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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A few weeks later, on December 21, the Galveston Daily News looked like a bad acid trip under a<br />
Stephen Kingish headline: “Mysterious Webs Drop from the Skies”. The story by Michael A. Smith<br />
described skies over Galveston County on Friday “literally filled with floating, shimmering strands and<br />
fuzzy, luminescent wads that looked a lot like spider webs.”<br />
It was around noon when Lorenzo DeLacerta spotted the weird webs while delivering building material<br />
to a site a mile east of the San Louis Pass Bridge. “It blew my mind,” DeLacerta said. “I have never seen<br />
anything like it before.”<br />
Back at the Daily News, a half-dozen skeptical news minds were also being expanded as “people were<br />
forced to admit that there was, indeed, under way a slow, steady parade of slender web-like strands,<br />
some near the ground, some way up where the airliners ply.”<br />
The wacky webs remained visible in the air “for five hours, and poles were left wrapped with the sticky<br />
strands and fuzzy wads. So what were they? Official sky-web sources seem scarce. A spokesman at<br />
the National Weather Service Office in League City said the service had received no reports of flying<br />
webs, and that flying webs “weren’t really their thing.”<br />
A few weeks later, on December 22, 2002 Oklahoma’s Duncan Banner asked, “Just What Was That<br />
White Stuff?” Toni Hopper hopped on the story, asking, “What was that powdery substance covering<br />
vehicles throughout Stephens County on Wednesday? Was there a volcano eruption somewhere in the<br />
world, dropping ash on Duncan? Maybe it was<br />
some unknown chemical sprayed from an airplane<br />
as it flew over southern Oklahoma during the early<br />
morning hours. Was it acid rain? A terrorist attack?<br />
Fairy dust?”<br />
Fairy dust seemed the most plausible answer as<br />
two library employees asked Hopper to follow them<br />
out o the parking lot. “I was astonished to see their<br />
cars covered in the powdery substance,” Hopper<br />
hyperventilated. “I recalled seeing similar white<br />
spots on my vehicle earlier in the day. At the time, I<br />
hadn’t given them a second thought. What was that<br />
stuff?”<br />
At a nearby Wal-Mart, people shopping between 11 p.m. and midnight reported their cars were clean<br />
when they entered the store. But when they came out, they found their vehicles covered with white<br />
powdery. “Cokie Kifer felt sprinkles on her head when she was walking into Wal-Mart around 11:30 p.m.<br />
Tuesday. She assumed it was rain.”<br />
A local resident named Danny wrote his own “rain” report the next day:<br />
My car, all of my family member’s cars, including a cousin in southeast Oklahoma whose car<br />
was covered as well. I don’t know what it was, but I do know it was everywhere. The best way to<br />
describe it is kind of like rain, mixed with a little bit of snow, mixed with a little mud. It wasn’t just<br />
simple water or dirty rain that ran off of things. It had substance and its appearance and the way<br />
it stuck to things just seemed unnatural.<br />
That was weird. But Danny found the lack of “news” coverage even more boggling: “It’s amazing that<br />
this stuff covered literally thousands and thousands of cars, and obviously many miles, but nothing has<br />
been said about it here in Oklahoma in the media.”