Published by an old curmudgeon who came to America in 1936 as a refugee from Nazi Germany and proudly served in the U.S. Army during World War II. He is a former law enforcement officer and a retired professor of criminal justice who, in 1970, founded the Texas Narcotic Officers Association. BarkGrowlBite refuses to be politically correct.
(Copyrighted articles are reproduced in accordance with the copyright laws of the U.S. Code, Title 17, Section 107.)
Wednesday, October 09, 2024
THE WEATHER IS CONTROLLED BY JEWISH SPACE LASERS
Marjorie Taylor Greene Says ‘They Can Control The Weather,’ Promoting Conspiracy About Hurricane Helene
Right-wingers have long promoted wild theories about weather control, and Greene, a Donald Trump ally, gave them a big boost.
By Christopher Mathias
HuffPost
Oct 4, 2024
"Listen to her, she knows what she's talking about."
Rep.
Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) pushed an unhinged conspiracy theory
about Hurricane Helene on Thursday as a large swath of the southeastern
U.S. still struggles to recover from the storm’s devastating floods,
with residents desperately searching for missing loved ones and mourning
the 215 people killed.
“Yes, they can control the weather,” Greene wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter, Thursday evening. “It’s ridiculous for anyone to lie and say it can’t be done.”
Greene
didn’t specify in her tweet who “they” were (although such insinuations
are typically antisemitic, and wouldn’t be out of place coming from a
congresswoman who once blamed wildfires on Jewish space lasers). But another post, from earlier in the day, seemed to suggest Greene was blaming Democrats.
“This
is a map of hurricane affected areas with an overlay of electoral map
by political party shows how hurricane devastation could affect the
election,” Greene wrote Thursday morning,
seeming to accuse Democrats of manufacturing a storm to kill hundreds
of their fellow Americans, and render thousands more homeless, as part
of a scheme to make Republican voters unable to participate in next
month’s elections.
The
map Greene posted appears to have been created by Matt Wallace, a dodgy
crypto influencer and conspiracy theorist with over 2 million followers
on X. “This took me a long time to make!” Wallace wrote on Sept. 30,
posting an image of the map. “I created map showing the path of
destruction of Hurricane Helene with an overlay of the 2020 election
results... The storm seemed to almost methodically miss the bluest parts
of those crucial swing states, while simultaneously ravaging the red
parts. What a crazy coincidence!”
“If
I was a conspiracy theorist, I might assume that this is a big part of
the reason why Biden and Kamala are still prioritizing aid to illegals
over aid to citizens impacted by the storm,” Wallace wrote. “I would
also wonder if it was all be design.”
Wallace,
of course, is indeed a conspiracy theorist. And so is Greene. Their
conspiracy theory about Hurricane Helene is completely baseless, having
emerged from a far-right media ecosystem long obsessed with the
government’s supposed ability to control the weather for nefarious
purposes. Particularly on Elon Musk’s current iteration of X, those
theories have flourished.
Rep.
Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) speaking before Republican presidential
nominee Donald Trump arrived to deliver remarks at the Johnny Mercer
Theatre Civic Center in Savannah, Georgia, last month.
Disinformation
peddlers have frequently focused on the practice of cloud-seeding,
which involves manipulating clouds to help produce more rain. The
technique, however, does not cause storms — especially ones that some
secret cabal of Democrats could direct to hit a prescribed set of
counties where people are likely to vote for former President Donald
Trump.
Trump
himself has made multiple false claims about the storm, including that
Democrats were purposefully withholding aid from red, Republican
counties, and that the Biden administration has not talked to Georgia
Gov. Brian Kemp about the storm response. (President Joe Biden and Kemp
have both independently confirmed that they spoke. Kemp, a Republican,
has praised the federal government’s response to the storm.)
Meanwhile,
state officials in the Republican Party have made posts begging their
constituents not to share the type of conspiracy theories peddled by
Greene.
“Friends,
can I ask a small favor?” North Carolina state Sen. Kevin Corbin (R)
wrote on Facebook. “Will you all help STOP this conspiracy theory junk
that is floating all over Facebook and the internet about the floods in
[western North Carolina]. Example: FEMA is stealing money from
donations, body bags ordered by government has denied, bodies not being
buried, government is controlling the weather from Antarctica,
government is trying to get lithium from WNC, stacks of bodies left at
hospitals, and on and on and on. PLEASE help stop this junk. It is just a
distraction from people trying to do their jobs.”
The
junk Greene shared in her post to X on Thursday is the latest in a long
series of lies and conspiracy theories posted by the congresswoman, who
was elected to office in 2020 in spite of her promotion of the baseless
QAnon conspiracy theory.
In 2022, Greene also spoke at a white supremacist conference
where her fellow speakers praised Adolf Hitler and called for Dr.
Anthony Fauci to be hanged. Nevertheless, she has risen to prominence in
the Republican Party since taking office. She currently sits on the
House committee on homeland security, and spoke at the Republican
National Convention in August.
2 comments:
How can you tell if a space laser is Jewish??
I think Rep. MT Green is about 1/2 a bubble off. However, weather manipulating the weather has been around for years. Look it up on Wiki.
Post a Comment