was even a song written about it many decades ago.
Yes, I've done research, and I've found the "chemtrail" farce to be illogical and unproven. Yes, there are contrails that last longer than usual because of the temperature and humidity. But if they contained anything other than condensed water, it would never reach the ground in appreciable quantities.
Global Dimming is real
X MARKS THE SPOT!
You may THINK you have seen the SUN....
Today, there were so many chemtrails outside my house, the sky looked like plaid.