British Government's £50million plan to play God with the sky...
...but who gave them the right to do so and why weren't we asked?
FOR years it was scoffed at for being another ‘conspiracy theory’ but Britain is ready to experiment with dimming the sun – and the Government couldn’t care a hoot if you have been asked or not.
This is not the plot of a dystopian sci-fi reboot. It’s the UK Government’s latest madcap brainstorm – spend £50million on outdoor geo-engineering experiments to see if they can reflect sunlight back into space and cool the Earth.
Perhaps they could hide it no longer; the frequent spraying by planes into the atmosphere. “Chemtrails!”, many shouted from the rooftops. “They are spraying us with who knows what chemicals”. “Contrails!” shouted back mainstream media outlets such as the BBC, insisting the criss-crossing of our skies was nothing more than vapour from passing airplanes.
This publicly funded science fiction venture is being funneled through the shadowy-sounding Advanced Research and Invention Agency (Aria) – a quango so vague in its mandate it might as well be plotting the next James Bond villain arc. Their goal? Test solar radiation modification (SRM), including ideas like spraying sulphur into the stratosphere to block sunlight, or pumping sea salt into clouds to make them brighter.
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