After Hurricane Ian ravaged the Caribbean and southeastern U.S. at the end of September, a years-old conspiracy theory about the government being able to control weather resurfaced on social media.
The High-frequency Active Auroral Research Program (HAARP) is not capable of creating or modifying the weather, as suggested in online posts saying it was used to create October floods in New Mexico.
A Feb. 21 Facebook post (direct link, archived link) shows a TikTok video containing a compilation of footage of various natural disasters. “HAARP just been tested on Turkey, Haiti and New Zealand,” ...
False. Hurricane Melissa was a natural event and could not have been created by HAARP research. In the aftermath of Hurricane Melissa, we’ve seen social media posts claiming it was actually caused by ...
HAARP (the High-frequency Active Auroral Research Program) created Hurricane Milton, and a video of swirling clouds shows what geoengineering looks like. Our verdict This is not true. The HAARP ...
Hurricane Helene made landfall on Florida’s gulf coast on Sept. 26. Powerful Hurricane Milton followed closely behind. Conspiracy theorist Alex Jones, the founder of InfoWars, posted this video that ...
A Feb. 7 Facebook post (direct link, archive link) features a video compilation of destruction purportedly from the Feb. 6 earthquakes in Turkey and Syria "What really happened in Turkey?" reads part ...
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