Friday, December 31, 2010

Small Beginnings

I'd heard about persistent contrails, also known by some as "chemtrails" about two years ago, but I'd never seen any in person...until this week. I was out right before sunset, which I normally don't do because, well, I hate rush hour, and I was stunned to see, in the western sky, directly over the sun, a huge swath of, criss crossed persistent contrails. Many of them were old and pluming into clouds, but others were in the process of being made (we could see the planes up in the sky).  A look on either side of this area show absolutely no trails or cloud coverage at all. It was all in one concentrated area.

When I told my son about it the following morning, he decided to check out the skies around our home. Sure enough, there were two planes visible, in the process of creating persistent contrails.  We watched the planes create them, then in a matter of one hour, the entire sky was completely gray where just an hour before it was pure blue without a cloud in sight.
Whether these are chemtrails (as some government documents have mentioned) or they're persistant contrails, logic tells me that it's artificial and probably not beneficial to the health of humans, insects (like honeybees), animals, plants or the soil.  If indeed it's a chemical being sprayed as some trails I've seen in videos appear, or not, the lack of sunlight reaching the soil and life on earth is potentially hazardous. The sun is vital for growing food properly and beneficial to our bodies, as we absorb vitamin D this way. During the Industrial age, rickets was on the rise due to the unnatural, nearly continual lack of sun!  We just don't know what they are doing, as geo-engineers discuss the "possibility" of putting sulfur or aluminum in the atmosphere via planes in an effort to "save the earth".  It doesn't help that it's perfectly legal to experiment with these things at this time. I'll take my clear blue skies back, thank you.

So, after discovering this in my own backyard - literally,  I've decided to keep a log of what I'm seeing in our area of Virginia. Your comments are welcome.

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