The popularity of these conspiracies may also be on the rise in right-wing spaces. Some MAHA figureheads, including Nicole Shanahan, have shared geoengineering content promoting conspiracy theories, while Marla Maples, Donald Trumpās ex-wife, told Fox News in July that she helped Floridaās anti-weather modification bill pass. (Bill Gatesā track record of funding solar geoengineering research has undoubtedly helped fan some of these flames.)
Doricko, the Rainmaker CEO, has spent much of the past year testifying in state legislatures that were considering vague anti-geoengineering bills that would have also banned cloud seeding. In May, he told WIRED that he and his team had spoken in front of 31 state legislatures. Education, he says, is key to getting people on board with the technology.
āI think thereās some cohort of people that believe that, you know, Joe Biden is actually a lizard person,ā he says. āI think that a lot of people arenāt quite that far along, but are very concerned about chemtrails, probably. Showing them farms that are greener than they otherwise would have been with testimonies from those farmersāthatās probably the way that weāre gonna win hearts and minds.ā (Doricko told WIRED last week that in recent months, his company has had āinterest, curiosity, and excitementā from various state governments, both Democratic and Republican, in using cloud seeding to enhance water supply. āThe education that we had the opportunity to do ultimately I think assuaged a lot of reasonable peopleās concerns.ā)
There is one additional type of human-caused shift in the worldās weather that played an outsize role in the hearing: climate change. Greene and other Republican lawmakers repeated many climate denial talking points and bad framing around climate science, including the idea that carbon dioxide is good for the planet because it is plant food. There were multiple mentions of beach houses owned by Barack Obama and Al Gore as a way of illustrating supposed hypocrisy about sea level rise. One of the witnesses called by the House majority works at an organization with a long history of questioning established climate science; he claimed in his testimony that there is āuncertainty as to exactly how much influence humans have exertedā over the global rise in temperatureāa take that is out of line with mainstream science.
āMy view is that this is mainly a way of saying there are secret forces at work that are making your life miserable, and everything bad is due to these secret forces,ā says Dessler. āWhen in reality, itās not secret forces, itās climate change and itās these other things that are hurting people.ā
But even a whole hearing dedicated to a conspiracy theory grab bag may not be enough for some. On X, a popular anti-geoengineering community was alight with posts about the hearingāincluding many critical of the experts and their findings. āThis was a scripted show to protect the governmentās weather control agenda,ā one moderatorās post reads. āWhy no independent voices?ā
