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

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

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Five air force KC-10 tankers – or a pair of the largest firefighting air tankers in the world, the gigantic<br />

Russian IL-76 water bombers converted to hurricane suppression – could deliver this amount of powder<br />

into the western edge of a hurricane. [St. Petersburg Times Aug 24/03; Chemtrails Confirmed 2007 by William<br />

Thomas; email to the author]<br />

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

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

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

eye to go through. I mean that’s crazy.”<br />

It took 13.<br />

GEL ON THE WATER<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. 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.”<br />

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 />

HANK<br />

“Hank” and I have been breaking major stories since I first interviewed this former military technician and<br />

Desert Storm veteran for my book, Bringing The War Home in 1991. The use of mind-and-mood altering<br />

“poppers” by the U.S. military in Afghanistan and Iraq, the detonation of at least three “low yield” nuclear<br />

bunker-buster bombs in those countries by U.S. forces, and the aborted nuclear strike on Iran by the<br />

Israeli Defense Forces F-16s after being intercepted by U.S. Air Force fighters over Iraq – all caused<br />

major waves in the U.S. Congress, British Parliament, Israeli Knesset and Iranian Government. And<br />

may even have saved some lives.<br />

With high-ranking sources on Capitol Hill, as well as inside the Pentagon and the Vatican, in our 18 year<br />

collaboration, Hank’s information has always proven accurate. So I was eager to learn what he knew<br />

about steering hurricanes.<br />

What about the skeptics who claim humans cannot possibly muster enough energy to deflect a<br />

hurricane?<br />

“It would be like trying to move a car with a pea shooter,” scoffs hydro-meteorologist Matthew Kelsch of<br />

the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder. “The amount of energy involved in a<br />

hurricane is far greater that anything we’re going to impart to it.” [AP Sept 23/05]<br />

So why not use a hurricane’s massive energy to redirect it?

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