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      Chemtrails....who believes

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      robbyr
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      Chemtrails....who believes
      Jul 21, 2009 11:41:34 pm
      A Chemtrail, is a contrail by another name,
      the theory is that, poisions are put into the jet engine, and these poisions materialise as clouds and slowly drift over the country by criss-crossing of aeroplane smoke and vapor release in the jet engines.

      Now i dont know how this is possible,

      But there are a lot of funny looking "falling clouds", that do appear from recent contrails, i dont know if there is anything in it, does anybody have any info of views about this subject as im undecided as to what to believe, it seems far fetched to me, but apparently some american authorities have admitted to it, under the premise of creating clouds to reduce global warming.

      any views or info on this all you people out there.
      Bahrosa-LFC
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      Re: Chemtrails....who believes
      Reply #1: Jul 22, 2009 01:27:05 am
      What do you mean, like creating rain? Apparently they did it at the Beijing Olympics last year, but correct me if i'm wrong.
      Shay
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      Re: Chemtrails....who believes
      Reply #2: Jul 22, 2009 11:11:39 am
      Robby, what the F**k do you smoke on a regular basis?

      I suggest you cut back to 3 spliffs per day.   ;)
      RedLFCBlood
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      Re: Chemtrails....who believes
      Reply #3: Jul 22, 2009 11:22:05 pm
      I have seen something similar on a programme on Discovery Channel's Ways To Save The Planet that is currently been investigated by scientists involving clouds to reflect sunlight and thus slow down global warming it is as follows.

      Episode: Brighter Earth

      John Latham, an atmospheric physicist based at the National Centre for Atmospheric Research in Colorado, and Stephen Salter, an Edinburgh University engineer, believe that by changing the size of water droplets in a cloud they can increase the cloud's ability to reflect the sun and stop global warming. Their vision is to build a flotilla of ships that will roam the world's oceans and seed clouds with minute particulates.

      Its quite an interesting series and there is other alternatives being investigated as follows:

      Episode: Wrapping Greenland

      Dr. Jason Box, a glaciologist from Ohio State University, wants to prevent glaciers from melting by covering them with blankets that will reflect the powerful rays of the sun. Box is convinced that his specially chosen material is resilient enough for Arctic conditions, but just how indestructible is it really? The team goes airborne to reproduce some of the worst weather experienced in the Arctic Circle: a hurricane-force ice storm. After testing, they deploy a 10,000-square-yard, reflective geo-textile blanket on the Greenland ice sheet. Will the blanket indeed reflect the sun and block the wind?

      Episode Space Sunshield

      Astronomer and professor Roger Angel thinks he can diffract the power of the sun by placing trillions of lenses in space and creating a 100,000-square-mile sunshade. He intends to use electromagnetic propulsion to get the lenses into space. Professor Angel has produced a diffraction pattern that will be etched onto each lens. The pattern will cause the sun's rays to change direction. The task force tests this pattern by etching it onto a lens. A scale model is built in a giant hanger with a model of Earth, a single lens representing the sunshade and a laser representing the sun. When the laser is turned on, it should hit the lens as a single beam and then split into a number of smaller beams that are diffracted away from the model.

      Episode Raining Forests

      Following the devastation of hurricanes Katrina and Rita, thousands of acres of Gulf Coast mangrove forests have been left bare. The huge swath of land presents a perfect proving ground for scientist Mark Hodges. Hodges believes he has devised a way to reforest large areas of Earth from the air. His idea? To use an aircraft to drop tens of thousands of canisters, each holding a tree seedling. The task force will carry out a series of tests to determine the type of aircraft, the delivery mechanism, canister design and whether or not the seeds will self-plant.

      Episode Infinite Winds

      Fred Ferguson, a Canadian engineer specializing in airships, has designed a revolutionary wind turbine that will use the constant winds that exist at 1,000 feet above sea level to produce energy. Testing a 70 foot prototype for the first time, they will need to prove that is can convert this untapped energy into electricity.

      Episode Orbital Power Plant

      We could have a source of never-ending power and, at the same time, reduce our carbon emissions to virtually zero. This is the astonishing vision of former NASA physicist John Mankins. He has a plan to send thousands of satellites into space, which will gather energy from the sun and then beam the solar energy down to Earth as microwave energy. The microwave energy will be collected by antennas on the ground. These then convert the energy to electricity. Can Mankins make it all work?

      Episode Fixing Carbon

      What if we could solve the problem of global warming by just scrubbing the air clean of carbon dioxide, before it has the opportunity to add to the blanket of greenhouse gases smothering the earth? Canadian professor David Keith, the 2006 Canadian Geographic "Environmental Scientist of the Year," believes we can do exactly that. He's building a prototype of a machine that will eventually be almost 400 feet high. It will suck ambient air into one end and spray it with sodium hydroxide solution, then expel clean air out the other end. Keith thinks he'll prove that his machine will be even more efficient than trees in cleaning C02 from the air.

      Episode Hungry Oceans

      Oceans cover 70 percent of our planet and are one of the most important carbon sinks we have, but the phytoplankton that convert carbon dioxide into living matter are declining – and many scientists believe that Climate Change is the culprit. Dr. Brian von Herzen of The Climate Foundation join forces with Marine Biologists at the University of Hawaii and Oregon State University to deploy three wave powered pumps. They head into the huge swells of the North Pacific in an attempt to restore this critical natural mixing effect.

      Having watched the full Series and seen what the teams developed and come up with along with costs and effectiveness of all the ideas put forward as all the trials and experiments were successful.  if all the technologies were combined we could really tackle global warming on a massive scale and reduce the damage that we have done to our planet.




      RedLFCBlood
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      Re: Chemtrails....who believes
      Reply #4: Jul 22, 2009 11:33:44 pm
      as you requested more info on chem trails, Ive gone slightly off topic but they are related in some way but makes for interesting reading all the same.

      Scientist reaches for the sky to curb global warming

      http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/scotland/article555171.ece

      FOR centuries man has dreamed of controlling the weather, from the rain dances of Native Americans to the fanciful exploits of Superman and other comic book heroes.

      Now Professor Stephen Salter, emeritus professor of Engineering Design at Edinburgh University, believes he can manufacture clouds that could help save the planet from global warming.

      Salter, who invented one of the first devices to turn wave power into electricity, claims that the highly reflective clouds could be used to bounce more of the sun’s rays back into space — counteracting rising temperatures caused by a build-up of greenhouse gasses in the Earth’s atmosphere.

      His technique, which is being examined by the environment department, involves using a fine mist of sea spray to increase the density, and whiteness, of low-lying stratocumulus.

      Salter, whose research will be published in Atmospheric Research, claims that by increasing the reflectivity of a third of clouds by 4% he could offset global warming.

      Salter’s heat shield would be created by a flotilla of hundreds of unmanned boats positioned off the west coast of Africa and in the Pacific, west of Peru, where the lumpy, white clouds are most prevalent.

      The forward movement of the boats — driven by wind-powered rotors — would turn underwater turbines attached to their hulls. These turbines would generate enough electricity to create an electrostatic field inside the rotors. Water sucked into the rotors would hit the electrostatic field, creating a very fine mist of sea water.

      As the sea-spray evaporates, tiny particles of salt would be carried into the low-lying clouds by rising currents of air. These particles would create more water droplets, increasing the clouds’ density and making them more reflective.

      Across the globe, 40,000 tons of sea spray is whipped up into the atmosphere each second naturally. Salter believes that an additional half a ton per second would have to be generated to brighten clouds by the necessary 4%.

      Initially, 500 radio-controlled boats, costing £1m each, would be deployed. The 70ft-tall vessels, which would be placed 25 miles apart, would be tracked by satellite. According to Salter’s calculations, an additional 500 boats would have to set sail each year to counteract rising levels of CO2.

      Although his idea may appear futuristic, Salter, who collaborated with Dr John Latham of the National Centre for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado, is convinced that a pilot project could be up and running within four years. He believes firms could be persuaded to off-set their carbon emissions by paying him £10 per ton to prevent a corresponding amount of heat from entering the atmosphere.

      While the academic admits the heat shield is not a solution to global warming, he believes the technique could act as a stop-gap until CO2 emissions are brought under control.

      Temperatures worldwide have risen 0.6C over the past century and are expected to accelerate over the next one.

      “I put everything I have into renewable energy but I don’t believe it is going to be enough,” said Salter. “People have signed up to Kyoto but CO2 still continues to increase at a faster rate so however much you do in the way of renewable energy or carbon sequestration there is going to be a huge gap left — it is essential that we control this as soon as possible.

      Pre-empting accusations that his project might be seen as fanciful, he added: “Can you think of anything that did not appear complex before it started? The car must have seen complex to those used to the horse and cart.”

      The government is aware of Professor Slater’s ideas and we are currently considering them,” said a spokesman for the department of environment, food and rural affairs.

      Sir David King, the governments chief scientific adviser, added: “The problem of global warming is sufficiently important and has such consequences for us all that we cannnot really reject any of these out-of-the-box ideas. Invesitigating the assistance of the generation of cloud cover has to be investigated.”

      In Russia, manipulating the clouds has been refined to an art. The air force is used regularly to drop chemical dispersal agents into clouds, to ensure fine weather on important occasions. The technique, which was used during the 1980 Moscow Olympics, was deployed again in May for the Victory Day celebrations to ensure that visiting dignitaries did not get wet. Last spring organisers of an open air concert of Sir Paul McCartney’s in St Petersburg ensured sunny weather by seeding the clouds with plane-loads of dry ice
      JD
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      Re: Chemtrails....who believes
      Reply #5: Jul 23, 2009 12:14:01 am
      Some crazy people in this world.

      Most of them seem to be on this board.
      RedRoy
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      Re: Chemtrails....who believes
      Reply #6: Jul 23, 2009 12:57:53 am
      Some crazy people in this world.

      Most of them seem to be on this board.
      Live long and prosper :action-smiley-035:
      bad boy bubby
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      Re: Chemtrails....who believes
      Reply #7: Jul 23, 2009 07:33:30 am
      Some crazy people in this world.

      Most of them seem to be on this board.

      Maybe there's a need for another section? ..........We could call it 'The Shroom Room'.  :angel:
      Gow
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      Re: Chemtrails....who believes
      Reply #8: Jul 23, 2009 09:15:20 am
      Sounds like a load of throllocks to me.
      robbyr
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      Re: Chemtrails....who believes
      Reply #9: Jul 28, 2009 10:53:49 pm
      According to some web sites and people, it is nothing to do with lowering the worlds temperature, but its to do with poisioning the population to reduce the population, eugenics, so the few can inherit the world. The release of heavy metals into the atmosphere to reduce our intellect, and slowly kill us. Also poisioning our water with Sodium Floride (excuse is to stop our teeth rotting), but Floride slowly rots the brain, apparently its now in the water in some uk regions like Birmingham (probably explains the accent).

      IT sounds scary, so next sunny day look up, and remember when you was a kid, did you see these sprays in the sky, i for one am undecided where i believe in this stuff, probably dont though.

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