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CHEMTRAILS%20-%20CONFIRMED%20-%202010%20by%20William%20Thomas

CHEMTRAILS%20-%20CONFIRMED%20-%202010%20by%20William%20Thomas

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On January 8, 1999, ENS wire service carried my first dispatch on these mystery lines in the sky<br />

worldwide:<br />

"Contrails" Mystify, Sicken Americans<br />

By William Thomas<br />

ENS Jan 8/99<br />

Contrails spread by fleets of jet aircraft in elaborate cross-hatched patterns are sparking<br />

speculation and making people sick across the United States. Washington state resident<br />

William Wallace became ill with severe diarrhea and fatigue after watching several multiengine<br />

jets spend New Year's Day laying cloud lines in an east to west grid pattern. A<br />

neighbor working outside came down with similar symptoms. But their wives, who<br />

remained indoors, suffered no ill effects from the inexplicable maneuvers which<br />

observers liken to high-altitude "crop-dusting" by unidentified multi-engine aircraft…<br />

The strange spray patterns are being reported repeatedly over towns in Tennessee,<br />

Connecticut, New Hampshire, New York, Nevada, Idaho, Mississippi, Montana,<br />

Oklahoma, Washington and California.<br />

Wallace has been watching formations of high-flying jets weave grid-like contrails above<br />

his home since last summer. Each time, "We get a taste in our mouth," he reports. He<br />

and his wife Ann get "kind of tired and sick," having "no energy to do anything."<br />

After plants began dying around his mountain cabin, "I got real sick for about three<br />

weeks," Wallace relates. "My eyes watered. Fluid came out of my nose. I could hardly<br />

move my arm up above my head to comb my hair for about a week." Wallace and his<br />

wife are not alone in their plight. In March, 1996, Dr. Greg Hanford bought an expensive<br />

camera and binoculars to keep an eye on jets spraying white bands above his<br />

Bakersfield, California home. Hanford has counted 40 or 60 jets on some "spray days."<br />

"Everybody seems to be getting sick from it," Hanford told ENS. "Hackin' and coughin'<br />

when you really get nailed with this stuff." The dentist, many of his patients and two<br />

receptionists have repeatedly contracted severe respiratory infections. Hanford's illness<br />

lingered for five months despite courses of four different antibiotics.<br />

"It's really weird," Hanford says. "You think two jets are going to hit each other—and then<br />

they make an X." The dentist says he has sometimes seen "furry globular balls" spread<br />

downwind in a long feather from the high-flying aircraft.<br />

Unlike normal contrails, which dissipate soon after a lone jet's passage, video taken by<br />

Wallace and Hanford show eerily silent silver jets streaming fat contrails from their<br />

wingtips in multiple, crisscross patterns. But instead of dissipating like normal contrails,<br />

these white jet-trails coalesce into broad cloud-bands that gradually occlude crystal clear<br />

skies. "Passenger jets don't make contrails that stay and become clouds," Wallace<br />

observes.<br />

Government officials deny that anything unusual is taking place. When Hanford called the<br />

local airport, tower personnel told him there was nothing going on." The jets were "just<br />

commercial" undergoing "international flight training." But a skeptical Hanford responded,<br />

"Is the FAA going to allow two jets to come at each other?"<br />

X's, overlapping W's and the Roman numeral XII are among the patterns flown by the<br />

mystery aircraft. Last June (1998), Hanford watched four aircraft spraying in circles to<br />

form a perfect bulls-eye. Through his Swaroski binoculars, Hanford could see what<br />

"looked like a 737" painted all-white on top with an "orangish-red" underbody and red

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