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No longer a conspiracy: Company offers services to control the weather

Controlling the weather is no longer a prospect of the future; it is becoming part of our current reality. Cloud seeding, which is quite a controversial practice, is moving into the spotlight now that it is available to the world’s wealthy elite.

One company, known as Oliver’s Travels, has begun offering its services to the rich, promising them clear, sunny skies for important events. There is even a wedding package available, if you’re willing to spend the money. According to their website, prices for a perfect day start at just $100,000, but “you can’t put a price on perfection right?”

Though cloud seeding was actually first developed in the 1940s, it is only recently that it has been offered to common citizens. Cloud seeding has generally been practiced over much larger regions for slightly more altruistic reasons, such as increasing rainfall. For now, the practice is only being offered in France, but it will surely spread across the globe in due time, and that will certainly come with a host of problems.

In addition to extra aviation fuel being burnt up in the sky, the fact is that no one can really say what the long-term effects of geoengineering will be. Scientists love to say that it’s totally safe and that there will be no ill effects, but the fact remains: it is still unnatural. 

Turning geoengineering into an everyday activity serves only to remove doubts about the practice. Allowing people to manipulate the weather so they can have a “perfect wedding” is not just absurd, it is obscene. Sure, they can afford the hefty price tag, but they are also normalizing a heavily scrutinized practice that many independent scientists believe could be catastrophic not just to our soil, water and air, but also to the atmosphere and the ozone layer – you know, the stuff that basically prevents us and all life on earth from being burnt to a crisp by the sun; nothing too terribly important.

Geoengineering Watch reported that geoengineering practices have already begun to damage the ozone layer, as evidenced by the increasing amounts of UVA and UVB radiation passing through the stratosphere.

Dane Wigington of Geoengineering Watch writes that, “Current testing reveals that almost 70% of incoming UV radiation is currently in the UVB and UVC range.”

UVC rays used to be filtered out completely by the ozone layer, but have been increasing over the last several years. The amount of UVB rays reaching through the ozone layer has also increased. Wigington also notes that there is plenty of environmental evidence that the ozone layer is being damaged by geoengineering. Excessive UV exposure is very apparent when plants start to die or experience reduced growth and don’t sprout seeds.

If that is what geoengineering does to the ozone layer, what do you think it is really doing to the rest of the planet? And is it really ethical to allow people who would spend $100 grand on weather control for a wedding to actually have that kind of power?

Sources:

NaturalNews.com

OliversTravels.com

GeoengineeringWatch.org

Science.NaturalNews.com

Monsoon-Storm-Clouds-Rain-Lightning

Geoengineering has become a global business

In today’s technological, transhuman terrain, mankind wants to control just about everything. Unsurprisingly, the weather is no exception — especially since you can make a lot of money. Water is a very hot property once it lands on the earth. Portions of this liquid gold have already been commoditized by mega-corporations, like Nestlé. As Global Research reports, the Chairman of Nestlé, Peter Brabeck-Letmathe believes that “access to water is not a public right,” it should be managed by a global corporate entity –  and he’s just the guy to figure all that out.

Are droughts engineered by the chemtrials? HAARP? Mother Nature? It’s getting more difficult to tell.

Raindrops falling on our heads is a very big business, especially if a few droughts are scheduled in between. Chemtrails, besides spewing their toxins, have been accused of creating drought, and those plumes certainly muck up what once was a blue sky. What a boondoogle for chemical companies with waste material on their hands. Hey, it happened with fluoride, why not unload extra stashes of aluminum particulates, barium, cesium, et.al.? Chemtrails, however, are just one facet of geoengineering. Creating rainfall is another, and has a variety of applications, as reported by Natural News. In the Indian state of Maharshtra, as in California, many farmers are completely dependent on irrigation. Weather Modification, Inc., from Fargo, North Dakota secured a $4.5 million dollar contract to  provide cloud seeding with sodium chloride flares for a 100 square mile area in Maharshtra. This same company has also has contracts in South America and the Middle East and hope to generate $40 million in cloud seeding operations in 2016.

Today, the cloud seeding business is booming, according to Bloomberg.

Bloomberg.com reports that over 52 countries have jumped on the cloud seeding bandwagon. In the U.S., there are approximately 55  programs, including those in poor, beleaguered California as the five year drought continues to take its toll. AlterNet.org  reported many residents  were  suspicious of these re-introduced cloud seeding programs. Qz.com reports that seeding operations in China have produced “55 billion tons of artificial rain per year,” making that nation the largest user of the cloud seeding technology.

Don’t want it to rain on your parade at your wedding? No worries, if you’ve got the cash.

For those who aspire to picture perfect weddings with a zero chance of rain, you can get one for $100,000 by contacting Oliver’s Travels. This luxury travel service employs pilots, meteorologists and a pinch of sodium iodide to whack a mole dark clouds on that special day. For a whole lot less, your children can make their own rain.

The Hopi Indian Rain Dance didn’t spew chemicals. And it worked.

We are light years away from the Hopi Indians beseeching the heavens for rain. But they performed this dance as a service for the good of their people. And it didn’t cost one dime. The sound of their voices and the pounding rhythm of their footsteps seem to be light years more appropriate than paying billions of dollars to spew chemicals like ammonium perchlorate, aluminum powder, copper iodide, acetone and silver iodide to make rain. But when you control the rain, and the drought, there are billions to be made. And that seems to be today’s ticket.

 

Sources:

Globalresearch.ca

Naturalnews.com

Bloomberg.com

Alternet.org

Qz.com

Oliverstravels.com

Weatherwizkids.com

Science.naturalnews.com

Youtube.com