Part III: New TIME Magazine Exclusive Story on MAKE SUNSETS confirms they Flew THREE Balloons with Chemical Payloads from NEVADA just 11 Days Ago to Block the Sun's Rays to "Cool the Earth"
TIME Magazine also confirms that the two co-founders of Make Sunsets, Luke Iseman and Andrew Song, are the worst humans on Planet Earth.
Time Magazine published an exclusive story on Make Sunsets 48 hours ago.
This story confirms that everything we told you in Part I and Part II was totally on point.
Time Exclusive: Inside a Controversial Startup's Risky Attempt to Cool Climate From U.S. Soil
And it raises specific, alarming and urgent questions for:
Joe Biden’s White House
Mayor Pete’s Federal Aviation Administration (FAA)
Arati Prabhakar’s Office of Science and Technology (OST)
URGENT QUESTIONS:
What was the purpose of the call between the FAA and Make Sunsets founder Luke Iseman on February 12?
Why did the FBI Directorate on Weapons of Mass Destruction call and then leave a voice mail with Make Sunsets founder Luke Iseman on February 10th?
Does the White House know that a rogue solar geoengineering firm just launched three weather balloons from the state of Nevada with chemical payloads of sulfur dioxide (SO2), with the intention of creating chemical “dust clouds” that bounce solar rays back into space?
During the February 12 phone call between the FAA and Make Sunsets founder Luke Iseman, why did the FAA fail to even ask Iseman what the balloons are for, and why Iseman was flying them?
SERIOUS QUESTIONS:
Do the White House, FAA and FBI all approve of stratospheric aerosol injection (SAI) conducted by rogue solar geoengineering psychos over United States airspace?
Why did the FAA and FBI both FAIL to stop the Make Sunsets balloon flights eleven days ago, considering:
(a) The terrifying, possibly irreversible ramifications of trying to alter the Earth’s climate with poisonous chemicals
(b) The immediate concern of weather balloons releasing sulfur dioxide, causing acid rain and poisoning plants, animals and humans
(b) The tense situation in America’s airspace after three mysterious flying objects. Both agencies contacted Iseman and both failed to ask basic questions and stop these lunatic brainwashed climate cult members
The two co-founders of Make Sunsets, Luke Iseman and Andrew Song, are two of the biggest dickheads in the whole wide world.
Time Magazine treats Luke Iseman like he’s a swash-bucking, climate-saving, serial entrepreneur superhero who breaks the rules to get things done.
But if you pop the hood on Luke Iseman’s sketchy past, you’ll see he has a criminal history of breaking the law, pissing people off and just being a total dick.
Luke built an illegal shantytown out of shipping containers in Oakland, California, before the neighbors complained about garbage and human shit in the compost piles, and the city government kicked him out for squatting.
Here’s Luke Iseman’s home at “Containertopia”.
If you are a bachelor in the Bay Area trying to cultivate a style that screams “Pussy Kryptonite”, well, Luke’s room checks all the boxes.
More on the local fallout from Luke Iseman’s shipping container shantytown in Oakland:
“…neighbors around his unpermitted container community complained about late-night work noise that kept them awake, as well as a health hazard from occupants composting human waste on the site.
“He drove us crazy. You look at how filthy and nasty his shipping containers were. He could have helped people, but he didn’t go about it the right way,” said one neighbor.
Time Magazine acts like the two Make Sunsets idiots are bad-asses for buying the supplies for their chemical lab at Home Depot, so they could cook up their sulfur dioxide in a hotel room.
Luke Iseman went from living in the world’s ugliest shipping container room to having the world’s worst mohawk.
I’m hoping some internet sleuths who skim Teddy Brosevelt’s stack can figure out which hotel these climate cult crackheads were staying at in Nevada.
We need to contact the owner and email him this photo:
“Next is what Andrew Song, 37, Iseman’s mustachioed, beanied business partner, insists on calling “the cook”—as in, “We have to cook,” from meth drama Breaking Bad.
“The hotel room is cluttered with hardware that Iseman and Song have recently purchased from Home Depot: plastic tubing, pressure cooker, a cooler filled with dry ice, and assorted one-pound jugs of sulfur-based fungicide. There’s a towel under the door, and the window is open. Song hands me an industrial respirator when I walk in. “You’re gonna need this,” he says solemnly.”
We are coming to the end of Part III.
Way overdue for a podcast.
Let me tell you about the core of the Earth, the bottom of the sea, and how nature, the sun and the universe are a total mystery.
What foundations are funding these twerks?
How to create a world wide Silence of the Clans in real time. Psychopathic minds are incredibly focused and creative.