To block rays reaching city, aircraft apply solar prophylactic, dim the sun

A jet trail over my house in Soddy-Daisy casts sideward and upward shadows on a silky haze bank left by earlier flights. (Photo David Tulis)

A jet trail over my house in Soddy-Daisy casts sideward and upward shadows on a silky haze bank left by earlier flights. (Photo David Tulis)

Jet stripes are like a wave of ocean foam cresting over the earth far inland — maritime jurisdiction crashing to the inmost mountain ranges and the ghostly horizons of Knoxville, Tenn. (Photo Lauren Wood)

A jet-messed sky tries to arrange its face over middle Tennessee. Notice a polite sun, keeping his manners. (Photo Jason Sinard, Tennessee Skywatch)

A jet-messed sky tries to arrange its face over middle Tennessee. Notice a polite sun, keeping his manners. (Photo Tennessee Skywatch)

A rogue sky over a city in Australia. Chemtrailing is a global phenomenon by brave national governments to manipulate the weather with little care for aluminum toxicity damage to human populations. (Photo Don Langanis)

A rogue sky over a city in Australia. Chemtrailing is a global phenomenon by brave national governments to manipulate the weather with little care for aluminum toxicity damage to human populations. (Photo Don Langanis)

This image of contraband clouds from North Weston, N.C., is posted Nov. 20, 2014, by ABC cameraman Greg Nelson.

This image of contraband clouds from North Weston, N.C., is posted Nov. 20, 2014, by ABC cameraman Greg Nelson.

Sky stripes in various grades of dispersal serve to dim sunlight over Nashville. (Photo Doug Diamond)

Sky stripes in various grades of dispersal serve to dim sunlight over Nashville. (Photo Doug Diamond)

Distempered skies over Southern Nevada are created by a U.S. program of weather modification operating under the doctrine of necessity and in military jurisdiction. It is not under any civilian oversight. (Photo Southern Nevada Sky Watch on Facebook)

Distempered skies over Southern Nevada are created by a U.S. program of weather modification operating under the doctrine of necessity and in military jurisdiction. It is not under any civilian oversight. (Photo Southern Nevada Sky Watch on Facebook)

Fogbanks, lofty hazes, disked-out sunballs, horizon-to-horizon streaks are symptoms of weather modification in 2014, intensifying into 2015. Here, glories above Tempe, Ariz. (Photo Anthony Lee)

Fogbanks, lofty hazes, disked-out sunballs, horizon-to-horizon streaks are symptoms of weather modification in 2014, intensifying into 2015. Here, glories above Tempe, Ariz. (Photo Anthony Lee)

Incidental jet traffic? Or is Crossville, Tenn., being subjected to policy skies from “the good people,” as I appreciatively like to call them. (Photo Marla Stair-Wood)

Incidental jet traffic? Or is Crossville, Tenn., being subjected to policy skies from “the good people,” as I appreciatively like to call them. (Photo Marla Stair-Wood)

If jet trails were mere water vapor, such scenes as this one near by residence in Soddy-Daisy, Tenn., would not occur. Sky stripes result from button- and lever-pushing, not hazards of nature. (Photo David Tulis)

If jet trails were mere water vapor, such scenes as this one near by residence in Soddy-Daisy, Tenn., would not occur. Sky stripes result from button- and lever-pushing, not hazards of nature. (Photo David Tulis)

This cloudbank over Chattanooga occurred on a day of heavy jet trail treatment. (Photo David Tulis)

This cloudbank over Chattanooga occurred on a day of heavy jet trail treatment. (Photo David Tulis)

A jet emits fresh aerosol pollution as a trail from an earlier flyover assumes its role as planetary protector over Chattanooga on Nov. 8, 2014. (Photo David Tulis)

A jet emits fresh aerosol pollution as a trail from an earlier flyover assumes its role as planetary protector over Chattanooga on Nov. 8, 2014. (Photo David Tulis)

White secretions from jet aircraft line the sky in Pasco County, Fla. (Photo Mark Porrey)

White secretions from jet aircraft line the sky in Pasco County, Fla. (Photo Mark Porrey)

Sky tattoos stop and start less by changes in atmospheric moisture than by hydraulic and mechanical processes. Sky stripes are national policy as Washington and the deep state behind it make much of “global climate change” to justify innumerable secret excesses. (Photo Facebook)

Sky tattoos stop and start less by changes in atmospheric moisture than by hydraulic and mechanical processes. Sky stripes are national policy as Washington and the deep state behind it make much of “global climate change” to justify innumerable secret excesses. (Photo Facebook)

That motorists and residents of Fresno see such skies and think nothing of them (most of them) makes us wonder. (Photo Matthew Banwart)

That motorists and residents of Fresno see such skies and think nothing of them (most of them) makes us wonder. (Photo Matthew Banwart)

Even farmland near Dandridge, Tenn., is deemed of sufficient interest to deserve a growing fogbank. (Photo Tennessee Skywatch on Facebook)

Even farmland near Dandridge, Tenn., is deemed of sufficient interest to deserve a growing fogbank. (Photo Tennessee Skywatch on Facebook)

Aluminium, strontium and barium are the key munitions in the war against global warming — a formula in “enmod” patents put to good use over Baltimore on Dec. 4, 2014. (Photo Ray Loftin)

Aluminium, strontium and barium are the key munitions in the war against global warming — a formula in “enmod” patents put to good use over Baltimore on Dec. 4, 2014. (Photo Ray Loftin)

Chattanooga and your hometown aren’t escaping solar radiation management. Neither are the occupants of these houses in Oostkamp, Belgium, on Nov. 24, 2014. (Photo Tom Vanderhaeghen)

Chattanooga and your hometown aren’t escaping solar radiation management. Neither are the occupants of these houses in Oostkamp, Belgium, on Nov. 24, 2014. (Photo Tom Vanderhaeghen)

Sky striping isn’t casual, even when crisscrossing stripes look a real muddle. A bit of a plan is evident here over Queensland, Australia, on February 2014. (Photo Jack Baran)

Sky striping isn’t casual, even when crisscrossing stripes look a real muddle. A bit of a plan is evident here over Queensland, Australia, on February 2014. (Photo Jack Baran)

Scenes like this one of upward-tossed sky stripe shadows over Calgary, Canada, have played out in the skies of Chattanooga, but not quite as dramatically. (Photo via Bobby Currie, Calgary Skywatch)

Scenes like this one of upward-tossed sky stripe shadows over Calgary, Canada, have played out in the skies of Chattanooga, but not quite as dramatically. (Photo via Bobby Currie, Calgary Skywatch)

Aluminum is used in weather modification over Cincinnati because it is reflective of light. Pulverized to nanoparticulate size, it has a better chance of staying aloft in wind currents. (Photo Sean Royse)

Aluminum is used in weather modification over Cincinnati because it is reflective of light. Pulverized to nanoparticulate size, it has a better chance of staying aloft in wind currents. (Photo Sean Royse)

Sky tattoos suggest that some participants in stratospheric aerosol geoengineering either have a great sense of humor or pilot their craft in a stupor. (Photo Faceobook)

Sky tattoos suggest that some participants in stratospheric aerosol geoengineering either have a great sense of humor or pilot their craft in a stupor. (Photo Faceobook)

Cloud-making stripes multiply over Kernersville, N.C., on Nov. 23, 2014, to lay a sun-defying haze. Environmentalists have yet to squawk about negative emissions that are part of national policy. (Photo Dianna Davis)

Cloud-making stripes multiply over Kernersville, N.C., on Nov. 23, 2014, to lay a sun-defying haze. Environmentalists have yet to squawk about negative emissions that are part of national policy. (Photo Dianna Davis)

Solar radiation management is a prophylactic — a preventative measure. Preventing what? Sunlight. Most of Dec. 17, 2014, looked like this scene shot in Hixson, North Chattanooga. (Photo David Tulis)

Solar radiation management is a prophylactic — a preventative measure. Preventing what? Sunlight. Most of Dec. 17, 2014, looked like this scene shot in Hixson, North Chattanooga. (Photo David Tulis)

This sky of many colors we understand to be pleasing to Uncle, as he has given it a coat of many colors via a “chembo,” as seen from Soddy-Daisy, Tenn., Nov. 15, 2014. (Photo David Tulis)

This sky we understand to be pleasing to Uncle, as he has given it a coat of many colors via a “chembo,” as seen from Soddy-Daisy, Tenn., Nov. 15, 2014. (Photo David Tulis)

Chemtrails lace the sky over San Fransisco, as seen from Embarcadero Center. California is dying under four years of drought that satellite imagery suggests is a manufactured event with heavy treatments over the Pacific Ocean redirecting the water-laden jet stream. (Photo Lisa Renee Villarreal)

Chemtrails lace the sky over San Fransisco, as seen from Embarcadero Center. California is dying under four years of drought that satellite imagery suggests is a manufactured event with heavy treatments over the Pacific Ocean redirecting the water-laden jet stream. (Photo Lisa Renee Villarreal)

Edinburgh endures a treatment that is part of a global plan by feckless national governments to “fight climate change.” (Photo John Slesser)

Edinburgh endures a treatment that is part of a global plan by feckless national governments to “fight climate change.” (Photo John Slesser)

Artificial weather such as that of upstate New York on Dec. 8, 2014, is a prodigious undertaking in which costs matter little. The U.S. creates its own money and is not sensible to monetary gravity. (Photo Cindy Petersen Arnold)

Artificial weather such as that of upstate New York on Dec. 8, 2014, is a prodigious undertaking in which costs matter little. The U.S. creates its own money and is not sensible to monetary gravity. (Photo Cindy Petersen Arnold)

Whether in an afternoon or a day, emission stripes cover Knoxville, Tenn., in gray in just a little vile. (Photo Marla Stair-Wood)

Whether in an afternoon or a day, emission stripes cover Knoxville, Tenn., in gray in just a little vile. (Photo Marla Stair-Wood)

In Gulliver's Travels the satire, projectors try to wring sunlight from cucumbers and reconstitute excrement into its original foods. In our day, as here over Monterey, Calif., aerial projectors wage a cockeyed war against photosynthesis. (Photo Sue Fanelli)

In Gulliver’s Travels the satire, projectors try to wring sunlight from cucumbers and reconstitute excrement into its original foods. In our day, as here over Monterey, Calif., aerial projectors wage a cockeyed war against photosynthesis. (Photo Sue Fanelli)

Scenes such as this one Dec. 20, 2014, in Jacksonville, Fla., give the world a blank look, a stupor. But jets are filling the greatroom of the sky with the smoke of their power. (Photo Facebook via Cori Gunnells)

Scenes such as this one Dec. 20, 2014, in Jacksonville, Fla., give the world a blank look, a stupor. But jets are filling the greatroom of the sky with the smoke of their power. (Photo Facebook via Cori Gunnells)

A day of heavy treatment in Sante Fe Mexico. (Photo Michael Radford)

A day of heavy treatment in Sante Fe Mexico. (Photo C. Michael Bradford)

A factory sky lours over Beaumont, Poitou-Charentes, France. (Photo Gerald Janniaux)

A factory sky lours over Beaumont, Poitou-Charentes, France. (Photo Gerald Janniaux)

This satellite photo from Nasa accompanies a report about how jet contrails may be altering the weather.

This satellite photo from Nasa accompanies a report about how jet contrails may be altering the weather.

Jet emissions create a condom sky, a hood of haze that weakens the sun into a sort of half-life, separating the people below in Santa Fe, N.M., from nature. (Photo C. Michael Bradford)

Jet emissions create a condom sky, a hood of haze that weakens the sun into a sort of half-life, separating the people below in Santa Fe, N.M., from nature. (Photo C. Michael Bradford)

A manufactured weather creates a sky dome, a sea of glass mingled with fire, as it were, as shown near West Hollywood in Los Angeles. (Photo William Wendling)

A manufactured weather creates a sky dome, a sea of glass mingled with fire, as it were, as shown near West Hollywood in Los Angeles. (Photo William Wendling)

A jet with a short tail flies near two expanding white booms. If it emits a water vapor contrail, what did the prior flyovers leave aloft? As seen from Green Pond Grocery, Soddy-Daisy, Tenn. (Photo David Tulis)

A jet with a short tail flies near two expanding white booms. If it emits a water vapor contrail, what did the prior flyovers leave aloft? As seen from Green Pond Grocery, Soddy-Daisy, Tenn. (Photo David Tulis)

Take a gamble: Would you bet this sky over Las Vegas has no effect on human health? (Photo Ginnia Irish-Knowles)

Take a gamble: Would you bet this sky over Las Vegas has no effect on human health? (Photo Ginnia Irish-Knowles)

A time-lapse sequence of a street scene in Europe captures how “persistent contrails” alter the weather by graying out the sky. The war on global warming is well under way. (Photo Facebook)

A time-lapse sequence of a street scene in Europe captures how “persistent contrails” alter the weather by graying out the sky. Prophylactic weather. (Photo Facebook)

The heavens declare the glory of God; And the firmament shows His handiwork. *** He has set a tabernacle for the sun, Which is like a bridegroom coming out of his chamber, And rejoices like a strong man to run its race. Its rising is from one end of heaven, And its circuit to the other end; And there is nothing hidden from its heat.    

— Psalm 19: 1, 4-6

By David Tulis

The skies over Chattanooga and many other cities among the 50 states are being regularly hazed out in a prophylactic program that saves the planet from the effects of sunlight.

The unfunded mandate of stratospheric aerosol geoengineering blessed Chattanooga on Dec. 3, 4, 7, 13, 15, 17-19 by my reckoning. On Tuesday the 15th, heavy jet activity preceded a storm system that darkened the city and left only a little rainfall — a process repeated in past months. Heavy striping by jets precedes a storm front that glowers and broods over Hamilton County and scuds away with nary a drop. Thursday, shapeless cloud cover fed by trails high above caught my attention as I during afternoon sales calls in the Hixson area.

National governments worldwide practice weather management, also known as solar radiation management, on the theory of anthropocentric global warming — manmade global temperature increases. The concept “climate change” with its variants controls the media and scientific literature and holds that ordinary human activity — farming, use of highways, industry — is destroying the planet and must be met with draconian progressive-oriented deindustrialization and new controls upon people and industry by the state to save the day.

Media ramps up ‘solar radiation management’ tale

Heightening the police state to suppress human activity is one solution to global warming.

The other is solar radiation management, also known as SRM. The Obama administration is reportedly considering climate management programs, a sort of iron dome protecting the surface of the earth from incoming sunlight. SRM replicates the haze volcanoes hurl across vast parts of the planet when they blow up.

The proposed injection of good pollution into the atmosphere by jet aircraft is hardly new, whether for storm creation (cloud seeding out West) or warfare (Agent Orange over jungle or Operation Popeye over the Ho Chi Minh trail).

But a remarkable contradiction exists between today’s practice and the world of scientific literature and the media. An aggressive aerosol program is being maintained in the skies of my hometown, Chattanooga, and very likely yours while university studies propose it as a  theoretical solution to the supposed “global warming” scare.

Arguments are popping up in popular media to suggest the necessity of future commitments that appear already to have been concocted — drafted by policy circles in secret, signed without concern for public health, scheduled behind the wall of national security that saves the citizenry from worrying about the terminus to which the doctrine of necessity brings us.

Newsweek fears global disaster

Newsweek in a cover story proposes that the 1991 eruption of Mount Pinatubo in the Philippines be a model for how scientists could create aerosol clouds to deflect sunlight and mirror away sunlight reaching the surface of the earth.

➤ “[Ken] Caldeira [on a National Academy of Sciences panel and a scientist] says that by sending a fleet of planes into the sky and spraying the atmosphere with sulfate-based aerosols, we could have a speedy, cost-effective method to cool the Earth. The sulfates would eventually fall out of the upper atmosphere and end up close to the Earth’s crust, but it’s probably not a major concern, Caldeira says. The sulfates would be thousands of times smaller than the air pollution around cities like Beijing or Shanghai, and they wouldn’t cause any increase in acid rain.”

➤ The story suggests chemtrail backers are willing to risk the danger of injecting aerosols in the atmosphere. “I’m negative about all the geoengineering options,” Mr. Caldiera says, “but I’m also negative about jumping out of burning airplanes with a parachute I’ve never tested before. I’d still rather have the parachute than not have it.” In other words, the existing program may have dangers of all sorts, but nation-states have no choice.

Newsweek proposes sky brightening as a way to stop global warming.

Newsweek proposes sky brightening as a way to stop global warming.

➤ Newsweek ignores national governments’ Pinatubo-scale efforts today and its varied manifestations, including metallic filament chaff dumped upon the earth below and new types of fibrous snow than can be rolled up like a carpet.

It takes seriously the work of an New York University philosopher and ethicist, however, who proposes redesigning the human race in what might strike you as a bold eugenic formula or a prescription for mass suicide. “Among the proposals were a patch you can put on your skin that would make you averse to the flavor of meat (cattle farms are a notorious producer of the greenhouse gas methane), genetic engineering in utero to make humans grow shorter (smaller people means fewer resources used), technological reengineering of our eyeballs to make us better at seeing at night (better night vision means lower energy consumption), and the extremely simple plan of educating more women (the higher a woman’s education the fewer children she is likely to have, and fewer children means less human impact on the globe).”

‘Just 2 years away’

Experiments in creating artificial weather are “just two years” away, says a New Scientist report covering a recent paper by the Royal Society. No, Chattanooga isn’t being subjected to climate control YET, we are to understand, but it’s a distinct possibility it could eventually happen.

Geoengineering to cool the planet by deliberately altering Earth’s atmosphere is highly controversial, with sceptics fearing it will fail and mess up the climate even more. Altering cloud cover, for example, could change rainfall patterns and increase droughts and floods unpredictably. Opponents also fear that if we rely on geoengineering solutions, people will no longer strive towards the main goal of dramatically reducing our reliance on the fossil fuels that are inexorably heating up the planet.

New Scientist mentions several proposals like those in the school of projecters encountered by the heroic Gulliver in Jonathan Swift’s heady satire of 1726, including altering cloud composition by with bismuth tri-iodide, turning cloud water into ice particles; the scheme would “reduce the water vapor and allow more radiation to escape.” Other wacky ideas include cannon, piping to the upper atmosphere and chemtrails by seagoing platforms.

Scientists such as Piers Forster of University of Leeds and others are skeptical of computer model tests and small-scale tests of chemtrailing. “We’ve emitted 500 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide and we only recently have any certainty this is affecting our climate, so limited tests would tell you next to nothing about the climate effects of solar geoengineering,” he says. New Scientist says it’s possible geoengineering could “[prove] to be impractical.” David Keith of Harvard says wants to test stratospheric aerosol geoengineering (you’d call it chemtrailing), but is awaiting for F$10 million in funding from the U.S. and a body to give “official permission” to conduct emission tests of sanctioned pollutants.

Academic theater, fruity ideas

Americans are said to have done no research on cloud-creating geoengineering, with most of what’s been spent going to computer models. Dr. Keith is said to be trying to get his way to a massive chemtrailing program that would go as far as he appears to want to go. A hesitant first step would be a “large balloon 20km up in the sky” that would “create a small plume of sulphate particles” and measure area atmospheric changes. He and other “cloud brighteners” are searching for funding from philanthropists.

Dr. Keith makes his case for a future program of SRM in a 2013 book The Case for Climate Engineering. The program is provocative and could have many unintended effects, he admits in an interview. Human health concerns need to take a back seat to save the planet.

“Now, there will be some direct risks, for sure,” he tells Recode.net. “If you put sulfuric acid in the atmosphere, some people could die from the extra air pollution. That’s a serious issue, and not one to take lightly. There’s an ethical aspect to taking action that results in harm. But it seems clear that the net impacts would be hugely positive. And that seems to me to be true from essentially all climate models.”

A small scale test envisioned at Harvard University and the Royal Society treads deftly into the fray. “This experiment — provisionally titled the stratospheric controlled perturbation experiment — is under development,” an abstract says, “and will only proceed with transparent and predominantly governmental funding and independent risk assessment.” Aluminum is not mentioned in the study, though it figures prominently in stratospheric aerosol geoengineering patents and is the ideal aerosol reflector.

What it means for our hometown

Aluminum, we know, and strontium and barium are perpetually in the air over Chattanooga, according to Bob Colby, air pollution control bureau chief. But these elements are off his radar as a matter of law. We know we are chemtrailed roughly every other day. We know that as we lead our lives we face hazards of many kinds — from unhealthy food, dangerous products, chemicals in consumer products, GMOs, police miscreancy and abuse, lawless regulators, decapitalizing and lawless taxation.

And now we either face climate modification as a future prospect, a perilous future necessity. Or should understand it as already under way? Either way, it’s almost too much to worry about. Crisis fatigue has set in.

If visual data suggests the truth, the academic world with its David Keiths and Ken Caldieras is entirely in the dark as to the real progress in weather control. What we see by looking up and what we read suggest two alternative universes. Weather control is already taking place over Chattanooga. As it intensified, I jumped onto the story in March, prompted by a freak snowstorm downtown a day after the city had been heavily sky striped amid shirt-sleeve weather. The literature about solar radiation control is growing, but existing practice is not made public.

The city is being heavily polluted from the sky. But its high purposes can’t be laid as an evil to industry. Sky tattooing is the official proceeding of a forward-thinking but improvident Uncle. Are you inclined to hold your nose and thank the U.S. government for aggressive weather modification, fulfilling a green agenda? Or are you tending another way? Are you asking how personally to deal with the medical and environmental fallout of current practice?

Sources: “Geoengineering the climate; Into the great wide open,” The Economist, Dec. 13, 2014

Atmospheric particles can brighten cold clouds as well as warm ones,” Phys.org, Dec. 5, 2014. http://phys.org/news/2014-12-atmospheric-particles-brighten-cold-clouds.html

Erin Biba, “Planet Reboot: Fighting Climate Change With Geoengineering,” Newsweek, Dec. 4, 2014, http://www.newsweek.com/2014/12/12/can-geoengineering-save-earth-289124.html

Andy Coughlan, “Geoengineering the planet: first experiments take shape,’ New Scientist, Nov. 27, 2014, http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg22429974.000-geoengineering-the-planet-first-experiments-take-shape.html?full=true&print=true#.VJRMyVLGY

Nicholas West, “Elite Think Tank Admits to Ongoing Climate Engineering Experiments,” Dec. 9, 2014, Globalresearch.ca. Originally at Activist Post, http://www.globalresearch.ca/elite-think-tank-admits-to-ongoing-climate-engineering-experiments/5418879

James Temple, “Harvard’s David Keith Knows How to Dial Down the Earth’s Thermostat. Is It Time to Try?” Recode.net. http://recode.net/2014/12/11/harvards-david-keith-knows-how-to-dial-down-the-earths-thermostat-is-it-time-to-try/

John A. Dykema, David W. Keith, James G. Anderson, Debra Weisenstein, ‘Stratospheric Controlled Perturbation Experiment[;] A small-scale experiment to improve understanding of the risks of solar geoengineering,” Nov. 17, 2014, The Royal Society, http://www.policyinnovations.org/ideas/briefings/data/00285. The study is at http://rsta.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/372/2031/20140059.full

Further reading with David Tulis et al

Scientist ‘terrified’ by prospect of aerial program already in effect over cities

Stratospheric aerosol geoengineering in a nutshell: Bad news

Flick hints at city rain droplet mystery, one explained by good professor

Airport says ignorant of sky striping; no documents, memos, forms exist 

Horizon-to-horizon lines tell of global engineering policy that affects you

Jet flights by hundreds drag white scars across city skies on Lord’s Day

Was NOAA form 17-4 filled out for city weather modification exercise?

Fleischmann ‘unaware’ of sky tattooing; staff ‘will continue to follow’

 It’s perfectly rational for Barys, other weathermen to ignore sky striping

Photo gallery: Origin of city’s haze U.S. jet-laid greenhouse gas emissions

The global angle in the sky geometry lesson over Chattanooga

City heavily treated with high-altitude aerosol dispersals 2 days

Tulis asks Fleischmann to help abate public nuisance of sky striping

Critics insist metal shield in stratosphere over city impossible, only water vapor

Uncle sky stripes city on national holiday; should we worry, or say thanks?

Aluminum nanoparticles highly reactive in body, easily penetrate brain

Wall of skepticism makes invisible aerial salvation by U.S.; still, look up

Chattanooga CBS Radio affiliate eyes geoengineering’s sky stripe program

State would sweat under EPA lockdown, but prof warns against chemtrail breakout

Tulis demands air data, says aerial spraying probably not illegal

As Chattanoogans protest, Monsanto gains access to weather

Man, 25, eyeing jet trails, worries on ’60s-style pollution over River City

Selling local economy by gazing skyward, lamenting a failed god

U.S. weather control affects human health, causes gyrations

Murky brilliance; 2 days of chemtrailing muzzy city’s skies

Are sky stripes over city lost jets, or stepped-up geoengineering program?

Against sky stripe ingredients, this watchdog does not bark

The first media coverage of sky striping in Chattanooga, April 2014

Bizarre March blizzard follows day of heavy chemtrailing in Chattanooga skies

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