All you have to do to a denier that doesn't believe chemtrails or HAARP exist and can hurt you, is show them HR 2977 on the "government's" own web site. In the definitions it shows they are both weapons of destruction.
Just go down to SEC. 7. DEFINITIONS. Then look at (2)(A)(i)(III)and it says: A weapon or weapon system is "directing a source of energy (including molecular or atomic energy, subatomic particle beams, electromagnetic radiation, plasma, or extremely low frequency (ELF) or ultra low frequency (ULF) energy radiation) against that object"
ELF and ULF is what HAARP puts out.
Then read (2)(b) and it says:
(B) Such terms include exotic weapons systems such as--
(i) electronic, psychotronic, or information weapons;
(ii) chemtrails;
(iii) high altitude ultra low frequency weapons systems;
(iv) plasma, electromagnetic, sonic, or ultrasonic weapons;
(v) laser weapons systems;
(vi) strategic, theater, tactical, or extraterrestrial weapons; and
(vii) chemical, biological, environmental, climate, or tectonic weapons.
But the sick part about this act in my opinion, is that they want to stop this stuff above 60 kilometers over the Earth. So doing it below 60 kilometers is fine.
And I don't think the bill ever got passed. But at least representative Kucinch had the guts to present it to the floor. Plus it provides a record on the government's own web site that shows these things exist and are considered weapons of destruction. And I would think it shows they have "extraterrestrial weapons" or they wouldn't be saying they shouldn't be used. And all this stuff was known back in 2001, over a decade ago.
Here's the link to the Library of CONgress:
http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/z?c107:H.R.2977.IH:
NASA sprays lithium gas and aluminum oxide into the atmosphere. According to NASA, aluminum is safe unless ingested causing Alzheimer's disease.
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/sunearth/missions/atrex-nightlight.html
http://www.gizmag.com/nasa-tracer-rockets-form-ringed-clouds-at-the-edge-of-s...
If you would like to speak to someone about Chemtrials, contact Professor M.F Larsen at Clemson University. It appears from the book authored by Larsen, that Chemtrails have been sprayed over 40 years.
A group from Clemson, led by Prof. Larsen, recently participated in the CARE experiment, that included a rocket launch from the NASA facility at Wallops Island, Virginia, to study the effects of dusty plasmas in the upper atmosphere. The rocket released approximately 100 kg of aluminum dust near 280-km altitude at twilight when the ground stations were in darkness but the release was still sunlit. The release was visible from many locations on the east coast of the United States. Clemson University provided photographic support for the experiment with camera sites at Duck, North Carolina, at Tuckerton, New Jersey, and at the launch site at Wallops Island. A photograph of the release in the early phase of its evolution is shown in the photograph.
Prof. Larsen's research focuses on the dynamics and electrodynamics of the upper atmosphere, including the mesosphere, and the thermosphere/ionosphere system. The research projects use a variety of ground-based and in situ measurement techniques, notably sounding rockets, ground-based radars and lidars. The observational studies have included rocket launches in Alaska, Virginia, New Mexico, Puerto Rico, Brazil, Norway, Japan, and Kwajalein, with supporting radar and optical observations at the same or nearby sites. The goal of the experiments has been to understand the interaction between the neutral and ionized components of the atmosphere, the instabilities that lead to the generation of waves and turbulence, the transport of energy and momentum by winds and waves, and the mixing in the upper atmosphere produced by turbulence.
"Five sounding rockets streaked into the pre-dawn sky on March 27, 2012, leaving trails of milky white clouds in a little understood part of the atmosphere. The first rocket was launched to the cusp of space at 4:58 a.m. Eastern Daylight Time, and the subsequent launches occurred at 80 second intervals. The goal of the Anomalous Transport Rocket Experiment (ATREX) was to improve understanding of the process that drives fast-moving winds high in the thermosphere.
http://asterisk.apod.com/viewtopic.php?f=23&t=28127
Fiery trails from four of the five sounding rockets are clearly visible in this time-lapse photograph (top) of the launch. The second image shows two of the clouds left in the wake of the experiment; the rockets released trimethyl aluminum, a substance that burns spontaneously in the presence of oxygen. The harmless by-products of this glowing reaction were visible to the naked eye as far south as Wilmington, North Carolina; west to Charlestown, West Virginia.; and north to Buffalo, New York. Both photographs were taken near the launch site at NASA's Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia.
Throughout the experiment, researchers used specialized cameras in North Carolina, Virginia, and New Jersey—as well as temperature and pressure instruments on two of the rockets—to monitor the clouds. By measuring how quickly the clouds move away from each other and integrating that information into atmospheric models, they hope to improve their understanding of the 320 to 480 kilometer (200 to 300 mile) winds in the thermosphere.
First noticed by scientists in the 1960s, the winds are thought to be part of a high-altitude jet stream that's distinct from the one lower in the troposphere, where commercial aircraft fly. Observing the turbulence produced by these winds should make it possible to determine what’s driving them.
An improved understanding of the upper jet stream will make it easier to model the electromagnetic regions of space that can damage satellites and disrupt communications systems. The experiment will also help explain how the effects of atmospheric disturbances in one part of the globe can be transported to other parts of the globe in a mere day or two.
The launches are part of a broader sounding rocket program at NASA that conducts approximately 20 flights a year from launch sites around the world.
References
Further Reading
Photographs from NASA's Wallops Flight Facility.
Caption by Karen Fox and Adam Voiland.