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

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

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“It worked, brother! This is what we’ve been looking for,” declared an ecstatic Dyn-O-Mat CEO Peter<br />

Cordani. “Our point is proven.” [NewOrleansChannel.com; Sun-Sentinel]<br />

Measured against single storm’s potential losses up to $40 billion, it would cost just over $6 million to<br />

drop two doses of Dyn-O-Gel weighing 1.67 million pounds into a fully developed hurricane. Five air<br />

force KC-10 tankers could deliver this amount of powder into the western edge of a hurricane.<br />

Since 2001, in all press coverage of Cordani’s achievements and ambitions, there has been no mention<br />

of government funding, or air force tankers spraying Dyn-O-Gel into tropical storms. The classified Dyn-<br />

O-Mat story evaporated like gel-bombed clouds over Palm Beach.<br />

But what is the potential downside? Hurricanes redistribute tropical warmth northwards, helping to adjust<br />

and balance the climate. And NOAA research meteorologist Robert Black worries, “Such seeding could<br />

easily make the storm worse, by removing precipitation faster, thereby unloading the convective updraft<br />

and allowing them to create tornadoes, hail, lightning, etc.” [Business 2.0 Jan /02]<br />

Hurricane-seeding could also slow these massive storms down, causing their destructive deluge to<br />

linger longer over populated areas.<br />

A WALK ON THE BEACH<br />

Just before Frances hit, its central eye suddenly expanded from the usual 20 miles across to 70 nautical<br />

miles wide.<br />

“That is just unbelievably large,” exclaimed a CNN affiliate out of Jacksonville. “And it’s moving<br />

unbelievably slow. If it’s going five, they say eight miles an hour, it could take 10 hours for the eye to go<br />

through. I mean that’s crazy.”<br />

It took 13.<br />

WFOR-TVs Dave Malkoff was on hurricane watch at Juno Beach just north of West Palm Beach when<br />

he was drawn to something on the water. It was 9:14 Saturday morning and Frances was coming in at a<br />

walk as Malkoff strode toward the shoreline to get a closer look.<br />

“Gel foam down here on the ocean,” Malkoff told viewers. “Once these waves crash, you’re going to see<br />

something interesting. Once the waves crash they instantly mix with foam – watch! That’s the foam right<br />

there. And it instantly turns into like a foam that you would have in your bathtub, and it blows away like a<br />

solid. Instantly, this foam that’s coming off the ocean mixes with the sand and is blowing down this way.”

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