Activity

  • mims posted an update 4 years, 9 months ago

    I doubt governments sabotaging their own weather. I did witness driving home at 2 am west of phoenix a lone grey cloud in a summers night sky and at first thought the flashes were lightening but then, not lightening. Because white bursts of light began pulsing either side of the cloud which I thought was interesting … and wow, a sudden fan of bright light that lit up the west valley. I could see for miles, it was like daylight and not lightening. There was a rapid accumulation of cloud over the next few hours, out of nowhere… and a downpour the likes of which I have never seen and I lived there for 21 years. My question is why isn’t whatever that was being used now, over the area’s that need it?????

    • I have no problem believing a government would sabotage its own country’s weather, if it served their purposes (or the purposes of whoever’s interests the government in question actually promotes and defends).

        • I upvote this comment a thousand times or more. Governments are made up of people who can be bought or threatened or motivated in any number of ways…

            • The rain is formed using drone technology (inset) that gives clouds an electric shock to ‘cajole them’ into clumping together and producing precipitation. The UAE is one of the most arid countries on Earth, and it hopes the technique could help to increase its meagre annual rainfall. And it is working. Video footage (main) released by the UAE’s National Center of Meteorology shows monsoon-like downpours across the country which create a sheet of rain on the highways.

            • The rain is formed using drone technology (inset) that gives clouds an electric shock to ‘cajole them’ into clumping together and producing precipitation. The UAE is one of the most arid countries on Earth, and it hopes the technique could help to increase its meagre annual rainfall. And it is working. Video footage (main) released by the UAE’s National Center of Meteorology shows monsoon-like downpours across the country which create a sheet of rain on the highways.