UK MET OFFICE PUSHES CLIMATE HYSTERIA WHILE SPAIN SPRAYS CHEMTRAILS
Britain's "authority" on weather-related issues is the 'Met Office'. But the Met Office is a joke; a hype-factory which cannot even deliver a moderately accurate weather forecast. Instead, they obsess on fear-mongering about a non-existent 'climate crisis'. Met Office boffins can't predict the weather any better than a 12 year-old with a telescope, but insist they can predict the 'climate' decades in advance. Incidentally, for over 70 years, military scientists have been manipulating clouds, rain, snow, hail, lightning, storms and whirlwinds across the globe, but in the fantasy world of the Met Office, geo-engineering does not exist.
I don't know why I persist in consulting the Met Office to see if the sun's going to shine. Probably because it so rarely does, due to the abundance of mysteriously uniform clouds that obscure the sun on 350 days of every year nowadays. Possibly because it's supposed to be summer, although so far the south-west of Scotland has enjoyed perhaps six days that could be described as 'summery'. Anyway, at 7 a.m. on Saturday it was overcast and grey so I checked my local forecast and was pleased to see that cloudless sky and bright sunshine would bless the neighborhood for the next five hours.
Five hours later I was still staring at the same slate-grey slab of low cloud with not a glimpse of blue let alone sunlight. I returned to the Met's website (where their 'forecast' for the island had been hastily adjusted to align with reality) and read a short lecture informing me that I was living through the 'hottest July in history' complete with serious danger of heat-stroke, drought and forest fires. So that grey slab over my head was obviously a figment of my overheated imagination.
Naturally, the Met took care to remind me this 'unprecedented' outbreak of scorching heat was due to excessive carbon emissions carelessly generated by human activity -a monstrous, looming catastrophe for which I and others like me are to blame. In 2022 it seems no state-funded organisation has any purpose other than to scold me, threaten me with death and disaster, and demand that I abandon the pursuit of happiness and get ready to suffer. Citizen-shaming appears to be the raison d'etre of modern government.
I imagine it's the same elsewhere in europe, although the people of Spain -no strangers to the joys of sunshine- must have been slightly taken aback to learn that their government spent much of 2020 spraying them like bugs.
On April 16th 2020 the Official State Gazette published Order/351/2020 [Read it HERE in Spanish] which authorises the Spanish military to spray "biocide" chemicals from the air as part of the government's "Covid pandemic response". Here are a couple of salient quotes :
"The Ministry of Health has been publishing and updating the list of biocides to be used against the new coronavirus, authorized and registered in Spain according to the UNE-EN 14476 standard, which evaluates the virucidal capacity of antiseptics and chemical disinfectants. In particular, due to their special effectiveness, some biocides are established in main group 1 of article 1.1 of Royal Decree 830/2010, of June 25, which establishes the regulations governing training for carrying out treatments with biocides."
"The CBRN defense units of the Armed Forces and the Military Unit of Emergencies (UME) have personal means, materials, procedures and the sufficient training to carry out aerial disinfection, since these are operations that they execute regularly, with the exception that instead of using biocidal products they do it with other decontaminating chemicals."
Interesting stuff for those of us with one eye on the increasingly unconvincing skies. But this is by no means the first time the Spanish authorities have been outed for chemtrailing. Step forward the wonderfully named Ramon Tremosa i Balcells - a highly-qualified Catalan academic who is also a Member of the European Parliament.
Not exactly a tin-foil hat wearing cellar-dweller, Ramon is a respected economist, a professor in the Economic Department of Barcelona University and something of a political maverick, affiliated to no party. He has been an MEP since 2009, but is rightly notorious for the startling "chemtrail" question he put before the European Commission on June 19th 2015.
Being both an awkward customer and a smart cookie, Ramon submitted his parliamentary inquiry as a formal "written question" which thus required a formal "written reply", meaning the exchange was entered into the EC historical record. Here is the text of his question:
Four employees of Spain’s Meteorological Agency have confessed that Spain is being sprayed nationwide by aircraft that are spreading lead dioxide, silver iodide and diatomite through the atmosphere. The objective is to keep rain away and allow temperatures to rise, which creates a summer climate for tourism while benefiting corporations in the agricultural sector. In turn this is causing very severe instances of the extreme weather phenomenon known in Spanish as ‘gota frÃa’
The autonomous communities of Murcia and Valencia and the province of Almeria are the most affected, to the extent that not a drop of rain falls in over seven months, catastrophic ‘gota frÃa’ storms are generated, and respiratory diseases are caused among the population due to the inhalation of the lead dioxide and other toxic compounds. These aircraft are taking off from San Javier military airport in Murcia.
Can the Commission confirm that it has received a report from Spanish meteorologists asking it to adopt a position on this matter?
What is the Commission’s view of this situation?
Does the Commission think that there are commercial reasons for these actions by governments, in particular, relating to the interests of food sector corporations, energy companies and the pharmaceutical and medical industries?
[See the original question (in English) on the EC Parliament website HERE]
Not exactly the demented ravings of a stoned conspiracy theorist. I was particularly impressed by the specifics :" lead dioxide, silver iodide and diatomite", the naming of the San Javier military airbase and the financal interests driving the programme. Ramon, remember, had been an MEP for six years at this point and was extremely well-connected in both the agricultural and commercial sectors.
A month after submitting his query, the EC finally produced its written reply, which was basically "What report? We never saw any report? We investigated and found no evidence. Geo-engineering would be a bad thing." [See the full reply here]
Nothing to see here, in other words. What became of the 'four employees of Spain's Meteorogical Agency" and their 'confession" is anybody's guess. You'd think twice about being a whistleblower in Spain, though, when you consider how they treat bulls.
We in Britain ,of course, have our own meteorological agency -the Met Office. They have plenty of (alarm) bells, but apparently no whistles. After consuming around 2000 words of their doom-laden prophecies on Saturday, I was invited to complete a short survey. This included an invitation to offer any ideas I might have about ways the Met Office website could be improved. Readers may be assured that I made several quite colourful suggestions.
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