Banning weather modification is a good thing, don't get me wrong.
But when this bill is passed, I hope people will finally understand that most of what they call chemtrails are actually just naturally-formed contrails.
How old are you? Contrails have been coming from jets for a very long time. They were only at very high altitudes and disappeared after about 20 seconds. But they changed dramatically in the mid to late nineties. Water vapor doesn't spread out like flour thrown on a table. It doesn't precipitate from the edges of a thin white cloud. Aerosols do that. If water vapor acted like chemtrails our breath would leave a trail of little white clouds behind us as we walk.
Big mystery: what changed in the mid-to-late 90s? The airliners were flying at significantly higher altitudes due to advanced engines and aerodynamics. Though the absolute humidity was lower (fewer kilograms/meter^3 of water vapor), the relative humidity was higher (carrying capacity of the air was near saturation), so the contrails would persist longer.
But long-lasting contrails stretching across the sky were commonplace in the 1950s where B-52s were operating at 50,000 feet altitude. I saw them as a pre-school child.
There has never been consistency with regard to contrails. The same plane at the same altitude will leave a contrail one day and not the next. Wind speed and humidity determine whether a contrail is visible from the ground and how long it persists.
The main way to tell whether something is a regular contrail, and something that MAY be, and that's still a may, is that regular contrails, formed from condensation of water or ice in the exhaust stream of the jet, usually dissipate in a few minutes. Those ever enlarging and seemingly never to disappear contrails are definitely suspicious, but if my memory is correct, I remember seeing those back in the 1970's, and other than the cloud seeding experiments back then, I don't know what would have been the reason to do it, since back then, "global cooling" was the fear.
See comment further above. Persistent contrails have been around since the 50s. It is all a matter of being formed at high-er altitudes, where the air is more saturated and it is difficult for a cloud to dissipate. Just a fact of airplanes being able to fly at higher altitudes due to better engines.
Depending on wind and humidity, a normal contrail can persist for 15-20 minutes, easy. Other days you can watch them disappear in seconds. Other days the plane doesn't leave a visible contrail.
Banning weather modification is a good thing, don't get me wrong.
But when this bill is passed, I hope people will finally understand that most of what they call chemtrails are actually just naturally-formed contrails.
EDIT: A basic understanding of cloud formation would clear up the confusion. Every person who objected to my comment should read this https://www.reconnectwithnature.org/news-events/the-buzz/nature-curiosity-what-are-contrails-and-how-do-they-form/
How old are you? Contrails have been coming from jets for a very long time. They were only at very high altitudes and disappeared after about 20 seconds. But they changed dramatically in the mid to late nineties. Water vapor doesn't spread out like flour thrown on a table. It doesn't precipitate from the edges of a thin white cloud. Aerosols do that. If water vapor acted like chemtrails our breath would leave a trail of little white clouds behind us as we walk.
Imagine on a cold day in which you can see your breath and then it lingering for 6 hours.
Kind of like fog.
Big mystery: what changed in the mid-to-late 90s? The airliners were flying at significantly higher altitudes due to advanced engines and aerodynamics. Though the absolute humidity was lower (fewer kilograms/meter^3 of water vapor), the relative humidity was higher (carrying capacity of the air was near saturation), so the contrails would persist longer.
But long-lasting contrails stretching across the sky were commonplace in the 1950s where B-52s were operating at 50,000 feet altitude. I saw them as a pre-school child.
There has never been consistency with regard to contrails. The same plane at the same altitude will leave a contrail one day and not the next. Wind speed and humidity determine whether a contrail is visible from the ground and how long it persists.
REMINDER - GENERAL FLYNN POSTS VIDEO ABOUT
NANOTECH BEING IN EVERYTHING BEING SPRAYED IN THE SKY
THEN MANIPULATED BY 5G
“Anything the NANOTECH is in can be manipulated by 5G… THE NANOTECH IS IN EVERYTHING… THEY SPRAY IT IN THE SKIES…”
https://greatawakening.win/p/16an0knRg7/gen-flynn--fair-warning---anythi/c/
BEAUTIFUL BLACK SKY… NOT LONG NOW! FAIR WARNING!
The main way to tell whether something is a regular contrail, and something that MAY be, and that's still a may, is that regular contrails, formed from condensation of water or ice in the exhaust stream of the jet, usually dissipate in a few minutes. Those ever enlarging and seemingly never to disappear contrails are definitely suspicious, but if my memory is correct, I remember seeing those back in the 1970's, and other than the cloud seeding experiments back then, I don't know what would have been the reason to do it, since back then, "global cooling" was the fear.
See comment further above. Persistent contrails have been around since the 50s. It is all a matter of being formed at high-er altitudes, where the air is more saturated and it is difficult for a cloud to dissipate. Just a fact of airplanes being able to fly at higher altitudes due to better engines.
Depending on wind and humidity, a normal contrail can persist for 15-20 minutes, easy. Other days you can watch them disappear in seconds. Other days the plane doesn't leave a visible contrail.
Where I live, they can last the whole day, slowly spreading in width. More the norm than not. The last few days have been especially noteworthy.
Thank you for stickying this.
Don't think it's contrail especially since I was on the air watching another plane spraying.
Contrails are visible from the air also. I've seen them coming off the tips of a plane I was on.
Thanks.
Hey, no problem frog. It was not my intention to condescend, we all just have to keep each other grounded.