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Originally posted by Bedlam
No, no, they'll use HAARP to sonar whales to death. A huge blast of HAARP waves will deafen all the whales and dolphins all over the world. After all, pigs is pigs, right? I mean waves is waves. All waves are the same.
Originally posted by buddhasystem
Originally posted by Bedlam
No, no, they'll use HAARP to sonar whales to death. A huge blast of HAARP waves will deafen all the whales and dolphins all over the world. After all, pigs is pigs, right? I mean waves is waves. All waves are the same.
I just realized that the title of the thread is pretty loaded, actually.
Keyword searches are not your friend.
Originally posted by tsurfer2000h
reply to post by siliconpsychosis
Keyword searches are not your friend.
It is when you are trying to prove HAARP is a weapon, or weather control device...
I wanted to see what haarp was measuring or reading when all the tornados broke out across the midwest usa...eespecially the record setting f5.
Just this year, i've been noticing rainbows in the clouds. I have never seen that before. Has anyone else noticed that? Is it a common thing? Thanks.
These colorful clouds are called iridescent clouds, and the phenomenon is called cloud iridescence or irisation. The term comes from Iris, the Greek personification of the rainbow. It’s similar to the colors you might see when oil lies on the surface of a puddle of water. When you see a cloud like this, you know there are especially tiny ice crystals or water droplets in the air. Larger ice crystals produce solar or lunar halos, but tiny ice crystals or water droplets cause light to be diffracted – spread out – creating this rainbow-like effect in the clouds.
Originally posted by geist0108
reply to post by WonderBoi
Just this year, i've been noticing rainbows in the clouds. I have never seen that before. Has anyone else noticed that? Is it a common thing? Thanks.