04-01-2024, 01:28 PM
The Guardian notes that…
Well, that’s what they would say, now isn’t it? :wink:
Not the only state dabbling in conspiracy theories:
The Tennessee bill passed the…umm…Republican-controlled State Senate and now moves on to the Republican-controlled State House.
Sometimes I fear half of our nation has descended into abject looney-tunes-itude.
The Tennessee bill, introduced in the senate by Republican Steve Southerland, does not use the term “chemtrails”. The language in the bill, however – there is talk of the government “intentionally dispersing chemicals into the atmosphere” – directly evokes a decades-old conspiracy theory.
… The idea is that the government, or shadowy private organizations, are pumping out toxic chemicals, with the aim being anything from modifying the weather to controlling a population’s minds.
This is not happening, scientists say.
“There’s no such thing as chemtrails,” said Alan Robock, a climate science professor at Rutgers university.
Well, that’s what they would say, now isn’t it? :wink:
Not the only state dabbling in conspiracy theories:
Doug Mastriano [R-Around-the-bend], a state senator in Pennsylvania, declared that he too would pursue a[n anti-chemtrail] law which would “ensure the skies over Pennsylvania are protected well into the future”.
The Tennessee bill passed the…umm…Republican-controlled State Senate and now moves on to the Republican-controlled State House.
Sometimes I fear half of our nation has descended into abject looney-tunes-itude.