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

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

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In Russell Springs, Kentucky, in a case of sudden fatal illness repeated throughout the USA: “My uncle<br />

who has always been healthy, had to go to the hospital because he couldn’t breathe. Well, he died in<br />

the hospital. He wasn’t even sick!”<br />

On February 15, an Akron resident reported:<br />

The trails above our home are lower and wider. How long has this been going on? Our kids are<br />

coming up with throat, lung, and upper respiratory ailments that no one can figure out. My<br />

husband started with the sore throat last week. Also, my elderly neighbor across the street is<br />

now in a hospital on a ventilator. She came down with what they thought was pneumonia, then<br />

decided it wasn’t that. It’s a thick lining growing in her lungs, and they do not know how to get rid<br />

of it or what it is. A local hospital is leasing an entire floor and it’s growing into a hospital<br />

company who specializes in upper-respiratory diseases.<br />

That same day, I used the word “chemtrails” for the first time in a follow-up piece for Environment News<br />

Service. I may have coined the word that would soon reverberate worldwide. I would soon make that<br />

term infamous…<br />

Or the other way around.<br />

Hundreds of photographs and videotapes made by ground observers show pairs or larger formations of<br />

aircraft spreading a white mist that thickens and drifts toward the ground. Hundreds of eye-witnesses -<br />

including police officers, pilots, military and public health personnel - provided detailed accounts of aerial<br />

spraying in characteristic "X's and east-to-west grid patterns, followed by occluded skies and acute autoimmune<br />

reactions and respiratory infections that saw emergency rooms across the nation flooded on<br />

heavy “spray days”.<br />

"I keep coughing phlegm that tastes bad," 50 year old Mary Young of Sallisaw, Oklahoma told ENS after<br />

an aircraft sprayed her home at rooftop level one night last January with something that struck the<br />

windows like sand. "My eyes hurt, my joints hurt. I'm not catching' my breath right. I can't get rid of this<br />

cold. I've had this bad headache – it's not just a headache – my eyeballs hurt so bad, way in the back. I<br />

just wish they would fall out."<br />

Severe headaches, nosebleeds, shortness of breath, joint pain and a dry hacking cough "that never<br />

leaves" are being reported by countless Americans jamming hospital Emergency Rooms from coast to<br />

coast. While December and January are traditionally bad months for asthma sufferers, patients, doctors<br />

and nurses across the USA reported hospital wards filled to overflowing with bronchitis, pneumonia and<br />

acute asthma admissions at up to twice normal winter rates.

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