
A new allegation has sparked debate in the US. Environmental researcher Dane Wigington claims that the US military is conducting a secret global operation that involves spraying millions of tons of toxic particles into the atmosphere for the purpose of climate control.
According to Wigington, the program called “geoengineering” aimed to block the sun and slow global warming. But, he says, the consequences have been catastrophic:
"These programs are destroying the planet's vital systems," he declared in an interview with Tucker Carlson.
He claims that modified military and civilian aircraft are releasing between 40 and 60 million tons of toxic nanoparticles such as aluminum, barium, manganese, graphene and various polymers every year.
According to Wigington, laboratory tests of rain and the testimony of several "signalers" show the presence of heavy metals that, he says, are linked to aerial spraying. He also cites a 1978 US Senate report on "weather modification" that, he says, proves that such programs have been in place for decades.
On his website Geoengineering Watch, he published test results from Mount Shasta in California, where he claims to have found high levels of aluminum and barium, many times above natural limits.
US authorities and much of the scientific community categorically deny the existence of such a program. A 2016 survey of 77 atmospheric scientists found that 98.7% of them found no evidence of “massive covert spraying” into the atmosphere.
Scientists explain that the "lines" seen in the sky are contrails (frozen water vapor from aircraft engines that form at high altitudes), not chemicals.
Despite denials, Wigington and his supporters insist that "weather control" programs are real and are seriously damaging the global ecosystem.
Even public figures like Robert F. Kennedy Jr., currently the US Secretary of Health and Human Services, have called for investigations into the matter.
"Those materials are put into jet fuel. I will do everything I can to find out who is behind this," Kennedy said in April.
While the scientific community considers the "chemtrails" theory a modern myth, Wigington's new statements have brought the fear of climate manipulation back into the spotlight, a topic that continues to divide the public between suspicion and belief.
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