Someone did a soil sample test in North Carolina after Hurricane Helene, they found elevated levels of things typically used in weather modification programs
“They were looking for arsenic, barium, cadmium, chromium, lead, mercury, selenium, silver, and manganese
Above the permissible exposure level were arsenic, barium, cadmium, chromium, lead, and selenium. How much above:
I did some internet sleuthing and nowhere can I find ANY Published REPORT stating what the man above says. The man above is TJ Morris and he had originally posted this video on Rumble.
His comment that, "Someone" did a soil sample test... with no backing information is simply not good enough!
We need more information than that. Who took it? What entity did the soil evaluation? When was it done? What else did they find? Can we see the actual paperwork?
I'm not saying that his statement isn't true, without more information, it cannot stand up to scrutiny.
Also some clarity around the hurricane versus the days and days of torrential rains prior to the storm, which was what really filled the Duke Energy dam in Tennessee, which was what they released without warning upon the mountain communities that coincidentally were sitting on land the big guys want. Like the California lands, like Lahaina, etc.
To be clear: hurricane Helene did not dump the floodwater on WNC. The dam opening did.
I had one story relayed to me about a guy that brought 10 cadaver dogs to help with SAR and 6 of the dogs died within the first few days of walking in the silt and the other dogs were sick and dying.
I'm extremely concerned what is in the water down the watershed as that is my playground.
Oh I know. There was a lot of manufacturing and mining in the mountains. Think about what came out of vehicles alone. They should be monitoring the levels at LKN, considering it's the largest lake in NC and has a nuclear reactor sitting on it.
We’re those testimonies firsthand for you (anonymous secondhand for me)?
The thing I don’t like about this is … we can’t prove the soil was dirtied by spraying, as pbman pointed out, and we can’t prove that it’s not, either.
All I can think of is
Proverbs 14:12 - There is a way which seemeth right unto a man, but the end thereof are the ways of death.
They've been spraying the skies here way before the storm. They basically forced it to rain everyday from July to the storm. I live here I ought to know.
And upstream. It rained so much upstream that the Tennessee dam was strained. It wasn't the hurricane that caused the flooding- it was Duke Energy opening the actual floodgates without advance warning that directly killed entire towns.
I used to have a job testing soil. We need sold numbers ppm before and after. Saying the soil is poisoned from spraying is not science. Look at the soil volume and how many tons of metal it would take....
Before, after, surface deposits and deeper samples... Penetration rates, seepage, whatever you call the rate at which stuff descends down through the soil. Yes, a spot number doesn't give you the full picture. I do get the feeling that the only soil studies permitted or funded, however, will be from the mining companies.
Nothing like using the weather management systems to force people off their land for pennies no the dollar so the corporations can scoop up the minerals for profit massive profits without environmental considerations.
I live in WNC. It rained everyday from July to the storm. Everyday! I'm not exaggerating either. The ground was already soaked, then the storm hit. I wouldn't doubt for a second that they made the storm worse.
There are so many factories and other types of businesses in the area. There's no telling what all has leaked out. I live downstream and won't be going any where near that water.
In the meantime, initial sample test results will be shared with farmers through local Extension agents, who serve as a farmer’s first-line resource. University teams will continue preparing fact sheets and decision-making tools to guide farmers’ unique situations. The group expects to make additional field visits later this year.
https://cals.ncsu.edu/news/soil-impacts-from-hurricane-helene-western-north-carolina/
Full text
Someone did a soil sample test in North Carolina after Hurricane Helene, they found elevated levels of things typically used in weather modification programs
“They were looking for arsenic, barium, cadmium, chromium, lead, mercury, selenium, silver, and manganese
Above the permissible exposure level were arsenic, barium, cadmium, chromium, lead, and selenium. How much above:
Arsenic, permissible exposure level level 0.01. Actual, 8.27
Barium, permissible, 0.05. Actual, 853.73
Chromium, permissible, 0.05. Actual, 57.42
Lead, permissible, 0.05. Actual, 194.06
Selenium, permissible, 0.2. Actual, 2.26
“This is from the silt of the Nolichucky River (Western North Carolina) post hurricane Helene because of where that sample was taken.”
I'd like to see how much of that ran off into the Catawba and into Lake Norman.
I did some internet sleuthing and nowhere can I find ANY Published REPORT stating what the man above says. The man above is TJ Morris and he had originally posted this video on Rumble.
His comment that, "Someone" did a soil sample test... with no backing information is simply not good enough!
We need more information than that. Who took it? What entity did the soil evaluation? When was it done? What else did they find? Can we see the actual paperwork?
I'm not saying that his statement isn't true, without more information, it cannot stand up to scrutiny.
Also some clarity around the hurricane versus the days and days of torrential rains prior to the storm, which was what really filled the Duke Energy dam in Tennessee, which was what they released without warning upon the mountain communities that coincidentally were sitting on land the big guys want. Like the California lands, like Lahaina, etc.
To be clear: hurricane Helene did not dump the floodwater on WNC. The dam opening did.
I see. Thanks!
They couldn't dump enough to change the level in all the soil. That area also had some mines.....
We would need to compare to pre storm samples.
I call fake and gay on this one.
I had one story relayed to me about a guy that brought 10 cadaver dogs to help with SAR and 6 of the dogs died within the first few days of walking in the silt and the other dogs were sick and dying.
I'm extremely concerned what is in the water down the watershed as that is my playground.
It may be toxic as hell, but it all didn't all come from chem spraying.
Oh I know. There was a lot of manufacturing and mining in the mountains. Think about what came out of vehicles alone. They should be monitoring the levels at LKN, considering it's the largest lake in NC and has a nuclear reactor sitting on it.
Yeah, a lot of these metals are used in small electronics.
It's the oldest mountain range in the US. The minerals have had time to reach peak quality. Ripe for pickin'.
They have worn down,putting a lot of minerals in the soil.
Without hard evidence the soil was clean,before this,we don't have proof.
We’re those testimonies firsthand for you (anonymous secondhand for me)?
The thing I don’t like about this is … we can’t prove the soil was dirtied by spraying, as pbman pointed out, and we can’t prove that it’s not, either.
All I can think of is
Proverbs 14:12 - There is a way which seemeth right unto a man, but the end thereof are the ways of death.
They've been spraying the skies here way before the storm. They basically forced it to rain everyday from July to the storm. I live here I ought to know.
And upstream. It rained so much upstream that the Tennessee dam was strained. It wasn't the hurricane that caused the flooding- it was Duke Energy opening the actual floodgates without advance warning that directly killed entire towns.
Do you see 10s of thousands of planes overhead?
One of the most anti science statements on this thread lol
I used to have a job testing soil. We need sold numbers ppm before and after. Saying the soil is poisoned from spraying is not science. Look at the soil volume and how many tons of metal it would take....
Before, after, surface deposits and deeper samples... Penetration rates, seepage, whatever you call the rate at which stuff descends down through the soil. Yes, a spot number doesn't give you the full picture. I do get the feeling that the only soil studies permitted or funded, however, will be from the mining companies.
Nothing like using the weather management systems to force people off their land for pennies no the dollar so the corporations can scoop up the minerals for profit massive profits without environmental considerations.
And also convince people to pay carbon tax and pay more for less transportation options
“SOMEONE”?
I live in WNC. It rained everyday from July to the storm. Everyday! I'm not exaggerating either. The ground was already soaked, then the storm hit. I wouldn't doubt for a second that they made the storm worse.
The dam opening up in Tennessee. The freakishly string windstorm was bad, but it didn't cause the major flood.
There are so many factories and other types of businesses in the area. There's no telling what all has leaked out. I live downstream and won't be going any where near that water.
In the meantime, initial sample test results will be shared with farmers through local Extension agents, who serve as a farmer’s first-line resource. University teams will continue preparing fact sheets and decision-making tools to guide farmers’ unique situations. The group expects to make additional field visits later this year. https://cals.ncsu.edu/news/soil-impacts-from-hurricane-helene-western-north-carolina/
They're still spraying Fla.