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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On January 24, 1999 Edgar reported that on “Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday and Thursday of last<br />
week, we were really hit hard with the contrails. I mean real bad. Everybody in this town is sick right now<br />
– sicker than a damn dog. It’s all in their head and their sinuses, and it hangs in the throat, [sore necks],<br />
ears ringing.”<br />
Edgar added: “Some customers that frequent our business have stated that they have been to the<br />
doctor and the offices have been full of sick people. Same thing at the Indian clinic.<br />
People have to wait for hours because the waiting room is full. Some people have reported being on<br />
their third and fourth round of antibiotics and they are still ill. We noticed excessive contrails Thursday<br />
February 11th.”<br />
Edgar became ill the following day, and visited a doctor. From a friend he learned that “Sparks regional<br />
hospital had over 500 people seeking medical attention at the emergency room for flu, or flu-like<br />
symptoms.”<br />
In nearby Gore, Oklahoma, Mary Young was watching TV on January 20, 1999 “about 2:30, quarter to<br />
three in the morning,” when she heard a prop plane in the distance, “going around and around.”<br />
Ignoring the television, she listened as the plane “kept getting closer and closer and closer.” Finally it<br />
went right over the house – so low “the windows rattled, and everything shook. It sounded like sand was<br />
hitting the windows.”<br />
About 1:30 that afternoon, Young went outside to rake leaves with her cousin. But when she began<br />
burning them, “an odor like the smoke bombs kids play with” made them put it out. “The smell was so<br />
nasty and so bad it scared me. I told my cousin let’s put it out because it’s hurting my eyes and burning<br />
my throat bad.”<br />
The full-blooded Cherokee has had a bad cold ever since. She says she “Keeps coughing phlegm that<br />
tastes bad. My eyes hurt, my joints hurt. I’m not catchin’ my breath right. I can’t get rid of this cold.”<br />
Even worse, Young says, “I’ve had this bad headache. It’s not just a headache. My eyeballs hurt so bad<br />
– way in the back – I just wish they would fall out. I’ve got a neighbor lady down the road who keeps<br />
talking about headaches all the time. This person had never complained of headaches before.”<br />
WILDFIRE<br />
In Phoenix, Arizona the January 28, 1999 edition of Arizona Republic reported 237 hospitalizations for<br />
bronchial problems in Phoenix that month is – “vs. last year at 160 or so."<br />
At the same time, hospitals in Portland, Oregon, Marietta, Georgia and Chandler, Arizona – as well as<br />
Bakersfield, Santa Cruz, Redding and Salinas, California and many other cities across the U.S. – were<br />
jammed with bronchitis, pneumonia and other acute respiratory cases after repeated spraying and<br />
cobweb-like fallout was reported in those regions.<br />
"We're getting sprayed real heavily with the contrails," a south Pennsylvania resident told ENS. "It's just<br />
total saturation."<br />
As overfilled Pennsylvania hospitals diverted their overflow respiratory emergencies to other facilities<br />
with bed space, another south-central Pennsylvania resident named Deborah Kammerer looked out her<br />
window and watched aircraft "flying and dispersing over the city. It was supposed to be a clear sunny<br />
day. It became more overcast as the day progressed. I observed how the white trails widened out and<br />
settled down creating a haze over everything."<br />
South Florida resident Karen Okenica told ENS she has watched on several occasions as contrails<br />
"crisscrossed or ran parallel to each other. They did not dissipate but got thicker and stayed in the sky<br />
for quite a while."