Call Me Stormy

Finding righteous currents in turbulent times

Archive for the tag “Project Cirrus”

Govt.’s Secret Weather Policies

Valuetainment’s Patrick Bet-David says his research found that former CIA Director John Brennan once mentioned in a press conference that the United States has technology capable of altering weather patterns.

He dug further and uncovered government weather modification policies and experiments in the past, such as Project Cirrus, raising questions about the ability to control or prevent natural disasters, signaling more ethical concerns. He explains further and also discusses the little-known National Weather Modification Act of 1976, which directed the Secretary of Commerce to study weather modification and develop a national policy on the subject. Here’s more.

Controlling Weather Since 1947

The unusual parade of hurricanes swirling up and down the eastern coastline or swerving into the Gulf Coast this season is again raising concern of weather manipulation.

The Reese Report’s Greg Reese says that we, indeed, have had the technology to create, control and steer hurricanes for decades. He says that Project Cirrus was the first attempt to modify the weather, which was created in 1947 by General Electric and supported by the U.S. military. Irving Langmuir, who was in charge of GE’s atmospheric research department, admitted the project was about weaponizing the weather, a claim the government vehemently denied. The project was shelved for a few years and re-emerged in 1965 as Project Stormfury, which also experienced political drama, including Congressional hearings.

Fast forward to 1997, when Defense Secretary William Cohen announced that the U.S. now had the technology to control the weather, including volcanoes and earthquakes, and the government has since placed gag orders on employees of the National Weather Service.

Reese reports that the government moved its concern to more alternative energy to enhance the project, which included procuring more lithium, an abundant chemical in the U.S., specifically at King Mountain, N.C. More from Reese.

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