Rainmakers Revealed
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Admits to Weather Manipulation
By Jonathan Harvey | BlendrNews.com
“He who controls the weather will control the world.” – Lyndon B. Johnson, 1962
For years, they called it a conspiracy. They mocked, censored, and gaslit anyone who dared to ask questions about geoengineering or weather modification. But now, after catastrophic floods across Texas, New Mexico, and North Carolina, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, or the EPA, has finally cracked the door open. And guess what? It was never a conspiracy. It was just an inconvenient truth.
The EPA just dropped new online resources acknowledging geoengineering, cloud seeding, and solar radiation management—things they’ve spent decades pretending didn’t exist. So why now? Well, maybe because a Texas-based weather modification company, Rainwater Tech, received death threats after cloud seeding just days before the floods. The CEO says it’s all just a coincidence, and maybe it is. But after decades of denial, people have the right to be suspicious.
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Even the EPA’s own administrator, Lee Zeldin, went on X and said, “Flat out. Americans have questions about geoengineering and contrails. They expect honesty and transparency from their government … This ends today.”
So what exactly does the EPA now admit? For starters, solar engineering is real. This is where they inject sulfur into the stratosphere to block the sun. They also admit to cloud seeding, which involves spraying silver iodide in the clouds to force rain. This, of course, has been happening for 50 years and already occurs in over 50 countries. In the U.S., it’s sold as a drought-fighting miracle, but there’s almost no transparency, no oversight, and no informed public consent.
They also addressed so-called chemtrails, dismissing them as harmless contrails. But at the same time, they admit they’re now tracking private actors involved in geoengineering. So is it harmless, or is it worth investigating?
In any case, one thing I can appreciate is that the EPA didn’t sugarcoat the potential dangers of geoengineering. According to their own materials, it could destroy the ozone layer, disrupt global and regional weather patterns, harm or wipe out entire crops, trigger acid rain—that’s a fun one—and deepen global inequality if deployed unevenly. In other words, steal rain from one region to dump it on another, which starts to sound a lot like warfare.
You could either starve your enemies by limiting their crop yield or flush them out by absolutely drenching their most populated floodplains. If that sounds familiar, it’s because the U.S. did something similar during the Vietnam War to extend the monsoon season over the Ho Chi Minh Trail.
So yes, geoengineering and weather modifications are very real. I guess that’s another check mark for the conspiracy theorists. But here’s the thing—you don’t get to play God with the sky and expect zero repercussions. There’s no free lunch, folks. We’re tampering with systems we barely understand and pretending we can fix climate change by hacking the atmosphere and blocking the sun.
This is a very stupid game. And you know what they say about stupid games: play stupid games, win stupid prizes.
Originally published on Instagram @itsjonathanharvey