HotRod
New Member
(split and re-titled from https://www.metabunk.org/threads/apparent-nasa-scientist-admitting-chemtrails.2009 )
I'm torn about chem/con trails. I know that one product of combustion is water (vapor) and that, given the low temperatures where jets fly, this vapor will condense forming a cloud. That is 8th grade science. However, the existence of these " clouds" and the possibility that there are other agents in them need not be mutually exclusive.
For example: I fertilize my lawn with Scott's Turf Builder. In that fertilizer, there is also weed killer. The analagos argument is that I am either fertilizing my lawn or killing weeds. One or the other...absolute. In fact, I am doing both. Why then must these trails be one or the other? Could it be possible that the contrails are a byproduct of combustion AND have chemicals to alter the atmosphere? If one wanted/needed to add these chemicals to the sky for some purpose, it would make sense to add them to jet fuel, since jets are a perfect mechanism for dispersal. It is akin to adding iodine to table salt.
I am not siding either way, but the scholarly mind should allow that both arguments might be true.
I'm torn about chem/con trails. I know that one product of combustion is water (vapor) and that, given the low temperatures where jets fly, this vapor will condense forming a cloud. That is 8th grade science. However, the existence of these " clouds" and the possibility that there are other agents in them need not be mutually exclusive.
For example: I fertilize my lawn with Scott's Turf Builder. In that fertilizer, there is also weed killer. The analagos argument is that I am either fertilizing my lawn or killing weeds. One or the other...absolute. In fact, I am doing both. Why then must these trails be one or the other? Could it be possible that the contrails are a byproduct of combustion AND have chemicals to alter the atmosphere? If one wanted/needed to add these chemicals to the sky for some purpose, it would make sense to add them to jet fuel, since jets are a perfect mechanism for dispersal. It is akin to adding iodine to table salt.
I am not siding either way, but the scholarly mind should allow that both arguments might be true.
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