Category: Environmental Panic
- The Cloud-Seeding Weapon
The Cloud-Seeding Weapon was the belief that the devastating droughts of the 1930s were not purely natural or agricultural disasters, but the result of hidden weather-control experiments conducted by hostile scientific powers, especially Britain. The label is partly retrospective: scientific cloud seeding is generally dated to 1946, but earlier decades already saw strong public fascination with rainmaking, weather engineering, and atmospheric manipulation. In its strongest form, the theory claimed that British experimenters had learned to suppress rain, redirect storm tracks, or dry out North American farmland as a geopolitical weapon. The conspiracy version turned drought into atmospheric sabotage.
- Dust Bowl Genesis
The Dust Bowl Genesis theory was a proto-environmental panic that attributed drying farmland, weak rains, and failing soil conditions in the Midwest and Great Plains not to agricultural practice, weather patterns, or land-use damage, but to the invisible spread of radio transmission. In this theory, wireless waves were said to pull moisture from the ground, disturb atmospheric balance, and slowly desiccate the prairie before the Dust Bowl was even named. The theory belongs to an earlier culture of radiophobia in which new transmissions were blamed for hidden bodily and environmental harm. Because radio was expanding rapidly in the 1920s and because soil stress and drought anxiety were already present in agricultural conversation, the medium could be reimagined as the hidden drying agent of the land.