CREDIT(s) to Sheilaaliens @ YouTube.
http://youtu.be/oF24RsVU-GAAbout the known toxicity of Silver Iodide (not much known, not much research done/published!!!):
http://www.pesticideinfo.org/Detail_Chemical.jsp?Rec_Id=PC35295#Symptoms***********************************************
Plumas County, California -
http://www.countyofplumas.com/index.aspx?NID=31***********************************************
This was just released on Dec. 28, 2011. I couldn't find a recording of the meeting where this was discussed. If anybody else knows where I can find the video from Plumas County Board of Supervisor's meeting on December 20, 2011 .. please, do tell.
After a 6-month "investigation" this is the results of their report. Silver Idiode has no negative health affects to humans. Right. Their main source of info? PG & E, a company that FUNDS Plumas County to begin with. More on this at some point, real soon. Consider this a preview.
Proof that PG & E FUNDS Plumas County:
http://www.tinyurl.com/PGE-Plumas and is therefore in a position of conflict of interest and should have no place or voice in this health report, much less be the main source of information from which they draw their conclusions!! ~Sheilaaliens
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"There's no evidence that cloud seeding has negative effects on the environment or public health. But more research should be done.
That's what an advisory committee told the Plumas County Board of Supervisors at its meeting Tuesday, Dec. 20.
Almanor Basin Watershed Advisory Committee Chairman Ryan Burnett said, "We don't have any smoking gun to suggest that they (PG&E) should stop (cloud seeding) right now.
"There's certainly potential benefits to cloud seeding. And we found nothing in our research that really was compelling to say that they should stop doing it," Burnett said. "But we have some concerns."
The advisory committee, which was formed by the Board of Supervisors in 2005, began studying cloud seeding last spring in response to public concerns.
The nine-member committee presented the supervisors with a five-page report that included recommendations for the board.
Burnett said PG&E was "a huge help" in the study, which included talking to some of the leading experts in the field."
http://www.plumasnews.com/mcondon/8957-board-of-supervisors-update-study-find...