January 29, 2005: Weather Control - Scott Stevens - podcast episode cover

January 29, 2005: Weather Control - Scott Stevens

Oct 23, 20252 hr 55 minSeason 2005Ep. 1066
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Episode description

Art Bell welcomes Scott Stevens, a television meteorologist from KPVI-TV in eastern Idaho, who has spent years studying anomalies in weather patterns. Stevens describes how forecasting accuracy has declined despite advances in technology, leading him to investigate unusual cloud formations including square-shaped clouds, right angles in cirrus patterns, and geometric signatures that defy natural fluid dynamics.

Stevens walks through satellite imagery on his website, pointing out regular intervals of notched clouds, perfectly square formations casting shadows, and cold fronts with geometry that does not match local terrain. He explains that after years of quiet observation, a June 2004 satellite image triggered an epiphany that confirmed his suspicions. The mathematics of fluid dynamics, he argues, simply cannot produce the hard right angles and symmetrical patterns now appearing daily in the skies.

Art reads a corroborating story from India Daily reporting that weather forecasting models are failing worldwide, from China to Russia to Australia. Stevens estimates roughly twenty entities globally possess the electromagnetic technology capable of manipulating weather systems, and he calls on fellow meteorologists to acknowledge what he believes is an undeniable human hand reshaping the atmosphere.
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