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#cloud seeding
reality-detective · 10 days
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Remember the Dubai flooding I posted? 👇
This confirms the UAE has been doing this for awhile 👇
"Cloud Seeding Science" is just another term for Geo-engineering, and weather modification.
First they "seed' the clouds with heavy metal particles and different chemicals, and then they use HAARP to induct the rain via the electro-magnetic frequencies.
They have basically confirmed everything we have known years ago, weather modification is real, however it's just a crazy conspiracy theory when we call them on it. 🤔
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awesomecooperlove · 5 months
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✈️🛬🛩️
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unbfacts · 6 months
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tornadoquest · 7 days
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Tornado Quest Top Science Links For April 13 - 20, 2024 #science #weather #climate #climatechange #severeweather #tornado #drought
Greetings everyone. Thanks so much for stopping by. Severe weather, including tornadoes, has taken place, but it’s been relatively quiet this spring. Having said that, there are changes on the horizon in terms of severe weather potential. It’s that time of year to buckle down on how to prepare for all severe weather hazards. Our overview of severe weather preparedness will stay with a review of…
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a-meh · 10 days
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wumingfoundation · 4 months
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Por qué tenemos que tomarnos en serio las fantasías de la conspiración sobre el clima
Hace una semana, la revista italiana Internazionale, edición en línea, publicó la primera parte de una investigación de Wu Ming 1 titulada Por qué tenemos que tomarnos en serio las fantasías de la conspiración sobre el clima.  Ahora también está disponible traducido al castellano, en el sitio A este lado del Mediterráneo.
Wu Ming 1 pronunció hace poco dos conferencias sobre este tema en Bélgica y Francia: la primera el 1 de diciembre en la Universidad Saint-Louis de Bruselas; la segunda el 4 de diciembre en la Universidad París 8 Vincennes-Saint-Denis. De los materiales preparatorios extrajo también la investigación para Internazionale, dividida en dos episodios. Se trata de una evolución del trabajo realizado en los últimos años y que dio lugar al libro La Q di Qomplotto.
El primer episodio parte de una historia que circuló durante las inundaciones de Emilia-Romaña en mayo de 2023: la del «misterioso avión que sembró las nubes».
A partir de este episodio, Wu Ming 1 identifica un conjunto de fantasías de conspiración climática que llama «de segunda generación».
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Rainmaker: Dr. Wallace E. Howell, the city's $100-a-day rainmaker, stands in the snow at City Hall Park, April 14, 1950, while New Yorkers wonder whether his rainmaking efforts of the day before might have induced the freakish mid-spring snowfall. (NYPD planes had dropped dry ice into clouds over the Catskills, and a silver iodide generator on the ground sent the compound rising upwards to, the city hoped, create the perfect storm.) Horace Stoneham, president of the NY Giants baseball team, said, “Look at that snow, and us with our opening game coming up only four days from now. That guy had better work out a schedule.”
Photo: Harry Harris for the AP via the NY Post
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kramlabs · 1 year
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https://www.esquireme.com/news/cloud-seeding-in-uae
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environmentalwatch · 1 year
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Cloud Seeding
Is Cloud Seeding as Promising as it Sounds?
Cloud seeding is becoming big business in drought-stricken areas like the Rockies, despite dubious research. Cloud seeding as it’s practiced today works like this. Seeders, either tower-mounted or by airplane, shoot silver iodide into clouds. The particulates bind airborne moisture to themselves, which forms ice. They then fall as snow, or melt into rain. “Cloud seeding generates water that…
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airbrickwall · 1 year
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reality-detective · 10 days
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Cloud seeding gone wrong in dubai 🤔
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awesomecooperlove · 7 months
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☣️☢️☣️
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unbfacts · 5 months
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Dubai is cloud seeding its skies to create artificial rain, but how?
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torontochemtrails · 2 years
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thechembow · 10 days
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Dubai flooding prompts orders to 'stay at home' after city gets 2 years of rain in one day
Apr. 16, 2024 - Fox Weather
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates – In just one day, two years of rain fell on Dubai, triggering flash flooding that crippled a city not accustomed to rain.
The desert city has seen 6.26 inches of rain as of Tuesday night local time. According to the UAE National Center of Meteorology, the city gets 3.14 inches on average every year...
Someone's towerbusting...
After seeing this article and visiting the UAE National Center of Meteorology site and seeing "cloud seeding" as one of the sections, I thought they will probably take credit for the rain by saying they did cloud seeding operations. Sure enough...
Cloud seeding would only have increased already existent rain by 8-15%, so that is definitely not the cause. UAE started cloud seeding in 2002, the year Georg Ritschl started gifting orgonite in Africa. They have taken credit for the rain all along, but someone is definitely doing orgone energy work out there.
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rjzimmerman · 2 years
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Part of our future........Excerpt from this New York Times story:
Iranian officials have worried for years that other nations have been depriving them of one of their vital water sources. But it was not an upstream dam that they were worrying about, or an aquifer being bled dry.
In 2018, amid a searing drought and rising temperatures, some senior officials concluded that someone was stealing their water from the clouds.
“Both Israel and another country are working to make Iranian clouds not rain,” Brig. Gen. Gholam Reza Jalali, a senior official in the country’s powerful Revolutionary Guards Corps, said in a 2018 speech.
The unnamed country was the United Arab Emirates, which had begun an ambitious cloud-seeding program, injecting chemicals into clouds to try to force precipitation. Iran’s suspicions are not surprising, given its tense relations with most Persian Gulf nations, but the real purpose of these efforts is not to steal water, but simply to make it rain on parched lands.
As the Middle East and North Africa dry up, countries in the region have embarked on a race to develop the chemicals and techniques that they hope will enable them to squeeze rain drops out of clouds that would otherwise float fruitlessly overhead.
With 12 of the 19 regional countries averaging less than 10 inches of rainfall a year, a decline of 20 percent over the past 30 years, their governments are desperate for any increment of fresh water, and cloud seeding is seen by many as a quick way to tackle the problem.
And as wealthy countries like the emirates pump hundreds of millions of dollars into the effort, other nations are joining the race, trying to ensure that they do not miss out on their fair share of rainfall before others drain the heavens dry — despite serious questions about whether the technique generates enough rainfall to be worth the effort and expense.
Morocco and Ethiopia have cloud-seeding programs, as does Iran. Saudi Arabia just started a large-scale program, and a half-dozen other Middle Eastern and North African countries are considering it.
China has the most ambitious program worldwide, with the aim of either stimulating rain or halting hail across half the country. It is trying to force clouds to rain over the Yangtze River, which is running dry in some spots.
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