Cloud Seeding Should Have Never Messed With Texas

Share This:

From “Browne Report”

The catastrophic floods that tore through the Texas Hill Country from the Fourth of July into the 5th have claimed at least 82 lives, including 68 in Kerr County alone, with 27 deaths at Camp Mystic, and approximately 41 people, including 10 girls and one counselor from the camp, remain missing. The disaster has prompted extensive rescue efforts, with over 850 people saved through air, ground, and water operations involving the Texas Military Department, U.S. Coast Guard, and FEMA, though challenges like debris, downed power lines, and forecast rain complicate ongoing searches.

Just two days before this biblical deluge, Augustus Doricko, a 25 year old tech bro and Thiel Fellow, was reportedly cloud seeding over Texas with his weather-modifying startup Rainmaker. Doricko played God with the skies.

Why is Thiel’s money funding private weather experiments? Why is a kid with zero oversight manipulating Texas weather? They call it “stewarding nature,” but Texas got a catastrophic flood that killed dozens, swept away homes, and left Camp Mystic “horrendously ravaged,” Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene introduced a bill to ban weather control and geoengineering, making it a felony to inject chemicals to alter weather, temperature, or sunlight. Over 30 states have passed or are pushing laws to restrict these shady practices in the last year, with Tennessee banning geoengineering outright in 2024. MTG, backed by Rep. Tim Burchett, demands clean air, clean skies, and sunshine as God intended. HHS head Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is also on the warpath, investigating DARPA for allegedly running secret weather control ops across North America.

The floods are a tragedy of epic proportions. Kerr County Sheriff Larry Leitha warns the death toll may rise as searchers scour the Guadalupe River’s banks, with 850 rescues already made, including people clinging to trees. The National Weather Service issued flood warnings, but officials admit they were blindsided by the rain’s intensity, with forecasts underestimating the deluge. Texas Hill Country, known as “Flash Flood Alley,” saw the Guadalupe River rise 26 feet in 45 minutes, rivaling the deadly 1987 flood. Governor Greg Abbott declared a disaster, and President Trump signed a Major Disaster Declaration to unlock federal aid, but families are reeling, with 11 Camp Mystic girls and a counselor still missing.

This trend of devastation has targeted Smart City planned areas across the nation. From Maui to the Pacific Palisades to Kerrville itself. The American people deserve answers, not chemtrails and cover ups. And as the skies clear, it becomes abundantly obvious. This storm is far from over.

Share This: