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Are they just for weather modification, are they used for 'over the horizon' radar, telecomunications, energy transfer, to bolster pharmaceutical profits... what?

2006-12-01 13:14:06 · 3 answers · asked by rarosera 1 in Environment

3 answers

Go search some of the paranoid websites, their all over the place if you look. You sound like your ready to buy into any of that kind of thing like global warming,911 was a US government conspiracy, various UFO conspiracies,the JFK assassination and on and on. Have fun.

2006-12-01 13:36:36 · answer #1 · answered by Iknowthisone 7 · 0 0

Some people noticed vapor trails that formed a grid, this caused them to propose that a chemical was being sprayed in the atmospere. However most commercial aircraft fly E,W,S,N. if the wind is blowing diagonal to this planes that are flying along the same flight paths will have their vapor trails blown to form a grid.

2006-12-01 21:20:56 · answer #2 · answered by Sleeping Troll 5 · 0 0

The chemtrail theory is a group of theories regarding what are claimed to be unnatural contrails from aircraft. Contrails are formed by condensation of water vapor in the aircraft's exhausts. Proponents of the theories maintain that some trails have an appearance and quality different from those of normal water-based contrails; i.e. that chemtrails are not consistent with the known properties of contrails. The general unifying factor is the belief that some kind of chemical or biological agent is being secretly released. The term "chemtrail" should not be confused with other forms of aerial dumping (e.g. crop dusting, cloud seeding or aerial firefighting). It specifically refers to systematic, high-altitude dumping of unknown substances for some undisclosed purpose.

Among the theories proposed for the purpose of the alleged "chemtrails" are: atmospheric and weather modification, biological warfare, mind control or occult purposes. They are also theorized to be part of a system to counter the effects of global warming, to create a cheap wireless communications network for the military, or to create a more sophisticated radar system (for both defensive and scientific application).[1]

Overview
The chemtrail theory apparently first achieved prominence in mid-to-late 1990s. [2][3] Chemtrails have been discussed on radio programs hosted by Art Bell and Jeff Rense. According to a FAQ[4] posted at Jeff Rense's website, "chemtrails (CTs) look like contrails initially, but are much thicker, extend across the sky and are often laid down in varying patterns of Xs, tick-tack-toe grids, cross-hatched and parallel lines. Instead of quickly dissipating, chemtrails expand and drip feathers and mares' tails. In 30 minutes or less, they open into wispy formations which join together, forming a thin white veil or a 'fake cirrus-type cloud' that persists for hours."

Lacking proper scientific equipment, most chemtrail theorists can only speculate about the composition of the alleged chemtrail. However, one chemtrail theorist, Clifford E. Carnicom, operator of a website entitled "Aerosol Crimes and Cover-ups"[5], claims to have analyzed ground-level air samples following chemtrail events. It is not clear what his experience or expertise in chemical analysis is, but he carefully detailed the methods and procedures he used. He claims to have found airborne aluminum, barium, calcium, magnesium and titanium, and "microscopic fibers" in areas supposedly exposed to chemtrails.[6]

Dr. Leonard Horowitz, a graduate of Tufts University and former faculty member at Tufts and Harvard University,[1] discusses chemtrails in his 2001 book Death in the Air: Globalism, Terrorism & Toxic Warfare.

"Chemtrails" are mentioned in House Bill HR 2977[7], the Space Preservation Act of 2001, introduced by Congressman Dennis Kucinich, where it appears as one of a list of "exotic weapons system[s]" to be banned under the bill. Proponents of the reality of chemtrails point to this as official acknowledgment of the possibility, at least, of such weapons systems. The reference to Chemtrails was omitted from the version of the bill re-introduced by Kucinich in 2002 as HR 3616 [8] or in 2003 as HR 3657[9].

An article entitled "The Chemtrail Smoking Gun"[10] by Bruce Conway, suggested that chemtrails represent the implementation of technologies suggested in a 1992 National Academy of Science study, Policy Implications of Greenhouse Warming[11]; specifically, that chemtrails are part of a secret project intended to mitigate global warming. Some science has corroborated this phenomenon as global dimming.

The Las Vegas Tribune, a free weekly broadsheet, ran an article on September 9, 2005, entitled "Chemtrails - Coming Out Of The Closet?"[12], wherein that publication's managing editor, Marcus K. Dalton, stated that United States Air Force scientists working at Wright-Patterson Air Force base in Dayton, told Columbus Alive[13] - a weekly entertainment magazine - that they had been conducting two aerial spraying experiements: "one involved aluminum oxide spraying related to global warming and the other involved barium stearate and had to do with high-tech military communications."[14] Dalton basically rehashes William Thomas's article in Convergence Weekly,[15] though some new information is presented.

You could get more information from the link below...

2006-12-02 03:27:26 · answer #3 · answered by catzpaw 6 · 0 0

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