Question:

Could IT b Possible the CURRENT CLOUD SEEDING experiments over TX, Co,Ok, Ks, b the reason for severe weather

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Everyday, there is a SuperCell Thunderstorm forming over, in & around some state in the USA, that is currently or has recently, participated in a privately funded, publically unknown but daily exposed "WEATHER MODIFICATION, CLOUD SEEDING EXPERIMENT". The state of TX, recently fined a company for "seeding" outside approved county lines, and with action being taken by a state regulatory agency, SOMETHING MUST BE happening each time "SILVER IODIDE" is expelled in the atsmophere over states participating in these "EXPERIMENTS" as a group or alone. I do remember learning that, "what goes up, must come down." There is 'LEAD' travelling in the jet stream from the May 2008, Pitcher, OK (SUPERFUND SITE), that was wiped off the OK map by a "supercell" thunderstorm. The "silver iodide" must come back down on us. Now, China is the biggest experiment of all, can you see any related weather cells where they are not expected to be???????

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  1. Actually, cloud seeding is likely to reduce the number of severe weather event, and to reduce the severity of those.

    Simply because it makes it rain *before* the clouds have accumulated a lot more moisture.

    And the silver iodide does not stay in the clouds. The chemical acts as a nucleating site for the growth of raindrop, and it is thus washed away as soon as rain starts.


  2. No; I lived in Texas for 42 years; if anything, storms this year are LESS violent than in years gone by.  Seeding would cause rain, and that means removing moisture from the air; less moisture means a LESS intense storm.

    The states you name are all part of the Great Plains; storms simply form easily, and if you're not very old, you may be only recently becoming aware of the weather, but I can promise you from personal experience that this severe weather is quite normal for the region.  My home town, Waco, Texas, experience a serious tornado just a couple of years before I was born (I'm 53); 110 people were killed.  Wichita Falls (near the TX/OK border) had a massive tornado in the mid-70, and OKC has had lots of them as well.  It's just a place where cool air from the north can easily mingle with warmth and moisture from the Gulf of Mexico, and the inevitable result is thunderstorms and tornadoes.

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