Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Rain Rain Go Away
















One learns the most amazing things by listening to late-night radio! Last night on Coast To CoastAMhttp://www.coasttocoastam.com/




I heard Will Thomas discussing the perils of chemtrails. Apparently the Chinese have PROMISED that there will be no rain during the Olympics. They are so sure of this that none of their outdoor stadia are covered--all open air. Thomas thinks the Chinese are pretty far advanced in their weather manipulation and can do some form of cloud-seeding and guarantee that all the visitors will have perfect weather.

This struck me as odd until I was reading Drudgehttp://www.coasttocoastam.com/
this morning. Lo and behold! Some poor Russian's house was hit with a 55 pound sack of CEMENT!



MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russian air force planes dropped a 25-kg (55-lb) sack of cement on a suburban Moscow home last week while seeding clouds to prevent rain from spoiling a holiday, Russian media said on Tuesday.

"A pack of cement used in creating ... good weather in the capital region ... failed to pulverize completely at high altitude and fell on the roof of a house, making a hole about 80-100 cm (2.5-3 ft)," police in Naro-Fominsk told agency RIA-Novosti.

Ahead of major public holidays the Russian Air Force often dispatches up to 12 cargo planes carrying loads of silver iodide, liquid nitrogen and cement powder to seed clouds above Moscow and empty the skies of moisture.

The homeowner was not injured, but refused an offer of 50,000 roubles ($2,100) from the air force, saying she would sue for damages and compensation for moral suffering.



The question of "moral suffering" aside, has anyone checked to see if any large sacks of cement have been spilled over the skies of Iowa????

1 comment:

Bobbisox said...

Ah, a few years ago when Art Bell still ran the show, the guests and guest moderators postulated that the reason Americans don't have rain seeding was the fear of law suits and troubles from not being effective.
Didn't ever hear about cement, though.