Critics memory-hole aerial chemical dumps when attacking Canadian politician for chemtrail comments



Alberta Premier Danielle Smith is frequently attacked in the Canadian media for her conservatism and her antagonism of the Trudeau government. This week, however, she was targeted for answering a constituent's question about chemtrails.

In their rush to condemn Smith for supposedly "sowing fears" and engaging with "conspiracy theorists," critics and other political opportunists glossed over at least one good reason why Canadians might suspect that planes are dumping toxic chemicals over their heads — namely the fact that the Pentagon has a history of doing just that.

Prairie chemtrails

During a recent United Conservative Party town hall in Edmonton, an audience member asked Smith about the occurrence of chemtrails over Alberta. Smith indicated that she did some asking around but has yet to see any evidence confirming public or private operations that would qualify.

'If anyone is doing it, it's the U.S. Department of Defense.'

Chemtrails refer to the theory that governments or other groups use airplanes to dump toxic chemicals or biological agents into the atmosphere, which appear as lingering condensation trails.

At temperatures below 45°F, contrails — usually the result of soot particulate from jet fuel and water vapor freezing — cannot evaporate again and typically end up persisting until dispersed by the wind. Although there are multiple versions of the chemtrails theory, some of which reference the 1996 Pentagon study "Weather as a Force Multiplier: Owning the Weather in 2025," the suggestion is there is a malevolence behind these puffy contrails.

"The best I have been able to do is talk to the woman who is responsible for controlling the airspace, and she says no one is allowed to go up and spray anything in the air," said Smith. "The other person told me that if anyone is doing it, it's the U.S. Department of Defense."

Although apparently open to conducting a formal investigation, Smith intimated that it would ultimately be a federal undertaking.

"I have some limitations in what I can do in my job," said Smith. "I don't know that I would have much power if that is the case, if the U.S. Department of Defense is spraying us."

The premier's office said in a statement to Global News:

The premier has heard concerns from many Albertans about this topic. In response, the provincial government looked into the issue and found no evidence of chemtrails occurring in Alberta. The premier was simply sharing what she has heard from some folks over the summer on this issue. She was not saying that she believed the U.S. government was using chemtrails in Alberta.

A spokesman for NORAD and U.S. Northern Command told the Canadian press in a statement, "NORAD and U.S. Northern Command are not conducting any flight activities in Canada that involve the spraying of chemicals."

Although she denied having seen any evidence of chemtrails, Smith was still attacked for daring to even broach the subject.

Timothy Caulfield, a professor at the leftist University of Alberta's School of Public Health, told Global News, "The premier is making room for and, I would argue, legitimizing a conspiracy theory."

"She could have said, 'Look, I hear your concerns but the reality is that this is not true,'" added Caufield.

Trudeau cabinet minister Randy Boissonnault similarly attacked the premier, telling reporters, "I think it's becoming increasingly obvious that Premier Smith is using her office to peddle conspiracy theories."

Nathan Ip, a member of Alberta's socialist NDP, joined his fellow travelers in mischaracterizing Smith's remarks, telling the Canadian Press it was "truly horrifying to see the premier of Alberta spread conspiracy theories."

'They said they were testing what they characterized as a chemical fog.'

Operation LAC

While the likes of Caufield, Boissonnault, and Ip appear keen to reject the possibility of aircraft dumping chemicals overhead, there is precedent in their province.

Over a decade ago, St. Louis Community College sociology professor Lisa Martino-Taylor obtained U.S. Army documents through a Freedom of Information Act request revealing that in the mid-1950s, the Army used motorized blowers atop the roof of a low-income housing high-rise in St. Louis to test whether a chemical fog could shield ground targets from aerial observation. The fluorescent material blown into the poor neighborhood was zinc cadmium sulfide, reported the Associated Press.

This test was not an isolated case.

'In principle, spraying an aerosol chemical mist over a populated area is criminal.'

Additional classified documents obtained by Martino-Taylor indicated that between July 9, 1954, and Aug. 1, 1953, six kilograms of zinc cadmium sulfide were sprayed in aerosol clouds over the unsuspecting city of Winnipeg via U.S. Army aircraft, reported the National Post.

This was part of the U.S. Army Chemical Corps' broader Operation LAC.

"In Winnipeg, they said they were testing what they characterized as a chemical fog to protect Winnipeg in the event of a Russian attack," said Martino-Taylor. "They characterized it as a defensive study when it was actually an offensive study."

"In principle, spraying an aerosol chemical mist over a populated area is criminal, to say the least," pharmacologist Frank LaBella told the Winnipeg Free Press. "At the time, there were no reports of illness but, if present, they could not be distinguished from other illnesses. If there were lasting effects, we'll never know."

Just over a decade later, aircraft conducted similar chemical dumps over the Albertan cities of Suffield and Medicine Hat, according to Martino-Taylor.

When the U.S. Army returned in 1964 for yet another chemical dump, Canadian officials expressed concern that an "American aircraft was emitting distinctly visible emissions."

A visible stream of toxic chemicals trailing out of a government aircraft engaged in a secret military experiment would likely qualify as a not-so theoretical chemtrail.

A bigger umbrella

Lewis Brackpool, an independent journalist and the host of the podcast "The State of It," told Blaze News, "I believe that we shouldn't be using the term 'Chemtrails' anymore as it carries a lot of toxic baggage (ironically) and is just an easy way for the media class to shut down the conversation and dismiss someone as a crank or a conspiracy theorist, similar to when people use the term 'the great replacement' instead of 'replacement migration.'"

Brackpool suggested that to open the conversation to the wider public and overcome the stigma, alternative terms, such as "climate engineering" or "geo-engineering," might be prudent.

After all, some of the renewed interest in chemtrails has been driven in part by recent controversies over governmental and private efforts to meddle with the weather and alter the skies, such as cloud seeding and solar radiation management.

Cloud seeding is the controversial weather modification technique whereby aircraft, rockets, cannons, or ground generators release various chemicals and tiny particles, such as potassium chloride, into clouds in an effort to artificially increase precipitation.

Like the U.S., the United Arab Emirates has conducted cloud-seeding missions for decades. The Gulf state's National Center of Meteorology reportedly conducts more than 1,000 hours of cloud-seeding missions every year, using aircraft equipped with hygroscopic flares full of nucleating agents.

Blaze News previously noted that a government meteorologist blamed the cloud seeding operations when Dubai was rocked in April by the heaviest downpour in 75 years and fatal flooding. The government subsequently denied responsibility.

Cloud seeding has proven fatal before.

Blackpool noted that declassified documents show that the Royal Air Force experimented with artificial rainmaking as part of Operation Cumulus the same week that some of the worst flash floods to have ever hit Britain stormed the village of Lynmouth, killing 35.

In addition to cloud seeding, some groups are feeding chemtrail theorists' suspicions by openly plotting to pollute the stratosphere with sulfur dioxide in hopes of replicating the effects of volcanic eruptions on blocking sunlight and lowering global mean temperatures.

The MIT Technology Review reported that last year, researchers in the U.K. used a high-altitude weather balloon to dump sulfur dioxide into the stratosphere. Their use of "Stratospheric Aerosol Transport and Nucleation" or SATAN balloon systems was allegedly "an engineering proof-of-concept test, not an environmentally perturbative experiment."

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Chinese scientists produce fluorescent-green 'chimeric monkey' that glows



Chinese scientists continue to meddle with animal genetics, undeterred by recent internationally consequential mishaps. Rather than create another chimeric virus, a team from the Chinese Academy of Science has instead created a chimeric monkey with an eerie glow.

Researchers published their findings in the experimental biology journal Cell on Thursday, revealing that they had produced a substantially "chimeric monkey" with luminous fingertips and fluorescent green eyes.

The significance of the experiment was not the short-lived creature's nightclub features, but rather what the green luminescence signified: It was the most chimeric live primate produced to date, using the stem cells of two different fertilized eggs from the same species.

In other words the monkey, a long-tailed macaque, had two sets of DNA deriving from more than one set of parents.

Researchers cultured nine stem cell lines using cells extracted from a week-old monkey embryo and altered them to ensure that they were pluripotent — able to differentiate into all the cells necessary to create a live animal. The scientists then introduced a fluorescent green protein to the stem cells in order to track which tissues had derived from these lines.

These stem cells were injected into monkey embryos, which were in turn implanted into female macaques, resulting in 12 pregnancies and six live births. Of these, one live-born monkey and one miscarried monkey were found to be substantially chimeric.

The chimerical nature of the monkey that briefly survived outside the womb was evidenced by the green stain found in the various cells and tissue throughout its body, including in its brain, heart, kidneys, testicles, and gut.

Whereas in previous studies, chimeric monkeys have contained limited donor cell contributions to between 0.1% and 4.5% of their tissues, the range this time was from a low of 21% all the way up to 92%, representing a major breakthrough.

The chimera didn't glow for long. After 10 days, the macaque's health "deteriorated with respiratory failure and hypothermia, and it was euthanized by a veterinarian."

The apparent breakthrough could reportedly pave the way for the generation of animals with specific human-like characteristics tailored to the testing of medicines and drugs.

"This is a long-sought goal in the field," said senior author Zhen Liu, reported EurekaAlert.

"This research not only has implications for understanding naive pluripotency in other primates, including humans, but it also has relevant practical implications for genetic engineering and species conservation," continued Zhen. "Specifically, this work could help us to generate more precise monkey models for studying neurological diseases as well as for other biomedicine studies."

Study coauthor Miguel Esteban, principal investigator at the Guangzhou Institute of Biomedicine and Health, told CNN, "It is encouraging that our live birth monkey chimera had a big contribution (of stem cells) to the brain, suggesting that indeed this approach should be valuable for modeling neurodegenerative diseases."

"Monkey chimeras also have potential enormous value for species conservation if they could be achieved between two types of nonhumanprimate species, one of which is endangered," added Esteban. "If there is contribution of the donor cells from the endangered species to the germ line, one could envisage that through breeding animals of these species could be produced."

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Retired Navy commander living under the sea as part of 100-day experiment to test high-pressure environments on human body, become 'superhuman'



Retired Navy Commander Joe Dituri has spent the past 37 days living under the surface of the Atlantic Ocean in a 100-square-foot pod in Key Largo.
If he persists and runs out the clock on his 100-day Florida study, he will break a world record and potentially provide the scientific community with some critical insights into how the human body performs under extreme conditions.

Dituri, 55, is both scientist and test subject in the Marine Resources Development Foundation's Project Neptune 100. According to the MRDF, the ultimate purpose of the undersea mission, which began on March 1 and will run until June 9, is to "support marine research and conservation."

The so-called aquanaut is presently living in Jules' Undersea Lodge: an aquatic bunker set 30 feet deep in a mangrove lagoon, where the pressure is reportedly 1.6 times that pressure experienced at ground level.

The lodge boasts a "moon pool," where divers enter and exit, a bathroom, two bedrooms, and a wet room. In addition to a TV, the lodge, which usually serves as an aquatic hotel, has a microwave and WiFi.

Dituri, chief researcher for the Underseas Oxygen Clinic in Tampa, has been conducting experiments to study the effects of long-term exposure to pressure and other diving related medical issues.

For instance, Dituri seeks to advance conclusions found in a study that indicated cells exposed to increased pressure doubled within five days. If this proves to be the case, it may afford humans a way to increase their longevity and combat aging.

"So, we suspect I am going to come out superhuman!" said Dituri.

He indicated his biceps have already grown significantly since he went below the surface over one month ago.

The Daily Mail reported that the resultant insights could prove useful to preparations for manned trips to other planets.
Dituri has reportedly been tasked with testing a medical tool that NASA may ultimately use in future missions. Like the tricorder in "Star Trek," the device reportedly can be used to monitor a person's physical well-being and determine if he needs help.

A smaller version would be utilized by astronauts headed to Mars.

"Even somebody who is just barely medically trained can operate this and kind of figure out what's going on and what's wrong in the human body," said Dituri.

There is a deeply personal aspect to Dituri's scientific study.

"Many of my brothers and sisters in the military suffered traumatic brain injuries, and I wanted to learn how to help them," he said. "I knew well that hyperbaric pressure could increase cerebral blood flow and hypothesized it could be used to treat traumatic brain injuries. I hypothesize that applying the known mechanisms of action for hyperbaric medicine could be used to treat a broad spectrum of diseases."

Extra to the mission's scientific aims, Dituri plans to set a new record for time spent under water in a fixed habitat by a non-military member. The previous record was 73 days.

"The human body has never been underwater that long, so I will be monitored closely," said in a press release. "This study will examine every way this journey impacts my body, but my null hypothesis is that there will be improvements to my health due to the increased pressure."

Media Availability: USF researcher attempts to set world record by living underwater for 100 days youtu.be

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Chinese scientists grow antlers on mice in hopes of one day regenerating human limbs



Researchers from Northwestern Polytechnical University in Xi’an, China, have demonstrated their ability to grow antlers on the foreheads of mice using stem cells transplanted from deer.

Unlike the mice given human lung cells prior to the pandemic by Wuhan virologist Shi Zhengli, these monsters are not being developed to create a new infectious pathogen. Rather, the scientists behind these grotesque experiments reckon their work may lead to advancements in human limb regeneration.

Tao Qin and his team's mice-antler research was published earlier this month in the Springer Nature journal Science.

The researchers noted that deer lose their antlers every spring. By autumn they have a new set, which grow approximately 1.08 inches a day and can reach up to 33 pounds in mass and 47 inches in length in approximately three months.

Whereas various fish, lizards, and amphibians have the capacity to rebuild organs and other body parts, this is not a common feature in mammals, so the ability of male deer to routinely regenerate bony structures enveloped in nerves and blood vessels may have some bearing on human endeavors to do likewise.

Supposing that a better understanding of the regeneration of deer antlers could be a source of potential applications in medicine, Qin and his team identified a population of antler blastema progenitor (stem) cells responsible for the antler regeneration cycle in sika deer.

This variety of stem cell, they reckon, could be a feature available to vertebrate tissue regeneration.

The researchers took stem cell populations from the base of shed antlers that were no more than five days old, cultivated them in a petri dish, then transplanted them into the foreheads of lab mice.

While limited, mice also happen to have the ability to regenerate parts of a limb: the tips of the toes on their front legs. Consequently, they may be more amenable than other mammals to the transplants.

Within two months of implantantion, the mice began to suffer ghastly deformations, described by the scientists as "antler-like structure[s]" of their own.

Field and Stream reported that this is not the first time that Chinese scientists have radically deformed mice with deer-like antlers.

A paper published August 2020 in the Journal of Regenerative Biology and Medicine detailed how researchers at Changchun Sci-Tech University in China's Jilin province transplanted antler tissue — not just the specific blastema cells — from a deer onto the heads of mice. They concluded that "the successful establishment of a nude mouse model to grow xenogeneic antlers has opened a totally new avenue for antler research."

Qin and his team noted that their recent results "suggest that deer [antler blastema progenitor cells] may have an application in clinical bone repair. ... Beyond this, induction of regular human mesenchymal or other cells into ABPC-like cells through activation of key characteristic genes could potentially be used in regenerative medicine for skeletal injuries or limb regeneration."

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