Advancing Life and Liberty Through Action
Jul 10, 2025
Geoengineering, including cloud seeding, is raising
serious concerns
The images from the devastating flood in Texas are hard to see. Some have used this tragedy to blame President Trump or climate change, neither of which is fair. While not proposing a causal connection by any means, we need to consider a serious concern — geoengineering using cloud seeding.
A company called Rainmaker conducts “precipitation enhancement” through cloud seeding. This company released silver iodide and salt into the clouds to increase rain on July 2, less than two days before the unprecedented flood. This was done upwind of the devastation. Wind patterns (coming from the S/SE) could have carried this cocktail straight into the region within a 24-to-48-hour window, just as the storm was building and dumping water. This raises troubling questions about human interference in our weather systems.
Texas has used cloud seeding for more than a decade. Below I will share some staggering results of cloud seeding in the Lone Star State.
Despite the concerns of cloud seeding, there is virtually no regulation.
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) is introducing federal legislation to ban this geoengineering practice that releases chemicals into the atmosphere.
Wichita Falls, Texas, retained Seeding Operations and Atmospheric Research (SOAR) to seed the clouds to increase water to the area. Cloud seeding undoubtedly works. A study of the results from a researcher at Texas Tech found that cloud seeding extended the cloud's life by 28%, expanded the rain area by 29%, and increased rainfall by 103 billion gallons — boosting the precipitation volume by over 10%. That’s a staggering amount of water. One thing is clear: We are messing with things far beyond our control.
Rep. Greene’s new bill would ban injecting or dispersing chemicals into the atmosphere with the goal of modifying the weather — temperature, rainfall, sunlight — with no congressional oversight.
Earlier this year, experts warned that “Silver iodide, the primary agent used in cloud seeding, is classified as a hazardous substance under the Clean Water Act.” In addition, experts warn it can cause “unintended consequences like flooding or droughts in adjacent areas.”
This legislation is critical because it cracks down on corporate experiments like Rainmaker conducts. And it warns that local or state actors have no business attempting weather modification.
Without your voice and your investment, this bill could die in committee.
Together, we must fight back. Send your urgent faxes urging Congress to fully investigate and block experiments with permanent, catastrophic consequences.
Artificially increasing the rainfall by seeding clouds or reducing surface temperatures by darkening the sun raises serious questions that affect all of us.
We have NO IDEA what the long-range consequences are from these actions. And there is no “undo” button for this global manipulation at the hands of environmental dictators if it all falls apart.
In the Wichita Falls case, Gary Walker of SOAR said: “Our goal was specifically to add rain to the watershed area. The City of Wichita Falls is paying us to put water on the ground.”
In 2014, this cloud seeding created an additional 315,920 acre-feet of water to the watershed. An acre-foot is equal to 325,851 gallons of water. This equates to almost 103 billion gallons more water.
This is not just in the hands of billionaire radicals. Now any city can try to control the weather. It could even be your city — or one nearby.
We need to flood Capitol Hill, urging Congress to:
Send your faxes NOW to your representatives and senators,
and urge them to stop these weather-altering programs without any oversight.
Your gift to Liberty Counsel Action enables us to amplify your voice on Capitol Hill.
But it all starts with you.
Mat Staver, Chairman
John Stemberger, President
Liberty Counsel Action
Sources:
Fields, Ashleigh. “Greene to introduce ‘weather modification’ bill.” The Hill, July 5, 2025. Thehill.com/homenews/house/5386499-greene-to-introduce-weather-modification-bill/.
Potter, Mark. "Cloud Seeding Brings Measurable Rain to North Texas, Analysis Shows." The Lawton Constitution, August 28, 2014. Swoknews.com/cloud-seeding-brings-measurable-rain-to-north-texas-analysis-shows/article_b24cb4e2-2e65-50dc-8966-38fdbb197411.html.
"Rainmaker CEO to Speak Publicly Amid Cloud-Seeding Controversy," The Dallas Express, July 7, 2025. Dallasexpress.com/state/rainmaker-ceo-to-speak-publicly-amid-cloud-seeding-scrutiny-over-texas-floods/.
"Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene Introduces Bill to Ban Weather Modification Chemicals in Bold Push Against Geoengineering," Politicom, July 6, 2025. Politicom.com.au/rep-marjorie-taylor-greene-introduces-bill-to-ban-weather-modification-chemicals-in-bold-push-against-geoengineering/.
Salazar, Melanie. "San Antonio Weather: Thunderstorms, Rain Roll Through Texas." MySA, July 2, 2025. Mysanantonio.com/news/weather/article/san-antonio-weather-thunderstorms-rain-20402274.php.
Yang, Jennifer. “Effects of Cloud Seeding on Humans: Benefits, Risks, and Uncertainties.” Fritz Energy, February 26, 2025. Fritzenergy.com/effects-of-cloud-seeding-on-humans/.