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

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

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Near Jonesboro, Arkansas that same month, a wife and husband traveling to his mother’s for<br />

Thanksgiving dinner…<br />

began noticing what appeared to be spider webs suspended up in the air or attached to trees<br />

and high-line electric wires. The webs continued on for several miles towards Jonesboro. We<br />

noticed some people rolling their windows down and trying to catch the webs or strands as they<br />

drove.<br />

As we approached Walnut Ridge, we began to see<br />

more of the fiber. It would be in big floating streams<br />

hundreds of feet long tens to hundreds of feet in the<br />

air and also gathered along the highway in bushes<br />

and trees and hi-line poles like so many very large<br />

cobwebs. As we were driving westward home with<br />

light high clouds allowing some sun to shine through<br />

the webs gathered along the highway looked like ice<br />

frozen in webs.<br />

Another eyewitness driving nearby saw gossamer strands<br />

“like a blanket 300 to 400 feet-long, blanketing power lines over the highway, hanging in trees, blowing<br />

in the air.”<br />

Also that November, this policeman wrote in his journal:<br />

I have been a police officer for nearly 24 years, and the last three years of my career has been<br />

spent working at Denver International Airport. Some of my work there includes directing traffic –<br />

most often at passenger drop-off on United Airlines side of the terminal (what we call ‘Six-West’).<br />

A couple weeks ago while I was directing traffic on six-west at the terminal I noticed fine<br />

filaments floating through the air. There were thousands of them, and some were thirty to forty<br />

feet long. They were floating down at ground level and perhaps a thousand or more feet up in<br />

the air.<br />

They were so fine that they could only be seen if the sunlight caught them just so. These<br />

filaments floated past for over an hour. I’ve never seen anything like it. Some of the filaments<br />

caught on light poles and other structures. At one point I reached out as one went by and caught<br />

some of it on my arm and clothing. It seems to me that spiders wouldn’t be flying around out on<br />

the Colorado prairie with winter setting in.<br />

COBWEBS IN COBDEN<br />

Living on Bell Hill directly across from Bald Knob, the tallest hill in Illinois, “J” reports that spray planes<br />

have been flying daily since December 21, 2000 - with only a few days off. It looks to him that the pilots<br />

are using Bald Knob as a reference while working a line from the Mississippi River to the Ohio River.<br />

J. is seeing as many as a dozen spray aircraft during a single session. - mostly “stretch Lear jets” or<br />

similar executive-type bizjets - with an occasional tanker-size plane working back and forth, west to<br />

east, east to west and occasionally north-south over the ridgeline.<br />

Collecting fibers dangling from tree limbs, J. recalls how Project SUCCESS sought to use updrafts along<br />

ridgelines to waft fibers spread by aircraft into the upper atmosphere, forming clouds.<br />

Under computer-enhanced electron microscope magnification at 3200x, he and a friend were able to<br />

clearly discern three fluorescing colors – red, green and blue – in the airdropped fibers covering his yard<br />

and farm machinery.

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