Until then we continue to go further into our brains to pull out unreal designs. This time or time in the future we are getting closer to making a distant dream into a reality straight out the pages of fiction. Ever since the beginning of time people have wanted to control the things that seem to control them. Like the Egyptians praying to the god of the sun. Of course the thing we want to do is control the weather.
To be able to sling lightning around and wipe things off the map without lifting a finger. There are the normal questions to be asked like the obvious if it fell into the wrong hands conundrum. But think of the good it could do (and of course the bad). Think of how this could give rain when we have a drought (or make a drought to shut down agricultural trade.) This is of course a skill not perfected and we are taking steps to make it more real. As of now we have perfected the art of cloud seeding the control of how much rain falls or where it falls.
Cloud seeding was created of course by an American by the name of Vincent Schrieffer on November 13, 1946. The largest cloud seeding plant in the world is in (Shockingly) China and they use it basically every day to increase the amount of rain in arid areas. That is causing problems with neighboring countries. They accuse China of “stealing rain” or redirecting rain that was meant for them. The government uses cloud seeding all the time without you knowing for example China used their weather control to cook up a nice day in the normally cloudy Beijing right before the 2008 Olympic Games.
China had 30 airplanes, 4,000 rocket launchers, and 7,000 anti-aircraft guns to stop rain.(no exaggeration) Each system would shoot various chemicals into any threatening clouds to shrink rain drops before they reached the stadium. Obviously something this big should have (and deserves) conspiracy. Ours is H.A.A.R.P
But there is good news, on May 18, 1977 we (the U.S) signed a contract saying we wouldn't use the weather for aggressive purposes. So don't worry were safe for now.
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