Louisiana House Passes Bill Banning 'Chemtrails' Amid Scientific Skepticism

HHS Secretary RFK Jr. expressed support for the controversial legislation
The Louisiana House of Representatives has passed legislation aimed at banning 'chemtrails,' with lawmakers voting 58-32 in favor of the bill. State Representative Kimberly Landry Coates, who authored the legislation, stated that the purpose is to prevent chemicals being released in the air specifically to modify weather patterns. The bill also includes an amendment requiring the Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality to record all reported chemtrail sightings and complaints from residents.
This legislation follows similar measures in other states, with Florida's Senate and Tennessee's legislature having passed comparable bills. According to reports, at least 24 additional states are pursuing legislation under the broader category of banning 'geoengineering,' which encompasses emerging research on potential methods to counteract climate change. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has publicly supported these legislative efforts.
KEY POINTS
- •Louisiana House passes chemtrail ban
- •RFK Jr. supports the legislation
- •Scientists reject chemtrail theories
During legislative hearings, Representative Coates claimed that multiple government agencies, including the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), release 'nanoparticles' to reflect sunlight and cool Earth's surface. However, NOAA has consistently refuted these assertions, stating it neither conducts weather-altering experiments nor has plans to do so. The Environmental Protection Agency has similarly explained that the white streaks in the sky are condensation trails or 'contrails' formed when hot aircraft exhaust meets cold atmospheric conditions.
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