The most powerful computers we have can't accurately forecast the weather
more than a few days ahead, what worldwide attempts at weather management
would do is unimaginable. It isn't that I don't realise such things occur a
la Beijing Olympics, but doing such all over the place ... the Gulf Stream
shifts periodically, but we don't really know why, perhaps we might find
out, too late ... it's hubris to imagine our puny technology really makes us
overlords of nature
On 10 March 2010 22:36, Stephen Vincent <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> 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
> The Animal Subsides http://www.arrowheadpress.co.uk/books/animal.html
> Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/david.bircumshaw
> twitter: http://twitter.com/bucketshave
> blog: http://groggydays.blogspot.com/
>
--
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
The Animal Subsides http://www.arrowheadpress.co.uk/books/animal.html
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/david.bircumshaw
twitter: http://twitter.com/bucketshave
blog: http://groggydays.blogspot.com/
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