Hast thou entered into the treasures of the snow? Or hast thou seen the treasures of the hail,
Which I have reserved against the time of trouble, against the day of battle and war?
By what way is the light parted, which scattereth the east wind upon the earth?
Who hath divided a watercourse for the overflowing of waters, or a way for the lightning of thunder;
To cause it to rain on the earth, where no man is; on the wilderness, wherein there is no man;
To satisfy the desolate and waste ground; and to cause the bud of the tender herb to spring forth?
Hath the rain a father? Or who hath begotten the drops of dew?
Out of whose womb came the ice? And the hoary frost of heaven, who hath gendered it? Job 38:21-29
When it is evening, ye say, It will be fair weather: for the sky is red. Matthew 16:2
During bad weather fewer planes can land which means a traffic jam builds up in the sky. Skies Above Britain II, BBC 2016
Peter A Kirby: Chemtrails Exposed: A New Manhattan Project. The Corbett Report: Chemtrails Exposed: The Past, Present and Future of the New Manhattan Project, James Corbett online 2016
Would they do something like this? … Is that well-known conspiracy theorist John Brennan talking about altering weather patterns and spraying things in the atmosphere in order to save us from ourselves apparently? Yes, that’s the director of the CIA. ibid.
‘These two books [Leonard A Cole: Clouds of Secrecy and Andrew Goliszek: In the Name of Science] outline hundreds of open-air testing experiments done covertly against the American people over the last 70 years. ibid.
A power more menacing that the H-Bomb will be wielded by the first nation that learns how to use Weather … Weather as a weapon … ibid. Popular Science article Howard Orville 1958
Britain’s year of wild weather – from snowstorms to heatwaves, gales to floods – we’ve all been affected. We meet the extreme weather winners and the losers. And what can we expect next? Tonight: Wild Weather UK: Winners and Losers, ITV 2018
From February to April we had some of the worst weather this century … But by May temperatures were rising, and a sweltering heatwave made this summer the joint hottest on record. ibid.
It’s been a day when Britain has been burning up. A day when the rail network buckled and the roads melted. A day when vital services struggled to cope. Does climate change mean we are going to have to get used to it? Burning Up: Britain in Meltdown, Channel 5 2019, Jeremy Vine
38.1 degrees in Cambridge: 100.6 degrees Fahrenheit in old money. ibid.
Across the UK extreme temperatures brought chaos and disruption. ibid.
Europe’s first hottest summers since the year 1500 have all been in the 21st century. ibid.
It seemed these vortices not only impacted animals and machinery, but their awesome power impacts the world’s weather patterns as well. The Devil’s Graveyards: Vile Vorteces Revealed, History 2020
It has to do with the Earth’s magnetics … It wasn’t until I started researching the vortices at the poles that I realised my suspicions were confirmed. ibid. Spencer
Just beneath the surface he found a blue-coloured substance. Running a Geiger-counter over it Dr Spencer found the topsoil had unusually high levels of radiation, just like at the South Pole … What was causing the radiation? … The aluminium isotope [26] they are finding on the Earth’s surface and that is abundant at all the vile vortices is somehow reacting with the metal at the Earth’s core to create these magnetic anomalies. ibid.
It’s a GPS system, a way to achieve global positioning … These vortexes post a serious threat to all life on Earth. ibid.
Each vortex appears to be a thousand square miles. ibid.
Hawaii: The United States government had unknowingly wiped out one of the twelve positions that was putting a drag on the world’s rotation. ibid.
[Experiment] These capacitors are loaded with power; when we drop those switches, the power’s going to hit here – boom – the protons are going to shoot into the ground and zap isotope 26 rendering harmless aluminium oxide. ibid.
The UK’s weather is getting wilder. This year we’ve been soaked with record-breaking rainfall and have sweltered in soaring temperatures. We’ve endured the pandemic but we’ve also seen some of our most extraordinary destructive weather yet. We’ll take you to the eye of the storm, and into the heat of this year’s exceptional weather. We’ll be asking what today’s wild weather tells us about the UK’s future climate. Because climate change is going to affect all our lives. Panorama: Britain’s Wild Weather, Justin Rowlatt reporting, BBC 2020
Our winters have got 12% wetter on average over the last 60 years. ibid.
Across the UK there are 1.8 million people whose homes are at risk of sea or river flooding. Many are in areas of low-lying ground. But despite the risks, we are still building homes in flood-hit areas. ibid.
Vulnerable places along the east Anglian coast have seen the same: sea-level rises and storms eating away at land and homes. ibid.
During the twelve months to July 104 wildfires broke out across the UK, with 9 across a 2-week period in May alone. ibid.
Lightning that follows you into your home; rain that falls like blood; and a single house spared total destruction. History is filled with tales of strange weather phenomena: frogs falling from the sky, hail so large is can crush an automobile … The UnXplained with William Shatner s1e13: Extreme Weather Mysteries, History 2019
‘Trying to understand ball lightning is trying to find the unicorn.’ ibid. Michio Kaku
‘Similar stories of red rain have essentially spanned history over thousands of years. It has been repeatedly reported.’ ibid. Dr Chandra Wickramasinghe
Apocalyptic forest fires, torrential rain and fatal floods and temperatures that have shattered previous records. It’s been a summer of severe global weather which isn’t over yet. Summer of Wild Weather: Is Worse to Come? Channel 4 2021
‘This is a kind of example of extreme event that is basically impossible without climate change.’ ibid.
The world is getting warmer and our weather is getting ever more unpredictable and dangerous. The death toll is rising around the world and the forecast is the worst is yet to come. It’s been a year of extreme weather. Wild Weather: Our World Under Threat, BBC 2021
In east 2018 the UK was hit by a snowstorm so ferocious that it earned a chilling nickname: Beast from the East. A big freeze from Russian became the toughest snowstorm to hit us in a generation. For ten days blizzards caused havoc on the roads. Beast from the East: The Big Freeze of 2018, Channel 5 2023