Page 92 - Elana Freeland - Under an Ionized Sky
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CHAPTER FOUR
Sky Anomalies
A system for facilitating cloud formation and cloud precipitation includes a controller and a
beam emitter that is responsive to the controller. The beam emitter is configured to emit a beam
to form charged particles within an atmospheric zone containing water vapor. The charged
particles enhance the formation of cloud condensation nuclei such that water vapor condenses
on the cloud condensation nuclei forming cloud droplets. The system further includes a sensor
configured to detect a cloud status and output a signal corresponding to the cloud status to the
controller.
— “System for facilitating cloud formation and cloud precipitation,” US 9526216 B2,
Kenneth G. Caldeira, December 27, 2016
At last count, there were sixteen different mixtures of chemicals for aerosol distribution—twelve
electrically different from each other and four being time tags logging how the mixtures are
working at all layers in the vertical wall of connectivity between them. Ultimately, the military
plans twenty-four layers extending from Earth into the higher frequencies of space. Thus the
electromagnetic Space Fence, with its cloak of invisibility dependent upon terahertz (THz)
wavelengths so small they can manipulate individual atoms, is to be contiguous with the witches’
brew in our atmosphere.
Not surprisingly, the number of “new clouds” being generated by geoengineering is the same
as the number of chemical mixtures—a baker’s dozen decided by the Cloud Appreciation
Society for the World Meteorological Organisation to include in its revised International Cloud
Atlas first published in 1896. Joining Nature’s clouds—cirrus (L., feathers), cumulus (L., heaped
up), stratus (L., layered and smooth), and nimbus (L., rain-bearing cloud)—are asperitas (L.,
roughness), cauda (L., tail), fluctus (Kelvin-Helmholz), murus (L., wall), flumen (“beaver’s tail,”
associated with a supercell severe convective storm), and the species volutus (L., rolled).
The inclusion of rainbows, halos (sun dogs), snow devils and hailstones is odd—“All types
of optical effects can be defined as clouds,” says BBC meteorologist John Hammond, who is
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looking forward to “many new entries in the future” —but no odder than lumping anthropogenic
plasma cloud production via chemicals and radio frequency and microwaves in with Nature’s
clouds. As the World Meteorological Organization puts it, “19th century tradition, 21st century
technology”: