Leememeber all is no problem until actively denial
https://www.rmit.edu.au/news/factla...ary-project-manipulating-weather-are-nonsense
A longstanding conspiracy theory that alleges a former US research project, HAARP, is being used to manipulate the weather has once again gained traction on social media.
This time, social media users are spreading the conspiracy in the form of an image, with one post, shared by an Instagram account with more than 22,000 followers, amassing more than 5,000 likes.
The text in the image reads: “For the pricetag of $80,000 - $100,000, there are multiple companies that guarantee rain-free wedding days around the world.
“It’s done by aircraft spraying nano-sized heavy metals into the atmosphere, and then multi-trillion watt beams of electromagnetic frequencies from HAARP stations are aimed at the particles, enabling them to manipulate cloud cover, precipitation and more.”
The image also contains two photographs, one of a wedding venue by the ocean and one of
condensation trails – line-shaped clouds also known as “contrails” or vapour trails – in the sky.
Additional text in the image claims that contrails are a sign of weather manipulation: “Many people see these trails daily, which begs the question; who is engineering the weather when not for weddings?”
Comments posted by Instagram users suggest that many believe the claim that HAARP is manipulating the weather, with some citing it as proof that climate change does not exist. Others refer to a similar
baseless conspiracy theory that alleges contrails are biological or chemical agents used covertly by governments to poison or vaccinate populations.
But the claims are false. HAARP has no effect on weather systems and contrails are a common byproduct of jet engines, according to experts consulted by RMIT FactLab.
HAARP (High-frequency Active Auroral Research Program) is a former US
research project that used radio waves to study the ionosphere (Earth's upper atmosphere).
There is only one HAARP station, not several as claimed, and its operation was transferred from the US Air Force to the University of Alaska in 2015.
Emeritus Professor Peter Dyson, an expert on the ionosphere at La Trobe University, told FactLab in an email that HAARP has “no effect” on weather systems.