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

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

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As long-lived CFCs, bromines and other industrial chemicals continued to devour Spaceship Earth’s<br />

solar shielding, ground level radiation levels were also rising alarmingly. U.S. farmers alone were losing<br />

more than $3 billion a year to crops damaged by rapidly rising rates of solar radiation, as an epidemic of<br />

sun-induced cataracts was sweeping North America. The U.S. EPA sharply revised its estimated skin<br />

cancer deaths from 9,300 to 200,000 sunshine-related fatalities over the next 50 years.<br />

Global warming threatened to bankrupt global insurers. Bigger than big oil and the international trade in<br />

arms, insurance companies handling more money than many once-sovereign nations are one of the<br />

world’s largest sources of investment capital. Losses from Extreme Weather Events and related<br />

damages were hitting a record $92 billion a year – three-times the annual dollar cost of the Vietnam War<br />

Reeling from catastrophic storm losses up 1,500%<br />

over the previous decade, this powerful lobby<br />

pressed Ottawa, Washington and Whitehall to turn<br />

down the heat on global warming. If global warming<br />

bankrupted insurers, the resulting “domino effect”<br />

would take out the money markets and the banks<br />

that backed them.<br />

Flagship insurer Lloyds of London was already nearly<br />

foundering after losing almost $11 billion in just four<br />

years. Insurance claims from Hurricane Andrew<br />

alone “totaled” $15.5 billion.<br />

Over many millennia, Earth’s climate has “cycled”<br />

between lesser extremes. But there is nothing “natural” about the unprecedented warming we are now<br />

experiencing. Tree rings from a 10,500 year-old Tasmanian pine show that the last 30 years have been<br />

the warmest in 2,000 years. In the past 3,800 years there has been only one comparable 30-year period<br />

of warmer temperatures than the present time. [Vancouver Sun Feb 4/94]<br />

And carbon levels are climbing steeply within our space colony’s closed, recirculating atmosphere.<br />

Today, the “CO2 Equivalent” of heat-trapping carbon dioxide, nitrogen and methane in Earth’s<br />

atmosphere are near 423ppm and climbing faster than a chemtrails tanker. If this trend continues, our<br />

“Climax Civilization” will suffer the same fate as our clear-cut “climax” rainforests.<br />

CHAOS<br />

We’re talking about major instabilities being unleashed across our planet with unpredictable<br />

consequences. Scientists call this a “nonlinear” dynamic. At the Santa Fe Institute, I talked to leading<br />

experts who simply call it Chaos. What happens when Chaos kicks in? As novelist Robin White writes in<br />

The Flight From Winter’s Shadow:<br />

There was a zone of uncertainty, a chaos zone where small perturbations had large effects...<br />

very soon after, a breaking point was reached. The world’s climate shifted suddenly and<br />

dramatically from the familiar to the utterly hostile. How long would it take? The journey from the<br />

zone of shadows to utter collapse was a matter of decades; perhaps as much as two. The<br />

climate was already in the shadow zone. Ten years sounded like a long time, but it wasn’t. Every<br />

five weeks you lost one percent of the time remaining until, until what?<br />

SUNSCREEN<br />

In 1998, the choice appeared stark. Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory calculated that cutting<br />

back fossil fuel burning 20% to 1990 levels would cost the U.S. economy $100 billion a year. But other<br />

scientists reported that carbon emissions must be slashed by 80% to curtail runaway global warming.<br />

Either way, global warming threatened to be a real showstopper.

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