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Originally posted by LostPassword
Right now every hurricane instead of hitting Florida and into US to
dissipate, something is pushing the Hurricane north along the
US border, and depending on the size and strength of hurricane
it doesn't always work, and it end up smashing in NY but with
lesser power.
What does all this mean, in my mind it is CLEAR that US government
is using some hidden technology to try to prevent damage to US
but this technology is by no means as powerful, and while it is able
to control a hurricane direction little bit, it definitely can't control it
completely.
Now this sounds like something good US government does, it sounds
like a feel good story about US government, but keep in mind
the money went to create hidden technology has COST THE UNITED
STATES BODY AND SOUL
Originally posted by LostPassword
I've been watching hurricanes hit USA from south Atlantic for a
long time, and only after Katrina hitting New Orleans did something
start happening, hurricanes started going UP into Canada instead
of smashing into USA and dissipating.
Right now every hurricane instead of hitting Florida and into US to
dissipate, something is pushing the Hurricane north along the
US border, and depending on the size and strength of hurricane
it doesn't always work, and it end up smashing in NY but with
lesser power.
Hurricane Isaac was a slow-moving tropical cyclone that caused severe destruction along the northern Gulf Coast of the United States in late-August 2012. Prior to becoming a hurricane, Isaac attained one of the lowest barometric pressure measurements, on August 28, for any storm below hurricane strength, with a pressure of 976 mbar (hPa).[1] The ninth tropical cyclone, ninth named storm, and fourth hurricane of the 2012 Atlantic hurricane season, Isaac developed from a tropical wave located east of the Lesser Antilles on August 21, strengthening into a tropical storm later that day. Isaac passed over Hispaniola and Cuba as a strong tropical storm, killing at least 34 people in Hispaniola, before it entered the Gulf of Mexico.
Originally posted by atsandy
cuz, usa HAS been TRYING, successfully since the 1960s or earlier with cloud seeding
Project STORMFURY, A Scientific Chronicle
STORMFURY itself, however, had two fatal flaws: it was neither microphysically nor statistically feasible. Observational evidence indicates that seeding in hurricanes would be ineffective because they contain too little supercooled water and too much natural ice. Moreover, the expected results of seeding are often indistinguishable from natrually occurring intensity changes.