FOIA reveals US DoD is spraying from airplanes over residential areas. At Night. Insecticides, herbicides...
[link to icandecide.org (secure)]
ICAN’s legal team recently obtained records through FOIA showing that the U.S. military sprays dangerous chemicals from airplanes over residential areas. The spraying is usually done at night (when insects are most active), so you likely wouldn’t realize that your home had been sprayed. It’s done by the U.S. Department of Defense (DOD), which has a specialized unit that is dedicated to spraying large areas of land (5,000 acres or more).
areas in Texas, Louisiana, Virginia, Parris Island in South Carolina, and the City of Burlington in North Dakota, just to name a few.
The records also show that the pesticides killed mosquitos that were inside boxes inside of buildings.
Incredibly, one flight path shows the planes intentionally avoided spraying areas with bald eagle nests.
So, if the chemicals being sprayed are too dangerous for baby eagles, how are they affecting us?
Bats deal to mosquitoes 1,000 an hour. Spraying needs halting. Natural methods are better all round. So much for democrats ecological and enviro talk. Hypocrisy.
Tennessee
Has passed a bill banning "stratospheric aerosol injection (SAI), solar radiation modification (SRM) experimentation, and other hazardous weather engineering activities" (as of April 2, 2024).
Pennsylvania
Introduced legislation (modeled after Tennessee's bill) to ban chemtrails, sponsored by State Senator Doug Mastriano.
Rhode Island
Introduced SB 2540, which would prohibit "stratospheric aerosol injection (SAI), solar radiation modification (SRM) experimentation, and other hazardous weather engineering activities" (as of April 2, 2024).
Kentucky
Introduced HB 506, which would ban "any form of geoengineering activities," including "intentional manipulation of the environment, through an atmospheric polluting activity, to effect changes to the earth's atmosphere or surface" (as of April 2, 2024).
Minnesota
Introduced HB 4687, which would ban "polluting atmospheric activity or use an unmarked or unidentified aircraft or other vehicle or facility" (as of April 2, 2024).
New Hampshire
Introduced HB 1700, which would outlaw the "intentional release of polluting emissions, including cloud seeding, weather modification, excessive electromagnetic radio frequency, and microwave radiation" (as of April 2, 2024).
South Dakota
Introduced SB 215, which would ban the "intentional release of polluting emissions into the atmosphere by cloud seeding" (as of April 2, 2024).