Flash flooding in Texas has claimed over 100 lives, prompting conspiracy theories linking the disaster to geo-engineering. Despite meteorologists refuting claims of negligence by the National Weather Service, figures like Kandiss Taylor and representatives like Marjorie Taylor Greene have spread assertions about "fake" weather. Greene announced intentions to introduce legislation against weather modification, paralleling Florida's strict laws. Influencers such as Gabrielle Yoder have further fueled conspiracy claims, suggesting cloud seeding caused the floods, contributing to the ongoing discourse surrounding climate events and governmental accountability.
"Fake weather. Fake hurricanes. Fake flooding. Fake. Fake. Fake," Kandiss Taylor, who intends to run as a GOP candidate, wrote in a post viewed 2.4 million times.
During the emergency response to the floods, US representative Marjorie Taylor Greene announced a bill to "end the dangerous and deadly practice of weather modification and geoengineering."
Kylie Jane Kremer claimed on X that the flooding "doesn't even seem natural," a sentiment echoed by various online influencers and lawmakers.
Influencer Gabrielle Yoder alleged that cloud seeding caused the floods, bringing attention to the conspiracy theory without concrete evidence.
#texas-flooding #conspiracy-theories #weather-modification #social-media-influence #emergency-response
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