Category: Weather Control

  • Cloud-Seeding "Water Wars"

    A modern weather-control theory claiming that extreme droughts, flash floods, and irregular rain events are increasingly the result of competitive rain capture rather than natural atmospheric behavior. In this framework, neighboring states, private weather firms, or geopolitical rivals use cloud seeding and other geoengineering tools to “steal” moisture, redirect rainfall, or weaponize weather against outsiders.

  • Radio Heat

    Radio Heat was a 1930s belief that the rapid expansion of broadcasting had saturated the air with unnatural energy, warmed the sky, disrupted rainfall, and contributed directly to the Dust Bowl. In its strongest form, the theory held that the invisible force of radio transmission was literally cooking the atmosphere over the Great Plains and turning weather into a byproduct of modern communications.

  • The Radio and the Weather

    A wartime theory that expanding use of radar, radio transmitters, and atmospheric electromagnetic systems was not merely detecting weather but altering it, and that the severe or unusual cold spells associated with the winters around 1942–43 were the result of man-made radio-wave interference in the sky. The theory joined early radar secrecy with wartime weather anxiety and the belief that radio had become an environmental force rather than just a communications tool.

  • The Atomic Weather

    The Atomic Weather theory held that nuclear detonations were already destabilizing the atmosphere and directly causing unusual storms, tornadoes, floods, and other extreme weather in the years immediately following World War II. The belief drew energy from a real postwar atmosphere of uncertainty: atomic weapons had introduced a new scale of human intervention in nature, tests at Trinity and Bikini were globally publicized, and scientists could not yet answer every question about planetary side effects. By the early 1950s, public concern over “atom weather” became large enough to flood government offices with letters. In conspiracy form, however, the fear was pushed further back into the late 1940s and treated as evidence that the government already knew weather was being altered but refused to admit it.