Contrails or Chemtrails? Good Bye Blue Sky. Taos is a great place to observe Chemtrails, but no one has made a local video yet. This video (10min 00sec) is from North County San Diego. Feb 07. Many people in Taos watch the skies and see these chemtrails being sprayed all around us. Clearly something is going on, but what exactly is that? More and more people are pointing their video cameras toward the sky to document what they are seeing, and turning to the Web to share information. There is some sort of serious question about just what these things are. Why are the skies clear for days and then suddenly another day filled with dozens of chemtrails that are not in any normal flight-paths? Keep watching the sky, friends. Maybe you can help answer these questions.
The chemtrail theory apparently first achieved prominence in
mid-to-late 1990s. Chemtrails have been discussed on radio programs
hosted by Art Bell and Jeff Rense with investigative journalist William
Thomas who first reported on Chemtrails. According to a FAQ
posted at Jeff Rense's website, "chemtrails (CTs) look like contrails
initially, but are much thicker, extend across the sky and are often
laid down in varying patterns of X's, tic-tac-toe grids, cross-hatched
and parallel lines. Instead of quickly dissipating, chemtrails expand
and drip feathers and mares' tails. In 30 minutes or less, they open
into wispy formations which join together, forming a thin white veil or
a 'fake cirrus-type cloud' that persists for hours."
One chemtrail theorist, Clifford E. Carnicom, operator of a
website entitled "Aerosol Crimes and Cover-ups",
claims to have analyzed ground-level air samples following chemtrail
events. It is not clear what his experience or expertise in chemical
analysis is, but he carefully detailed the methods and procedures he
used. He claims to have found airborne aluminum, barium, calcium,
magnesium and titanium, and "microscopic fibers" in areas supposedly
exposed to chemtrails.