EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin unleashed the conspiracy theory floodwaters. The EPA’s press release, posted yesterday, was titled “EPA Releases New Online Resources Giving Americans Total Transparency on the Issues of Geoengineering and Contrails.” Truthfully, the word total might be an overstatement.

CLIP: EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin promises total chemtrail transparency (2:58).
So far, the EPA’s “new” materials available online appear, well, underwhelming. If Zeldin has, in fact, published everything the EPA knows about geoengineering, then the EPA doesn’t know much. “The federal government,” the website said, “is not aware of there ever being a contrail intentionally formed over the United States for the purpose of geoengineering or weather modification.”
Please. Maybe that’s just artful lawyerese. They didn’t say it never happened, they only said they “weren’t aware” of it. They said no “contrails” have been used for geoengineering or weather modification, which is undoubtedly true, since by definition, contrails are made from water vapor.
But what about chemtrails? Silver dioxide? Nothing mentioned on the EPA website.
Curiously, the very first comment to Zeldin’s post was this, from HHS Secretary Kennedy (using his personal account, not his official HHS account):

A sitting Cabinet Secretary praising a disclosure about mass poisoning via geoengineering is not just political theater. That’s a seismic shift in Overton window geography.
Meanwhile, online investigators are posting claims that dozens of cloud seeding operations to produce more rainfall preceded the weekend’s tragic, unprecedented Texas flash floods— right up to the day before.
What were they seeding the clouds with? Fairy dust? Or aluminum?
Cloud-seeding experts insisted there’s “no connection” between the rainmaking operations and the floods, which followed a stalled tropical storm dropping a foot of water onto rain-soaked ground. But, even if we take the experts at their word, a fair question remains: How much rain is too much rain? And, if we’re poking the atmosphere with weather sticks— what exactly is in those sticks? Fairy dust? Or aluminum?
And that’s the real issue. The real problem is that the government denied, and is still denying, knowing about legions of planes straying something into the atmosphere while insisting we were crazy to ask.
For years, even mentioning geoengineering got you lumped in with flat-earthers and tinfoil hatters. Now the head of the EPA is on camera promising full disclosure, while the Secretary of Health cheers him on like a man who’s been waiting two decades to say “I told you so.”
Maybe there’s nothing to it. Maybe the tracking is absent or incomplete. Maybe it’s just damage control.
But at least they’re willing to discuss it now. Maybe, just maybe, it’s the beginning of a reckoning.