CHEMTRAILS%20-%20CONFIRMED%20-%202010%20by%20William%20Thomas
CHEMTRAILS%20-%20CONFIRMED%20-%202010%20by%20William%20Thomas
CHEMTRAILS%20-%20CONFIRMED%20-%202010%20by%20William%20Thomas
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Based in Gakona, Alaska, this unclassified joint U.S. Air Force and Navy project known<br />
as the High Altitude Auroral Research Project (HAARP) has for the past several years<br />
been using phased array antennas to steer powerful beams of tightly-focused radio<br />
waves "to stimulate," heat and steer sections of the upper atmosphere.<br />
Awarded in 1985 to MIT physicist Bernard Eastlund, HAARP's commercial patent claims<br />
that directed energy beams of more than one-billion watts can be used for "altering the<br />
upper atmosphere wind patterns using plumes of atmospheric particles as a lens or<br />
focusing device" to disturb weather thousands of miles away.<br />
In an interview with this reporter, Eastlund admitted, "I had looked at using this intense<br />
beam, which can be angled, to do some experiments in terms of guiding the jetstream,<br />
moving it from one spot to another. I presume it is possible, which might lend credence to<br />
these other things…"<br />
Farmer guesses that besides its obvious tactical military applications, aerial-seeding of<br />
contrail-clouds aligned in HAARP's characteristic grid-patterns could be part of a secret<br />
U.S. government initiative to address the global weather crisis brought about by<br />
atmospheric warming.<br />
The aircraft spraying that has sickened Americans across the country may not be<br />
confined to the United States. On August 11, 1998, "USA Today" reported dozens of<br />
residents of Quirindi, Australia "swearing they saw cobwebs fall from the sky" after<br />
unidentified aircraft passed overhead.<br />
Media coverage of the Wallace’s plight was not well received in certain corridors of power. After William<br />
Wallace went to Channel 2 television news with his claim that odd-acting contrails were making him and<br />
his wife sick, “two jets buzzed me and left a contrail” over their yard.<br />
Two days later, after returning to Channel 2 with this new complaint, a small airplane over flew the<br />
Wallace’s remote homestead. When it reached their property, Wallace says the prop plane emitted a<br />
chemtrail from its tail. The plane passed directly over their house, shutting off its valve as it exited their<br />
property.<br />
“After that,” Wallace relates, “we started getting really sick. We got horrible headaches and backaches<br />
and bone aches and we felt nauseous and sick and we felt very sick. We felt we would get cancer and<br />
die. Ann got shaky and achy and went upstairs to bed.”<br />
The propeller planes were “white planes with blue on the tips. I call them UN planes. They fly by all the<br />
time. And out of its tail came a spray and we got real sick and that was tellin’ me to shut up.”<br />
On New Year’s Day, 1999 Wallace was outside splitting wood when… “It started up again. The jets<br />
came over about three times.”<br />
That evening another jet flew over their remote mountain home and William Wallace showed Ann<br />
chemtrails woven in a silver tracery against the moon. About six in the morning, Wallace became sick<br />
with diarrhea. He suffered from diarrhea all day – “the worst I ever had it.”<br />
But Anne, who had remained indoors when the jets were working overhead, suffered no ill effects from<br />
maneuvers many observers liken to high-altitude “crop-dusting”.<br />
After requesting an explanation from the FAA’s Arthur Jones in Spokane, William Wallace received a<br />
letter stating in part: