News

As Central Texas continues to mourn the lives lost in the catastrophic July 4 floods, a wave of online speculation has put cloud-seeding operations under the microscope.
In the aftermath of the Texas Hill Country flooding, as well as floods in New Mexico and North Carolina, misinformation about cloud speeding is surging.
A Tennessee congresman is backing Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene's push to ban "weather modification" in the wake of devastating floods in Texas. What to know.
Michael Flynn, President Donald Trump’s former national security adviser and an election denier, who pleaded guilty to lying ...
In the aftermath of devastating floods in Texas, social media users have spread misinformation that cloud seeding is to blame ...
Conspiracy theories about weather modification programs are surging online amid a torrent of misinformation following tragic ...
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) announced over the weekend that she plans to introduce federal legislation to ban weather ...
More and more voices, including politicians, say that cloud seeding — or man-made ways of increasing precipitation — caused the deadly floods in Texas. Experts say this is damaging public trust.
A weather modification company has come under scrutiny after claims that its cloud-seeding operation may have contributed to the catastrophic floods in Texas. Flash floods swept across Central ...
Americans have questions about geoengineering and contrails. They expect honesty and transparency from their government when ...
A cloud seeding project took place in Pleasanton, about 150 miles southeast of Kerr County, on July 2, according to reports from Rainmaker, one of the weather modification companies in the U.S.