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

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

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Whatever he was seeing was too thick for normal foam. Confirmation came at 11:28 that morning when<br />

a CBS-affiliate reported from Pompano Beach: “White foam all across the water. And it is not blowing<br />

away.”<br />

Those news reports reminded me of an item posted on the environmental website, Moonbow Media:<br />

“On July 19, 2001, ABC News reported a similar story of gelatinous ‘goo’ again washing up on beaches<br />

in West Palm Beach, Florida. This time it turns out the substance was identified as Dyn-O-Gel.”<br />

WHAT HAPPENED TO CHARLEY?<br />

As Hurricane Charley approached Jamaica, something strange occurred. “It was following a direct line<br />

path through the center of Jamaica, but suddenly it made a perfect arched curve to the south, and<br />

ended up back on its original course after it had swung around the island,” observed Michael Edward.<br />

“That was just as odd as the sudden right-hand turn it made into Charlotte Harbor. There's no doubt that<br />

since hurricane paths have been recorded over the past 200 years, no hurricane ever acted like Charley<br />

did, or had ever followed such an erratic path. This was one of the biggest reasons Tampa was the<br />

predicted landfall area.”<br />

As the biggest evacuation in Florida’s history got underway, “the sudden spike in Hurricane Charley’s<br />

strength took even forecasters by storm,” the Associated Press reported. “Then Charley started turning<br />

to the east, taking aim at the area south of Tampa Bay and officials were quickly looking at an entirely<br />

different storm.<br />

“At the same time as it turned, Charley rapidly strengthened, going from a Category 2 storm at 110 miles<br />

per hour to a Category 4 storm at 145 miles per hour in only three hours. This rapid intensification was<br />

outside the official forecast, which called for only a slight strengthening before landfall.” [AP Aug 14/04; Sept<br />

4/04]<br />

And something else happened, too.<br />

As Michael Edward noted, in the late 1800's Nicola Tesla discovered that the Earth reverberates with a<br />

pulsating electrical current in the ELF (Extremely Low Frequency) range. More than half-a-century’s<br />

concentrated research by Soviet and U.S. military researchers subsequently showed how artificiallycreated<br />

ELF waves identical to the frequency spectrum of human brainwaves can change thoughts and<br />

emotions. 7.83 Hz - Earth's pulse rate – makes people feel good; 10.80 Hz can produce riotous<br />

behavior and 6.6 Hz causes depression. 10 Hz puts people into a hypnotic state.<br />

This technology has been used in Afghanistan and Iraq, where “poppers” capable of reproducing a<br />

smorgasbord of frequencies were directed by the U.S. military against local populations – until severe<br />

electromagnetic “blowback” caused the program to be halted.<br />

In speaking with everyone he could “who survived the direct path of Hurricane Charley,” Michael Edward<br />

learned that “people were not just describing the pressure they felt in their ears or the other physical<br />

signs of rapid pressure changes. Rather, they were describing extreme mental and mood changes they<br />

could not control.<br />

About an hour before the center of Hurricane Charley passed over, survivors have described<br />

how they became very tired, depressed, and lethargic. Not the anxiety depression such<br />

anticipation would typically invoke. This was an overall mental and physical depression that even<br />

affected them with general body aches and a widespread feeling of non-wellbeing. Almost all<br />

said it was as if they were drugged with a pain killer, but without the "goofy side effects." They<br />

could do the things they needed to do, such as get mattresses into their bathrooms to huddle<br />

under, but their thinking seemed "surreal."

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