Were the Texas floods geoengineered?

At least 110 people are confirmed dead and more than 160 remain missing as the devastating flash floods that began over the weekend continue to ravage central Texas.

Search and rescue teams continue to search for survivors. One of those teams is Operation Helo, a volunteer group of search and rescue veterans who assist government efforts in disasters. In a recent interview with The Daily Pulse, Gary Heavin, a helicopter pilot with Operation Helo, suggested the floods might have been geoengineered.

“You look at means, motive, and opportunity,” Heavin said. “I think they had the means and the opportunity, but I’m not sure what the motive would be.”

Heavin added that “there is certainly a lot of evidence” that Hurricane Helene, which devastated North Carolina in September, was “manipulated.” The pilot said he participated in search and rescue efforts there and saw forests of trees that had been snapped in ways that didn’t match the storm’s weakened winds.

What is cloud seeding?

There are several ways to manipulate the weather through geoengineering. Former CIA Director John Brennan expressed particular interest in stratospheric aerosol injection (SAI), a method in which sulfates are shot into the atmosphere to reflect solar radiation back into space.

Cloud seeding is another form of geoengineering where pilots spray silver iodide into clouds to stimulate stronger rains or snowfall. Water vapor freezes around the chemicals, eventually falling to the ground in the form of rain or snow. Salt crystals such as calcium chloride are used in warmer clouds. An experiment conducted in Idaho found that cloud seeding was able to elicit 300 Olympic-sized swimming pools more snow than usual. Texas, Utah, Colorado, Nevada, Idaho, New Mexico, California, and Mexico all have cloud seeding programs, according to the Wall Street Journal.

Although legacy media have long insisted that geoengineering is a conspiracy theory, it appears they may be ready to admit the truth.

Cloud seeding was conducted before the floods

NBC News reported on Tuesday that Rainmaker, a cloud seeding company, had conducted a cloud seeding operation in south-central Texas just two days before the floods. But Rainmaker CEO Augustus Doricko said the operation did not cause the floods because the two clouds that were seeded would have dissipated within hours.

“Did Rainmaker conduct any operations that could have impacted the floods? No,” Doricko wrote in a post on X. 

“The last seeding mission prior to the July 4th event was during the early afternoon of July 2nd, when a brief cloud seeding mission was flown over the eastern portions of south-central Texas, and two clouds were seeded . . . The clouds that were seeded on July 2nd dissipated over 24 hours prior to the developing storm complex that would produce the flooding rainfall.”

Doricko added that after observing “unusually high moisture content” in the atmosphere, his company suspended operations to avoid causing floods.

Not everyone was convinced by Doricko’s explanation, however.

“Sure, the seeded clouds dissipated within a couple of hours, but atmospheric changes don’t operate on such a clean, isolated timeline,” a user responded to the CEO. “Small disturbances can propagate, moisture redistribution can linger, and the seeding materials themselves can have extended effects under the right conditions. The assertion that the July 4th storm was entirely disconnected from the July 2nd seeding is a little too convenient, especially given the scale of the flooding.”

The Department of Defense aimed to ‘own the weather’ by now

In 1996, the Department of Defense produced a report titled “Weather as a Force Multiplier: Owning the Weather in 2025,” in which researchers detailed how the Air Force could manipulate the weather by this year. This included increasing rain to muddy an enemy’s terrain or reducing precipitation to allow for drier ground and easier troop mobility. It also involved “fog seeding” in which the military would be able to create fog.

Another weather modification technique proposed in the paper is creating storms by increasing latent heat release in the atmosphere and providing additional water vapor for cloud cell development. 

The paper says an artificial ionosphere can be created through the “injection of chemical vapors and heating or charging via electromagnetic radiation or particle beams (such as ions, neutral particles, x-rays, MeV particles and energetic electrons).”

The report’s authors note that “many techniques to modify the upper atmosphere have been successfully demonstrated experimentally.”

Solar geoengineering

Climate hysterics have been researching ways to change the Earth’s temperature by reducing the Sun’s rays, a method called solar geoengineering. The United States and European governments, along with organizations like the World Economic Forum (WEF), have been exploring strategies like solar radiation modification (SRM), which involves planes shooting aerosols into the atmosphere to divert the Sun’s rays.

Like former CIA Director Brennan, the WEF has also recommended stratospheric aerosol injection (SAI).

In 2023, UNESCO held a symposium to discuss the impact of geoengineering methods such as carbon dioxide removal and SRM techniques.

Attempts to experiment with solar engineering have been forging ahead with the backing of wealthy financiers. Those include the Pritzker family, which owns the Hyatt Hotels Corporation and remains one of America’s top ten richest families. 

The Pritzker fortune heavily funds Leftist causes such as gender ideology and the climate agenda. The Pritzker Innovation Fund was one of the sponsors of a recently canceled solar engineering experiment in Alameda, California. The experiment, planned by University of Washington researchers, aimed to alter clouds by spraying aerosols from an aircraft carrier in the San Francisco Bay. Local officials shut down the experiment 20 minutes in, in part due to concerns about weather interruptions and “unintended consequences.” 

Geoengineering in warfare

According to the BBC, chemical warfare experiments have been conducted by spraying the atmosphere:

In the 1950s and 1960s, decades before the conspiracy theories were born, much of Britain was sprayed with airborne chemicals in a series of secret germ warfare tests. And in 1950, San Francisco was sprayed with a chemical agent from a ship to gauge the effects of a bioweapon attack on a populated area.

In September 2013, CBS ran a segment on weather modification. Michio Kaku, a physics professor and network contributor, told host Norah O’Donnell that the CIA used cloud seeding during the Vietnam War to manufacture monsoons “to wash out the Viet Cong.” Kaku was on the show to discuss how physicists were experimenting with lasers to cause storms.

O’Donnell herself recalled hearing that China used geoengineering, as did the USSR after the Chernobyl disaster to create rain clouds.

Blocking the Sun

Another method of solar geoengineering is using balloons or umbrellas to block the Sun’s rays. In February 2024, a group of scientists from the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology said they may have discovered how to do so successfuly.

Dr. Yoram Rozen, director of the university's Asher Space Research Institute, told the New York Times that several small solar shields may be used to block the Sun, thereby diffusing sunlight and "shading" the Earth.