The Great Narrative: Conspiracy? – Chemtrails being banned by law in United States.
Is this really conspiracy because they don't want us to know what is happening? Robert Kennedy Jr. says "We are going to stop this crime." Chemtrail bans are now being introduced in seven US states: Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Minnesota, Kentucky, New Hampshire, South Dakota, and Tennessee.
More in the Jimeva video.
Here is the video from Richard Vobes and his talk on his time up in Scotland where he encountered chemtrails along the way. "Let's not normalize what they are doing to our skies and how they are damaging humanity. This has to stop."
Have you wonder what is being deposited in the atmosphere? Aluminium dust is one of the substance being sprayed in the skies. Here are what aluminium dust can do.
This is taken from Australian Industrial Vacuum. The 5 most dangerous aspects of aluminium dusts:
- Aluminium dusts react easily with oxygen at room temperature, so any workplace operating with aluminium or producing aluminium waste must adopt explosion proof measures in compliance with Australian Standards.
- The smaller the particles of Aluminium dust, the greater the risk of explosion or fire. Particles smaller than 100 microns are considered dangerous. Anyone working in pharmaceutical laboratories where aluminium hydroxide is used, for example, must use industrial vacuums with high efficiency filtration.
- Large particles are also quite dangerous because their combustion speed is higher. It’s uncommon that explosive dusts are uniform, so aluminium particles of bigger sizes that may be considered 'safe' will also be mixed with smaller 100 micron particles. The result is a high risk of explosion coupled with a high rate of burning.
- When the percentage of oxygen in the atmosphere is between 10% and 15% fire tends to spread more rapidly. A higher concentration of oxygen results in more violent explosions. It’s much easier to avoid the accumulation of aluminium dusts with proper maintenance than to modify the concentration of oxygen.
- When in contact with water, aluminium releases heat and hydrogen. This means that the slightest accumulation of aluminium dust can become a source of heat capable of causing an explosion.
Ever wonder what happens when aluminium dust are sprinkle over forests? What about the health risks?
Comments
Post a Comment