The whole of 'legalizing weather' appears inevitable - leases and ownership rights to showers, thunder, lightning. "The State done stole my thunder!", etc.
The liquid properties versus those who weaponize and control the containers.
Wow.
Stephen V
http://stephenvincent.net/blog/
--- On Wed, 3/10/10, David Bircumshaw <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
From: David Bircumshaw <[log in to unmask]>
Subject: Re: the rain in - aus falls mainly in queensland
To: [log in to unmask]
Date: Wednesday, March 10, 2010, 2:25 PM
A closed system, Mark? With the sun as the most powerful agent upon it?
(altho' I get your drift btw)
On 10 March 2010 20:42, Mark Weiss <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> Given the closed system that weather is, nations will soon be competing to
> monopolize the water. What fun.
>
>
> At 11:44 AM 3/10/2010, you wrote:
>
>> I've been reading about this on Colin Andrews site, who first alerted the
>> world to strange radar pictures/readings from the Australian Bureau of
>> Meteorology, which Andrews links into HAARP type weather modification
>> experiments. He cites the fact that legislation has been recently
>> introduced
>> to make weather modification legal in Australia.
>>
>> The most interesting part of this story, comes by way of a video of an
>> Australian meteorologist who analysed the recent rainfall in Melbourne and
>> found it had thousands of times over the limit of various heavy metals,
>> which he puts down to the chmetrails the planes he said he witnessed
>> flying
>> over the city has released.
>>
>> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NFn2c-1xmgg
>>
>> A freind was in the last storm and said he felt spaced out, like paint
>> factory fumes would.
>>
>
> Announcing The Whole Island: Six Decades of Cuban Poetry (University of
> California Press).
> http://go.ucpress.edu/WholeIsland
>
> "Not since the 1982 publication of Paul Auster's Random House Book of
> Twentieth Century French Poetry has a bilingual anthology so effectively
> broadened the sense of poetic terrain outside the United States and also
> created a superb collection of foreign poems in English. There is nothing
> else like it." John Palattella in The Nation
>
--
David Bircumshaw
"A window./Big enough to hold screams/
You say are poems" - DMeltzer
Website and A Chide's Alphabet
http://www.staplednapkin.org.uk
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