A viral video claiming that super typhoon “Yolanda” (international name Haiyan) which battered the Philippines and left 10,000 dead was a man-made disaster has been making the rounds in the internet.
The man behind the video, who only identified himself as Dutchsinse, demonstrated in the video his hypothesis that “Haiyan / Yolanda” was caused by a technology that emits microwave pulses.
Calling the technology a "weaponized weather," Dutchsinse said a microwave pulse generates cyclones, making the water evaporate and accumulate in a particular area.
The video showed how the microwave pulses were transmitted from "up north in Japan," citing the microwave pulse also did the same thing in the 7.2 magnitude earthquake which hit Bohol, central Philippines.
There were previous studies on a similar topic, referred to as “climate engineering,” where scientists inject aerosols and sulfur into the atmosphere where they could control the climate in any particular region, and of course, "cloud-seeding" to create rain.
Microwave pulses coming from "up north" in Japan generates cyclones, making the water evaporate and accumulate in a particular area. |
The man behind the video, who only identified himself as Dutchsinse, demonstrated in the video his hypothesis that “Haiyan / Yolanda” was caused by a technology that emits microwave pulses.
Calling the technology a "weaponized weather," Dutchsinse said a microwave pulse generates cyclones, making the water evaporate and accumulate in a particular area.
The video showed how the microwave pulses were transmitted from "up north in Japan," citing the microwave pulse also did the same thing in the 7.2 magnitude earthquake which hit Bohol, central Philippines.
There were previous studies on a similar topic, referred to as “climate engineering,” where scientists inject aerosols and sulfur into the atmosphere where they could control the climate in any particular region, and of course, "cloud-seeding" to create rain.