The name
chemtrails is a spin-off from contrails, which are condensation trails left behind flying aircraft. There is credible evidence that
chemtrails are toxic to man, animals, and the soil.
There is current concern in the United States about the increasing number of neurodegenerative patients. Since 2000, the number of Alzheimer’s patients has increased from 4.5 million to 5.4 million in 2012, according to the
Alzheimer’s Association.
One in eight people 65 or older have Alzheimer’s. A yearly increase seems inevitable because of the aging population, but environmental factors also play a role.
The article,
“Chemtrails, Nano-aluminum, and Neurodegenerative and Neurodevelopmental Effects” by Russell Blaylock, M.D., in the National Health Federation magazine “Health Freedom News” warns against one of these environmental hazards:
chemtrails.
Blaylock, who has retired from neurosurgery to do research, write, and teach, began to notice
chemtrails a few years ago and writes, “Of particular concern is that there are now so many—dozens every day are littering the skies.”
Chemtrails are made from aerosols, usually spread by non-passenger jets. What at first looks like contrails turns into ribbons of clouds that spread out making the sky look over-cast. They contain various toxic, and biological substances.
Blaylock concentrates on the effects of the nano-aluminum particles, as mentioned in Part 2 of
Chemtrails Over Las Vegas in the August 26, 2005, Las Vegas Tribune.
Chemtrails are not admitted as a threat or as existing by governments, but their existence occasionally comes out in the media. TV station KNBC Los Angeles, Calif. hosted
Toxic Sky, an account of sickness of children and record amounts of barium and aluminum in the water supply after
chemtrails were seen over San Bernardino.
In Aug. 2005 the
Las Vegas Tribune had a two-part article detailing the
chemtrails over Las Vegas, the ensuing
chemtrails sickness, and previous chemtrail history from other sources. In the Las Vegas Tribune report, the U.S. Air Force on their website called
chemtrails a “chemtrail hoax,” but “scientists working at Wright Patterson Air Force Base confirmed to the Ohio newspaper, Columbus Alive, that they were involved in aerial spraying experiments.
One involved aluminum oxide spraying related to global warming and the other involved barium stearate and had to do with high-tech military communications.”
Individuals who have noticed health problems, die-off of livestock or crops concurrently with the appearance of
chemtrails have investigated on their own, having their blood, soil, water, and atmosphere tests made to compare with the norms. A compendium of these reports both documented and anecdotal is on
Strange Days Strange Skies online.
The documentary film What in the World Are They Spraying? produced by G. Edward Griffin, Michael Murphy, and Paul Wittenberger shows the impact on the environment of
chemtrails. For instance, the snow on Mount Shasta normally has 7 parts per billion (ppb) of aluminum, but over the last four or five years it has increased to 61,000 ppb.
Soil in northern California is turning alkaline, disrupting the root systems of trees. Farmers have noted that some plants will no longer grow in Hawaii. Fishermen see fewer bugs for the fish. These are a few examples from the above documentary.
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