OK, we need suicide volunteers to bring plant earth populations down under 2 
billion. How are we going to do this?




On Monday, February 24, 2014 11:32 AM, Bhairitu <noozg...@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
  
  
The first time I ever heard or read about this was back in the late 60s or 
early 70s when there were stories about chemtrails in the alternative press 
like the L.A. FreePress and Berkeley Barb.  It is supposedly a classified 
program but we are getting leaks about it.  I've seen airliners at the same 
altitude, one with a trail that didn't disperse and another when came a long a 
few minutes later which had a contrail that of course dissolved behind it.  
Same altitude, same air temperature.

Yes, we may well see a horrible apocalypse if California doesn't
      get a good rainfall.  Food prices will go through the roof and not
      just here but all over the US.  We can only hope this rain storm
      which is forecast to begin on Weds continues on for quite a while.

Human population should have been capped at 2 billion.  That is
      manageable in terms of resources and livability.  What we have now
      is the fallout from far too many people on the planet.

On 02/24/2014 06:35 AM, doctordumb...@rocketmail.com wrote:
 
  
>Cloud seeding with silver iodide has been going on for decades, without much 
>concern. The reason we are in a drought is due directly to global warming, 
>probably aided by our huge population growth, and consequent (warm) pollution. 
>We have a high pressure zone sitting on top of California, which prevents the 
>normal Pacific current from bringing us our Winter water. 
>I have noticed the Pacific current, which runs the length
              of California's coast, has been warming up for about a
              decade. It was only a matter of time before the land began
              to retain enough heat, in the Winter, to create a high
              pressure system, as is commonly produced here, in the
              Summer months. So, we are in a severe drought. I am not
              sure how we escape the cycle, at this point. 
>Desalination plants are a good (very expensive) idea for
              the longer term, though I am not sure that even those can
              supply enough water for agriculture.
>A Chinese curse comes to mind: "May you live in
              interesting times".
> 
>
>
>---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, mailto:no_re...@yahoogroups.com wrote:
>
>
>Indeed it is. It seems aluminum is the most "important" ingredient  in the 
>chemtrail, yet the Californians wonder why they are stricken with drought. 
>Like the Americans say: Go figure !    
 
 

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