James P.M. Odell, OMD, ND, LAc
When I first moved to Kentucky over 40 years ago, I looked up at the sky and recalled the lyrics of the song Sweet Home Alabama, “where the skies are so blue.” The Kentucky sky was a deep, rich blue, truly beautiful. Well, that is not the scene anymore, as now the sky is pale blue and crisscrossed with jet aircraft trails almost every day. Many of you may be aware of this ongoing aerial operation, but for those that are still unaware, or in denial, this is the result of what is termed climate geoengineering. This involves spraying or releasing specific aerosolized chemicals from jet aircraft into the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere. Going under a variety of names – atmospheric geoengineering, weather modification, solar radiation management, chemical buffering, cloud seeding, weather force multiplication – toxic aerial spraying is popularly known as chemtrails. Keep in mind that the term “chemtrail” is not a scientific term and is thus used to discredit the validity of the anti-geoengineering effort. This aerial spraying has been extensively photographed and documented and is merely one of the many well-funded techniques employed to modify weather.
One such documentary that conclusively exposes the existence of global weather intervention operations is The Dimming.
Thus, chemtrails are the public term for the classified ongoing artificial modification of Earth’s climate systems using reflective nano-materials (aerosols) to reflect sunlight. The aerosols are dispersed via jet aircraft trails that expand into reflective artificial clouds. Interestingly, the term “chemtrails” originated with the Department of Defense in 1990. It was picked up later in the decade and adopted by concerned citizens who had begun to post thousands of photographs and videos on the Internet, recording strange aerosol trails in the skies.
Essentially, there are two types of atmospheric geoengineering: the overt kind, now openly discussed in the media and publications, and the covert military type known as stratospheric aerosol geoengineering (SAG) which is still quasi-secret, of which discussion is repressed. Authors who write about the virtues or liabilities of overt climate geoengineering rarely if ever acknowledge clandestine military geoengineering. To do so would jeopardize their jobs. Authors that do dare discuss military geoengineering, more frequently than not, are self-published and many have become blacklisted from media and social media platforms. Of the many notable research pioneers of this field is the interdisciplinary scientist James Marvin Herndon, Ph.D., climate scientist Tom Wigley, physician Mark Whiteside, M.D., M.P.H., writer and researcher Ian Baldwin, and solar expert and climate researcher Dana Wigington. One of the most informative websites on the subject is Dana Wigington’s Geoengineering Watch.
Climate geoengineering in part represents efforts to manipulate the climate (weather) and manage solar radiation on a global scale but creates its own problematic toxic environmental and medical impact. There is a large body of information regarding the types of particles being sprayed into the air. Many of these particles are potentially toxic to human, animal, and plant life. Thus, a primary concern in medical science is that the metal oxides and aerosolized chemicals used in geoengineering are potential biological contaminants to humans and wildlife.
This troposphere geoengineering spraying operation to manipulate the weather now exist in all 50 states and almost all industrialized countries. Mounting evidence suggests that the millions of tons of aluminum, barium, and strontium oxide particulates purportedly used in geoengineering programs explain the dramatically increasing levels of these metals in sampled water and soil tests. Scientists in several countries have linked recent plant and animal die-offs to aluminum and/or barium toxicity drawing even more attention to global geoengineering programs. Independent analysis of aerosolized chemical fallout has allegedly identified many other toxic chemicals (including but not limited to): aluminum, arsenic, barium, cadmium, ethylene dibromide, lead, mercury, methyl aluminum, cesium, thorium, strontium, and even live biological matter – bacterial and fungal species.
Climate geoengineering fallout is extensively contaminating our waters, our soils our crops, and every breath we take. These metals raining down on Earth are dramatically changing the pH of the soil to become excessively alkaline, killing trees and plants. Researchers claim many of these aerosolized particles are nanoscale. That they are so small they can easily penetrate from the lung into the bloodstream and adhere to cell receptors like a plaque. Once absorbed they are almost impossible to eliminate from the body.
Most people, when confronted with the idea of clandestine geoengineering, find the idea psychologically incomprehensible. If anyone were to Google chemtrail they would discover hundreds of websites designed to debunk this idea as false. If shown reliable photographic evidence of aerosol tanks inside planes and specialized jets mounted on aircraft to release the aerosol or other real-life visual evidence, they will still deny what they see and proclaim it all is contrails, not chemtrails. Even, if shown patents for this process they still will deny its possibility. This all-too-common deniability is partly because there have been no academic investigations, no informed consent, and no disclosure as to the nature of all the toxic substances now being dispersed into the upper atmosphere. Nor has there been one human health risk assessment or environmental impact study submitted for public and civil examination, comment, or debate.
Chicken Little was right, the sky is falling, and we need to become more aware, do diligent research, and help others become conscious of the dangers of climate geoengineering polluting our world and depleting the ozone layer. Remember the moral of the traditional Chicken Little story is to have courage, even when it feels like the sky is falling or really is.