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

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

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eventually hurricanes, Cordani told me, “We want to attack it in its embryo stage, whether off the coast<br />

of Africa or wherever, and get it out of the way.”<br />

When asked to supply additional information on the air force test that dispensed his company’s product<br />

into a storm off the South Florida coast in October 2001, Cordani did not respond.<br />

But the U.S. Air Force admitted to CNN in July 2004 that it had broken up a storm over the Atlantic using<br />

products made by a company called Dyn-O-Mat.<br />

The following year, a serving member of the U.S. military confirmed his work with the C-130s used to<br />

seed hurricanes Frances, Charles and Ivan as they closed the Florida coast.<br />

According to the air force, specifically modified C-130s are<br />

used by the 757th wing based at Youngstown, Ohio - near<br />

“chemtrail central” at Wright Patterson - for to spray pesticides<br />

on South American cocoa crops.<br />

The 757th has six of Penner’s Modular Aerial Spray Systems<br />

to load and reload its four MASS-modified C-130s. Each<br />

MASS unit has a 2,000-gallon capacity and flow rate of 232<br />

gallons per minute. [The Officer July 2000]<br />

According to this source, the returning squadron could be<br />

resuppplied and refueled in just 10-minutes using the<br />

special tracks and containers of the MASS Containerized<br />

Cargo Turnaround System to load fresh tanks of<br />

hurricane-seeding chemicals into the giant transports<br />

while they were being “hot-fueled” with engines running.<br />

Conroy Penner and his brother Murray helped fabricate<br />

the C-130 spray tanks at Conair in British Columbia under<br />

a United States Air Force contract specifying 11 special<br />

tank systems for use with Hercules C-130s to “spray<br />

insects” on USAF bases in the States.<br />

The transports make their spray runs at 200 knots at just 100 feet, laying a 100 foot-wide swath of the<br />

UN-banned herbicide glyphosate over Colombian coca plants. Colombian farmers hit by this new “Agent<br />

Orange” complain that wind-drifted fungi banned by the UN are hitting adjacent agricultural fields. “The<br />

fumigation has caused damage to our yucca and sugarcane crops and has caused sickness in our<br />

children,” said Francisco Tenorio, president of the Regional Indigenous Organization.<br />

Across Columbia, communities report that indiscriminate fumigation is causing illnesses, destroying<br />

pastures and food crops, poisoning livestock and contaminating water supplies. Photos displayed at a<br />

press conference showed food crops destroyed by fumigation alongside thriving coca plants that<br />

somehow escaped the herbicide.<br />

About 500 bird species also inhabit the region targeted by USAF C-130 spray planes. The<br />

Environmental Protection Agency’s own study on the herbicide published in 1993 noted that in<br />

California, a state that is required to report pesticide poisonings, glyphosate was ranked third out of the<br />

25 leading causes of illness or injury due to pesticides. [Inter-Press Service November 22/00]<br />

“From a global bio-diversity perspective, defoliating and poisoning vast areas of Colombian forests is<br />

like dynamiting the Taj Mahal, a global jewel of humanity’s cultural heritage,” protested David Olson,<br />

director of the conservation science program at the World Wildlife Fund.

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