I noticed it during hurricanes around that time. Mainstream weather would repeatedly say the hurricane is so strong that recon aircraft are going over and/or through the storm ostensibly in order to gain imaging data. The elites don't want me talking about it so my current check indicates some sketchiness, but I'm pretty sure I heard amidst the discussion of hypothetical influences (dry ice, silver iodide, polymers) that it was definitely being attempted in the midst of such storms. Officially the US stopped "Stormfury" hurricane seeding in 1971 and declared it all a failure.
But at the same time (early ohs), the proud among the elites were gleefully getting articles published moving the window toward "geoengineering is good". This is to prevent every association in memetic history, as to blotting out the sun from earth, being associated with supervillains exclusively (e.g. The Avengers with Sean Connery). Among these it was clear that what I later called revelation of method was going on: we admit we can make changes and that means you're on the hook for knowing that we can do it. Trouble is, Jesus already revealed to John that they'd be trying it, so he caught them on the hop.
Hal Lindsey, God rest his soul, first called my attention to HAARP, which is technically still ongoing as a quiet "ionosphere research" facility operated by U of Alaska Fairbanks. In fact, the amazing spike of hurricanes in 2004-2005 and the amazing lack of hurricanes for about 10 years afterward (i.e. most of Obama's regime) defy simple statistics. The famous Miami snow of January 1977 was blamed on the forerunner of HAARP by Russia, who felt their own winters were being sabotaged by warming due to the diversion of the cold stream. Oh look, an article mentioning a recent such accusation by Russia that also mentions a 1977 "Environmental Modification Convention". They always plan ahead, don't they?
The bestselling book ever published in Alaska, 1995, was "Angels Don't Play This HAARP: Advances in Tesla Technology" by Nick Begich and Jeane Manning.
Wait, what? Can you expound on this a bit?! 👀
I noticed it during hurricanes around that time. Mainstream weather would repeatedly say the hurricane is so strong that recon aircraft are going over and/or through the storm ostensibly in order to gain imaging data. The elites don't want me talking about it so my current check indicates some sketchiness, but I'm pretty sure I heard amidst the discussion of hypothetical influences (dry ice, silver iodide, polymers) that it was definitely being attempted in the midst of such storms. Officially the US stopped "Stormfury" hurricane seeding in 1971 and declared it all a failure.
But at the same time (early ohs), the proud among the elites were gleefully getting articles published moving the window toward "geoengineering is good". This is to prevent every association in memetic history, as to blotting out the sun from earth, being associated with supervillains exclusively (e.g. The Avengers with Sean Connery). Among these it was clear that what I later called revelation of method was going on: we admit we can make changes and that means you're on the hook for knowing that we can do it. Trouble is, Jesus already revealed to John that they'd be trying it, so he caught them on the hop.
Hal Lindsey, God rest his soul, first called my attention to HAARP, which is technically still ongoing as a quiet "ionosphere research" facility operated by U of Alaska Fairbanks. In fact, the amazing spike of hurricanes in 2004-2005 and the amazing lack of hurricanes for about 10 years afterward (i.e. most of Obama's regime) defy simple statistics. The famous Miami snow of January 1977 was blamed on the forerunner of HAARP by Russia, who felt their own winters were being sabotaged by warming due to the diversion of the cold stream. Oh look, an article mentioning a recent such accusation by Russia that also mentions a 1977 "Environmental Modification Convention". They always plan ahead, don't they?
The bestselling book ever published in Alaska, 1995, was "Angels Don't Play This HAARP: Advances in Tesla Technology" by Nick Begich and Jeane Manning.