Hi, Sterling,
I took a look at your website and noticed the article on the current weather situation. I am somewhat bemused at the fact that while you reference nearly every unlikely wild unconfirmed rumor of weather control technologies in the hands of government organizations, you make no mention of a very real problem that you yourself know to exist, namely weather intervention by private individual backyard hobbyists.
I know you are aware of at least some of the hundreds, possibly even thousands by this time, of people who have found out from the internet how to make a home made weather control apparatus and are playing around with it, usually with good intentions, but zero knowledge of how to use it responsibly. Many of these people delude themselves that they are doing scientific research, proving to officialdom that the technology works, or helping the world by making rain, ending a drought, preventing hurricanes or other unwanted weather, etc., while in reality what they are doing is randomly vandalizing the already damaged atmosphere. As single individuals the amount of harm they can do is limited, but collectively, they are far more of a menace than any alleged secret government plot could ever be.
So why did you not mention them as a possible cause of the present weather catastrophe? Is it because you just do not consider privatre backyard experimenters to be a big enough problem to be worth bothering with compared to secret government agencies? Or is it that you do not want to call negative attention to these people for some reason?
If I were to write a speculative article on who could possibly be causing the weather events in question, I would name names of suspects. Ash Palaise would be at the top of the list for the situation in Australia, James DeMeo and the other members of the CORE Network would be mentioned as suspects in the North American weather conditions, and a certain Ken Schwartz would be on the list for his known history of irresponsibly playing around with the jet stream.
There is also a German group doing a desert greening project in Algeria who have been known to cause bad weather in Europe as a side effect of their attempts to improve conditions in North Africa. And there are some people in Germany, Switzerland, and Greece who are known to have messed up in the past and might be operating again now.
And, of course, there could be any number of other people I have never heard of who have accidently discovered from the internet how to build a cloudbuster, and decided to try it. I cannot keep track of them all. But if you are going to write an article on possible human causes of the novel weather now underway, the possibliity should at least be mentioned that it is not some government program like HAARP or chemtrails that is causing the problems, but well meaning hobbyists with home made equipment.
Frankly, I suspect you left these people out of consideration because you tend to identify with them as scientific pioneers, rather than see them as irresponsible menaces as I do. I think you do not want to bring them to public attention as a potential problem instead of as a solution. Am I wrong? Is that the reason you did not mention them? Or is there some other reason?
I wish we could co-operate on these issues, but you seem determined to give these people a free pass no matter how much damage they do.
Joel Carlinsky