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ENVIROETHICS Home

ENVIROETHICS Home

ENVIROETHICS  2002

ENVIROETHICS 2002

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Subject:

FW:Chemtrails

From:

John Foster <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

Discussion forum for environmental ethics.

Date:

Tue, 30 Apr 2002 10:24:29 -0700

Content-Type:

text/plain

Parts/Attachments:

Parts/Attachments

text/plain (193 lines)

Check this out...


by SunToads Health News
(formerly named Health Matters).

Chemtrails - Peanut Butter
And Barium Sandwiches
The Chemistry Of The Modern Sky
By Nicholas Jones


Earth Day approaches. A time for appreciation, reflection
and action. Activists mobilise to defend the responsible stewardship of this
precious blue sphere. Global warming remains the big issue on the podium and
in Big Media. But the focus on chimney stacks and car exhaust rising from
the ground is distracting world attention from a far more apocalyptic
operation underway in the sky: global warming mitigation.

 While environmentalists have long argued that a warm, fuzzy blanket of
greenhouse gas threatens to melt polar ice caps, one of the most ambitious
global engineering initiatives in earth's history may have already started
above and over our heads. Evidence is now literally floating in
the air for various projects underway, documented by patents
and confirmed by whistleblowers, in militaryspeak: aerial spraying,
scattering and chaff operations.

We, mere mortals on the ground, may use the term "Chemtrails", and without
Our consent, it appears that heavy metals are being released into the upper
atmosphere at an alarming rate - to save us from ourselves - as proposed in
a paper delivered before the 22nd International Seminar on Planetary
Emergencies, in 1997, by E. Teller et al.

The author, to be more precise, is 'E' for Edward, preceded by 'Dr.', the
co-father of the H-Bomb and darling savant of the US Department of Defense
and the military-industrial-academic establishment, the same Dr. T who in
the 50's invented a perky little radiation mascot, Readi Killowat, while
proposing to create artificial harbours by nuking the coastline. Although we
got the bomb, thankfully, the glowing harbours never
got the green light.

But on April 24, 2001, the New York Times confirmed that he had indeed
"promoted the idea of manipulating the earth's atmosphere to counteract
global warming." The Spin: a lining of aluminum chaff scattered into the
upper atmosphere to create a sun screen - like a giant emergency blanket
wrapping the earth - to reflect UV radiation back into space and save the
world!

Brilliant! A chrome-plated planet. But here's the catch:

What goes up, must come down. Over three months, three separate rainwater
and snow samples from Chapel Hill, North Carolina were collected and
submitted for 'double-blind' laboratory analysis in March, 2002. Tests were
ordered for several elements which should not be present in normal rain or
snow. The result was devastating news about the health of our ecosystem: all
samples consistently revealed enough of the following materials to indicate
that they were present in the atmosphere "in large amounts...and
concentrated form" through a "very controlled delivery (dispersion),"
primarily: aluminum and barium.

Follow the chemical trail, from A-Z. Aluminum, inhaled or
ingested, as we have all been warned, makes us forget the warnings that
aluminum makes us forget....in other words: Aluminum - bad. Barium compounds
that dissolve well in water (like rain) will cause a whole host of symptoms,
from breathing difficulties to brain swelling. Barium is hygroscopic, a
dessicant or drying agent: itchy eyes, burning throat, asthma, allergies,
nose and lung bleeds. Barium - really bad.

Just ask Readi Kilowatt's chemical counterpart, Mr. Yuk!  Most of us will
remember the mean, green man who stopped us from downing a bottle of Bleach
when we were six. The Mr. Yuk for our corner of earth is technically the EPA
(Environmental Protection Agency) in the south, and Environment Canada,
where it snows.

However, barium hasn't even been classified by the EPA with respect to human
carcinogenicity because no studies have even been done on people.
Surprisingly, aluminum is also a no show on the list of hazardous air
pollutants.

But check any Material Safety Data Sheet and you'll find
barium clearly marked:

"DANGER! MAY BE FATAL IF SWALLOWED" with the "Health Rating:
3 - Severe (Life)".

Hey kids, bring out your "GOGGLES and GLOVES" Mr.
Yuk's taking you on a picnic!

But, here's the scary part, on the same Data Sheet, under Environmental
Toxicity: "No information found". Barium has twenty times more chronic
lethality than the worse organic-chlorinated pesticide (private interview
with R. Mike Castle, Nationally Accredited Environmental Risk Auditor).

Confusing? Not really - nobody with enough acuity to read has been reckless
enough to intentionally release barium into the ecosystem. Until now.
When anhydrous barium (mon)oxide reacts with water, forming
barium hydroxide (commonly known as soluble barium salts), the chemical
reaction liberates a lot of heat. And where there's heat, there's fire.

Let's connect the dots. Follow closely: February 17, 2002 UP Science News
headlines, "Pollution drying up rainfall" - when particles are too small to
seed nice fat raindrops, "the clouds that do form...have a hard time to
rain." These tiny particles are called "aerosols" by scientists, and long
term exposure is now "an important environmental risk factor for
cardiopulmonary and lung cancer mortality"
(Journal of the American Medical Association). Bad news for
the humans.

It gets worse for the earth, and here's where the heat turns
up: a third of the United States and even vast tracts of Canadian Prairie
are suffering from acute drought conditions, some of the worst shortages in
years. Rivers are literally drying up. Reservoirs are at record low levels.
New York has declared a drought emergency. Montana is officially a drought
disaster area. Even the UN warns of severe water shortages by 2025 -
globally.

Back to the lab:
barium has a much lower "specific heat" value of 0.19 as compared to air
(1.003) and water (4.184). When introduced at higher altitudes, barium will
have a net effect of increasing the temperature of the atmosphere. Ergo: it
gets hot and dry.

Why would anyone want to do that to the earth? Ask the
military: In 2025 (a familiar date), US aerospace forces plan to "own the
weather" by "capitalizing on emerging technologies and focusing development
of those technologies to war-fighting applications."(The Weather as a Force
Multiplier, August 1996). In a summary table, under the column "DEGRADE
ENEMY FORCES", among all the nasty
options we find: "Precipitation Denial - Induce Drought".

The smoking gun, not surprisingly always sits on the rack in a Department of
Defense pick up truck.

Technicians working at the Tesla Center, Wright Patterson
Air Force Base, in Dayton, Ohio, have positively identified aluminum,
barium, polymer webs with melanin, ethylene glycol-based monoacrylates and
other heavy metals used extensively for weather modification projects for
years (R. Mike Castle).

What a wicked, tangled web it is - literally. And here's
where we find the other half of our sandwich: DYN-O-Gel. Sounds like a
product Ronco might distribute, but it is actually the trade name for
cross-linked aqueous polymer,
US Patent 6,315,213 awarded two years ago to one Peter
Cordani - when dispersed into a storm it forms a gelatinous substance which
falls to the ground, "thus diminishing the clouds ability to rain."
Dial-O-Matic in the weather!

And if you took your Pocket Fisherman to Florida Bay last
month, you would have probably caught some of those "gelatinous blobs
floating in it and spider-weblike filaments." In January, fishermen in the
Bay of Mexico began to report on a zone of lifeless water, about the size of
Lake Athabasca, they dubbed "black water". By early April, divers off Key
West found dead and dying sponges, a trail of devastation and no answers.
Clearly, none of the baffled marine biologists read Woman's World magazine:
an article in the March 19 edition proudly announced that a Florida research
firm had discovered "a powder that will give you perfect weather every day,"
and that in a top-secret test, this weather wonder drug was scattered over a
storm by military planes. The company spokesman: Peter Cordani. The product:
DYN-O-Gel.

The Spin: it will "protect the lives of millions, but it'll protect your
leisure time, too."

The most plausible explanation for "black water": a recent
real world test on a hurricane released enough Gel into the atmosphere to
kill everything in the sea below. What goes up, must come down.

So what about humans breathing in this miracle product? Mike Castle explains
how these fine acrylic acrylate powders will suck all the moisture from your
lungs, sticking the insides together - in two words: "extremely toxic". Not
advised.

Mr. Yuk take cover! The scientists are playing God but there
are no environmental impact assessments for these compounds or any
other kinds of weather manipulation chemistry. So why are they being
sprayed into our skies?

Look Up! Connect the Dots. Follow the Patents. Smell the
Air. Taste the Water. Control the Spin. Tell Everyone. The Truth is
Copyright Free.

Health and Happiness for all natural creation,

Charle

----------------------------------------------------------------------------


 "We must become the change we want to see"  Mahatma Gandhi

" We have insurmountable opportunities "  Yogi Berra

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