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Geoengineers discuss implementing weather control through aerosols to manipulate wind speeds and cloud formation. HAARP and chemtrails are used as weather weapons to influence precipitation and storm patterns. The introduction of aerosols in the atmosphere leads to droughts and floods, impacting agriculture and water rights. The California drought results in water restrictions, land acquisition, and prioritization of corporate agriculture over small farmers, leading to public suffering. Water scarcity becomes a critical issue with implications for the future.

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A group of wealthy individuals, including Reid Hoffman and Laurene Powell Jobs, are buying farmland for a new city project called California Forever. John Schremmick, a former trader, aims to create an affordable, walkable city in Solano County. The project's success depends on overturning a law restricting development. Locals are skeptical of the proposal, questioning affordability and impact on the area.

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Aerosols in the atmosphere affect weather and cloud formation. Geoengineering programs aim to control weather, like rain distribution. HAARP and chemtrails work together as weather weapons. Manipulating the jet stream diverts storms, causing droughts and floods. Water scarcity leads to land loss and corporate control. The public suffers from water restrictions and higher rates. The drought in California is linked to water rights shifts and corporate interests. The impact of weather manipulation on agriculture and society is a growing concern.

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Linda and Stuart Resnick control over 60% of California's water rights, amassing wealth through their agricultural business, the Wonderful Company, known for pomegranate juice and pistachios. They consume over 150 billion gallons of water annually. Water was once a public right but changed after a secret meeting in 1994, prioritizing agricultural needs over citizens. As the largest farmers in California, the Resnicks receive the most water. They also sell water back to the county, but this "paper water" often doesn't reflect actual availability. This ongoing issue has persisted for years with little change, prompting calls to boycott the Wonderful Company for its impact on California and beyond.

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A billionaire couple in California, the Resniks, control a significant portion of the state's water system, originally funded by taxpayers. They own The Wonderful Company, worth billions, and have acquired vast farmland for products like pistachios and pomegranate juice. Through secretive meetings, they gained control of the Kern Water Bank, profiting off droughts by selling water back to the state. The Resniks influence politicians like Senator Feinstein through donations, securing more water access and funding. Their actions harm California's water supply, environment, and economy, highlighting the need for legislative change to prevent such exploitation. Translation: A billionaire couple in California, the Resniks, control a significant portion of the state's water system, originally funded by taxpayers. They own The Wonderful Company, worth billions, and have acquired vast farmland for products like pistachios and pomegranate juice. Through secretive meetings, they gained control of the Kern Water Bank, profiting off droughts by selling water back to the state. The Resniks influence politicians like Senator Feinstein through donations, securing more water access and funding. Their actions harm California's water supply, environment, and economy, highlighting the need for legislative change to prevent such exploitation.

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Hawaiian government officials recently passed a law preventing new building permits on sacred lands unless a serious natural disaster occurred. After wildfires hit these areas, residents discovered zoning restrictions on their land, causing insurance companies to deny their claims. Within 24 hours, developers who were previously fought by Hawaiian elders for the law were making offers to buy the affected homes. This situation highlights the influence of the government and insurance industry, as they collaborate with developers to profit from the situation. The Hawaiian elders are left disadvantaged, and this pattern of events raises suspicions of corruption.

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The video discusses the Chinese government's involvement in the takeover of Smithfield Foods and Saudi Arabia's acquisition of farmland in the US to secure food and water resources. Residents in Arizona are facing water scarcity due to excessive pumping by foreign companies, leading to wells running dry. Legal loopholes allow these actions, causing frustration and concern among locals. The lack of regulation exacerbates the situation, prompting calls for conservation measures and accountability from authorities. Translation: The video talks about how the Chinese government and Saudi Arabia are involved in acquiring food and water resources, leading to water scarcity and frustration among residents in Arizona due to excessive pumping by foreign companies. Legal loopholes allow these actions, causing concern among locals.

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Bill Gates has reportedly partnered with Nestle and BlackRock to buy farmland with aquifers, with the alleged intention of selling the water. The Nestle CEO has stated that water is not a basic human right. Additionally, a product called Appeal has been approved for use on organic produce. Appeal is claimed to be non-water soluble, meaning it cannot be washed off. The speaker suggests that because the human body is 70% water, consuming Appeal could be harmful. The speaker promotes a Kangen water machine, claiming its 11.5 pH water can remove the Appeal residue from produce.

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The conversation centers on the claim that Iran has faced long-running weather manipulation and climate intervention, pushing the idea that weather warfare is being waged against Iran for decades and that this has contributed to severe droughts, disrupted rainfall, and harsh living conditions amid sanctions. Dane Wiggington, founder of geoengineeringwatch.org, leads the discussion with Clayton and Natalie, presenting a narrative that goes beyond mainstream geopolitics to point to covert weather manipulation as a central factor. Key points and assertions include: - Weather warfare against Iran has “gone back forty years plus,” with Iranian meteorologists and former president Ahmadinejad publicly asserting that NATO was cutting off precipitation, thereby destabilizing weather patterns and food production. The guests describe this as ongoing warfare that destabilizes populations. - The practice is described as not just about Iran; the tactic, historically used by the US in conflicts such as Vietnam (Project Popeye), has led to international attempts to regulate weather modification (INMOD treaties) in 1976, though the speakers argue that nations still engage in such activities over their own citizens. - The mechanism of climate engineering is presented as two main methods: diminishing and dispersing precipitation, and completely cutting it off. The discussion highlights ionosphere heater technologies (notably HARP) as tools to heat portions of the atmosphere, creating high-pressure heat domes that steer moisture patterns and produce chemically nucleated rainfall or drought. This is linked to current US West Coast heat waves and is described as a deliberate manipulation of moisture cycles. - The oil-cloud phenomenon in Iran is described as a result of such warfare, with reports of oil covering streets, doors, cars, and lungs from inhalation of aerosolized oil. The guest connects this to broader environmental impacts, including toxic precipitation and altered air quality, and claims similar operations have caused dramatic weather and pollution events elsewhere. - The discussion cites historical and contemporary examples to illustrate broader patterns: Kuwait’s oil wells torched by US forces allegedly to justify infrastructure moves; allegations that US military operations use climate intervention as a weapon; and a claim that blizzards and chemical cooling downs (including alleged chemical ice nucleation) have been weaponized in various regions, including the Gulf Coast and the US Northeast. - The conversation ties climate engineering to geopolitical strategies, arguing that portraying Iran as a nuclear threat serves to justify aggressive actions and to obscure the manipulation of weather and climate systems. Netanyahu’s warnings and statements about water and control of resources are presented as part of this broader manipulation. - The speakers argue that the US and allied governments are maintaining control through deception, suggesting that media coverage is insufficient or complicit. They claim that mainstream outlets like Forbes “cover” for the narrative of cloud theft and downplay the severity of drought and weather manipulation in Iran, while asserting that Western North American snowpack is at record lows, much of it chemically nucleated, reducing runoff. - They emphasize the scale of water stress domestically, warning that tens of millions in the US Southwest could face severe water shortages, with reservoirs like Lake Powell and Lake Mead described as near dead pools with substantial sedimentation reducing usable capacity. - The dialogue connects climate engineering to broader biosphere collapse and asserts that the greatest single source of pollution is the US military. They argue that climate engineering is the crown jewel weapon used to inflict misery while remaining hidden, urging listeners to awaken, form supportive networks, and push for action at the legislative level. - They reference the documentary The Dimming as a resource for evidence of climate engineering and invite audiences to explore geoengineeringwatch.org for ongoing information. Throughout, Dane Wiggington reiterates that climate engineering and weather manipulation are central, ongoing operations that intersect with geopolitics, media coverage, and public health. The conversation maintains a consistent stance that these interventions are real, pervasive, and inadequately addressed by mainstream discourse, urging viewers to seek out more information and grassroots advocacy.

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The owners of the Wonderful Company, Stuart and Linda Resnick, aim to dominate the US lemon market with their seedless lemons. They hold exclusive licenses for two seedless lemon varieties, hoping to control 25% of the market. This move would prevent lemon tree regrowth from seeds. The Resnicks, who also own Halos, Fiji Water, Wonderful Pistachios, and Pom, have faced criticism for their water usage. They acquired water rights in California through secretive deals and have close ties to politicians like Dianne Feinstein. This situation highlights the importance of supporting small, local farms over large corporations. Translation: The owners of the Wonderful Company, Stuart and Linda Resnick, want to control a quarter of the US fresh lemon market with their seedless lemons. They obtained exclusive licenses for two seedless lemon varieties, which would prevent lemon tree regrowth from seeds. The Resnicks, who also own Halos, Fiji Water, Wonderful Pistachios, and Pom, have been criticized for their water usage. They acquired water rights in California through secret agreements and have close relationships with politicians like Dianne Feinstein. This demonstrates why it's important to support small, local farms over big corporations.

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The Idaho Department of Water Resources issued a curtailment of 500,000 acres, affecting 781 square miles of farmland during a year with abundant water. Reservoirs are full, risking overflow. A farmer faces a $3,000,000 loss, potentially ending a 135-year family legacy. The governor has the power to end the curtailment but has not acted. Leadership plans to let the water dry up the farmland.

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A company backed by a billionaire hedge fund is attempting to drill 30 industrial wells into the Carrizo Wilcox Aquifer in rural East Texas, potentially extracting 15 billion gallons of water per year. This water would be piped out of the area and sold, while local communities that rely on the aquifer would face depleted water levels and dry wells. The well drilling company hired for the project is owned by Donald A. Foster, who until recently, served on the groundwater district board responsible for reviewing the permits. Public records allegedly do not show Foster recusing himself from discussions or votes regarding the project, except for one vote in April 2025. He was present during discussions of this project and even participated in closed sessions where this project was discussed. Foster resigned from the board the day before a public hearing on the issue.

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A billionaire couple, the Resniks, control a large share of California's water system, acquired through secretive meetings. They own The Wonderful Company, worth billions, and influence water policies through political donations. Their control over water resources allows them to profit at the expense of taxpayers, selling water back to the state during droughts. The Resniks manipulate legislation, exploit workers, and harm the environment with their water monopoly. Legislation is needed to prevent individuals like the Resniks from exploiting essential public resources.

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Speaker 0 discusses the public misunderstanding of what it means for humans to integrate with AI, noting that many imagine only using chatbots more, but the concept is a mixed reality existence where it’s hard to distinguish digital from real. They reference documents describing a future where people won’t leave their lounge rooms, with loved ones appearing as holograms and the sensation of hugging them in the skin, including dopamine and endorphin release, even though the contact is with a hologram. This is presented as part of a broader push into a digital world since COVID. Speaker 1 responds by connecting this to the idea of a societal digital nervous system, where everything is based on electricity and emotions, and life is governed by electrical processes like fight or flight. They describe a state-run institution in which AI would be the teacher, and emphasize that the spectrum of digital integration would form a pervasive nervous-system-like infrastructure. Speaker 0 calls the future horrific to contemplate and points to aggressive data-center expansion, NDAs shielding big tech from communities, aquifers being drained, and people losing access to water. They argue the situation will worsen as the push continues. Speaker 1 adds that the flooding in Texas highlighted the strategic importance of the Edward Aquifer and notes that many natural underground water stores are being taken over by the Army Corps of Engineers, the Department of Energy, and the Department of Commerce, with involvement from the Interior and State Department. They describe a broader pattern of resource control, mentioning the Tennessee Valley Authority and the involvement of the Department of Defense and the Army Corps of Engineers in a large-scale, fifteen-minute city grid, including water resources and nuclear power being confiscated. Speaker 0 warns that declaring national security needs could justify eminent domain, a notion Sam Altman has suggested in relation to AI, and asserts that this would normalize the appropriation of resources. They argue this is why legislative action is needed to protect communities and prevent such takeovers. The discussion expands to concerns about water poisoning through data-center pollution, EMF exposure, noise, health impacts, and other environmental harms accompanying the data-center push. Speaker 1 concludes by offering a personal course of action: a heartfelt recommendation to pray and to build a relationship with Jesus, stressing the importance of prayer and faith in navigating these concerns.

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A billionaire couple in California, the Resnicks, uses more water than all residents of Los Angeles combined. They own the Palm Wonderful Company, which includes brands like Fiji Water, Palm Pomegranates, and Wonderful Pistachios. In 1994, California's public water access was privatized, and the Resnicks acquired 60% of the state's fresh water resources, making them the largest owners of fresh water in California.

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The same individuals who claim to care for public health and the environment are actually harming both. Their push for electric vehicles and AI data centers requires extensive mining, threatening ecosystems in Latin America and Africa for resources like nickel and cobalt. This process also demands significant water, which they aim to privatize through carbon markets, effectively commodifying essential life resources. The concept of carbon credits originated from a banker linked to past financial scandals, illustrating a pattern of exploiting crises for profit. Instead of saving the planet, these actions are detrimental. We must reclaim our role as creators and supporters of one another, and work to eliminate those who are damaging our world.

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A billionaire couple, the Resniks, control a large portion of California's water system, acquired through secretive meetings. They own The Wonderful Company, worth billions, and influence water policies to profit from selling water back to the state. Their political connections, including with Senator Dianne Feinstein, help them secure control over water systems and funding. The Resniks' actions harm California's water resources, environment, and economy. They exploit workers, manipulate studies, and prioritize profits over public welfare. Legislative changes are needed to prevent individuals like the Resniks from exploiting essential public resources.

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LA is facing devastating fires, and there's speculation that this is linked to a cover-up involving a couple who owns a significant portion of the water supply. This couple, known for their ownership of pistachios and Fiji water, controls 60% of the water, raising concerns about public resources being privatized. While people are suffering from the fires and water shortages, the regulators who allowed this should be held accountable. There’s a call for prayers for those affected, but a suspicion lingers about the wealthy who may have evacuated in advance of the fires. The situation raises questions about the motives behind the fires and the protection of evidence related to serious allegations.

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According to the speaker, powerful, wealthy entities influence politicians to create laws that benefit them. Robert Kennedy Junior stated these entities work in coordination to increase authoritarian control, transform people into consumers, shift wealth to the ultra-rich, and exploit the planet. They are allegedly at war with democracy and operate without checks, balances, or legal constraints. The speaker claims there is a secret government operation with more resources than the constitutional government. This operation is described as a criminal enterprise, unsanctioned by the president or Congress, that uses tax dollars to exploit the planet and impoverish populations. The speaker asserts this is the problem that needs to be addressed.

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BlackRock owns the four meat packers in the country, who are keeping meat prices high and cow prices low, hurting both farmers and consumers due to their monopoly. BlackRock also owns all the pharmaceutical companies. The speaker suggests initiating antitrust suits against the meat packers and regulating pharmaceutical companies to prevent cartel-like behavior.

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I'm going to be the bad guy and I want to get away with as much as possible to enrich myself. You're all my co-conspirators helping me legally. My campaign is entirely funded by corporate PACs, like those from the fossil fuel, healthcare, and big pharma industries. I can even use dark money to pay off people to cover up skeletons. Once elected, I have the power to shape laws without limits. Being funded by oil and gas or big pharma means I can write laws benefiting them without restrictions. I want to get rich, so I can hold stocks in an oil company and then write laws to deregulate the industry, causing the stock value to soar. Does this sound familiar? Our system is broken, with these influences shaping the questions being asked right now.

This Past Weekend

Investigative Journalist Nate Halverson | This Past Weekend w/ Theo Von #510
Guests: Nate Halverson
reSee.it Podcast Summary
Nate Halverson describes The Grab as an investigative look at how money and power are concentrating control over food, land, and water across the world. The goal, he says, is to show that in the 21st century the rich and powerful are turning to food and water as strategic levers, with governments, Wall Street, and billionaires like the Gates family emerging as owners of large tracts of farmland in the United States. Halverson, an independent writer and Center for Investigative Reporting contributor, broke ground years earlier by examining China’s move into the world’s pork market. He traveled to Hong Kong, spoke with US intelligence, and found that the Chinese government was behind the Virginia pork company acquisition, illustrating a pattern: food is political power. He notes that food has become a national security concern. In Venezuela, he witnessed food riots, lines to enter grocery stores, and a warehouse where soldiers and police carted out food to be distributed to authorities in order to keep the population in line. As he followed stories around the globe, he saw dots connect: land grabs in Madagascar, arid Saudi Arabia tapping aquifers to grow wheat in the desert and then shipping alfalfa to meet domestic needs; and the same logic applying to pigs and grain, creating what he calls “virtual water” — moving water through crops and animals to feed populations elsewhere. In the Arizona example he covered in 2015, Saudi purchases of land and water created anxiety for locals whose wells were dropping. He explains the law in parts of the West that allows large buyers to pump water without regard to neighbors, so water can be exported as crops. He emphasizes that 70-80% of global fresh water is used to grow food, while drinking water accounts for a fraction, making water the critical resource behind food production. Halverson argues this trend is not confined to distant places. Across the United States, smaller farms are increasingly being bought by Wall Street funds or foreign entities, with foreign ownership of agricultural land growing but poorly tracked. He cites a United Nations World Water Development Report statistic that billions lack safe drinking water or sanitation, while oceans of water are extracted to feed crops. Africa, he says, has seen aggressive land grabs by international players displacing indigenous families, a pattern echoed in the American West and other regions. He discusses the broader geopolitics: China’s rise as a manufacturing power, Russia’s emergence as a food exporter, and Ukraine as a strategic breadbasket. The documentary also touches on the ethics of private influence in journalism, technology, and food systems. He explains his nonprofit funding through the Center for Investigative Reporting, the importance of corroboration and multiple sources, and the value of public information for democracy. He ends with reflections on community, purpose, and the need to foster real connections beyond screens.

Coldfusion

Why California Sold Its Water to Two Billionaires
reSee.it Podcast Summary
The Resnicks, a billionaire couple, control more water than Los Angeles uses in a year, owning vast agricultural land in California. Their company, The Wonderful Company, uses significant water resources for crops like almonds and pistachios, raising questions about their water rights amidst California's droughts. They manipulated state water laws through secretive meetings, gaining control of the Kern Water Bank, which was funded by taxpayers. Accusations arose linking their practices to exacerbating California wildfires, although they deny wrongdoing. The episode explores the ethical implications of water privatization and the need for legislative reform in California's water management.

Keeping It Real

A Global Power Grab Is Happening-And It Starts With Food & Water!
Guests: Nate Halverson
reSee.it Podcast Summary
The episode delves into a modern power struggle centered on food, water, and land, arguing that these resources have become the new currency of influence for governments and corporations. Nate Halverson, an Emmy-winning journalist and filmmaker of The Grab, unpacks a global playbook where nations seek to secure vital resources to safeguard populations and profits in a climate-changed, volatile world. He cites examples like a Chinese purchase that gave a meat processor control over about a quarter of America’s pigs, and the push to position Russia and Ukraine as a grain powerhouse, or “grain OPEC,” to tilt global supply and pricing. The discussion emphasizes that water and arable land are increasingly strategic assets, with water use for farming comprising the bulk of consumption and triggering cascading effects such as migrations, political upheaval, and local deprivations in places like California and Arizona. The conversation traces how markets, private equity, sovereign wealth, and even private military contractors intersect with food security. In Zambia, desert lands, rural communities, and legal systems clash as land rights are challenged by well-funded buyers, sometimes with international legal and political cover. In Arizona, Saudi-backed dairy operations tap groundwater to grow fodder for export, illustrating how “virtual water” is moved via food products rather than water itself. The hosts examine the moral and practical hazards of this consolidation, including the erosion of local livelihoods, environmental degradation, and potential security implications when communities are displaced or deemed a threat. They also recount the filmmakers’ experiences with pushback and even deportation, underscoring how sensitive food and water narratives can be for national interests and corporate power. The episode reframes health and ecology debates within this geopolitical lens, highlighting knife-edge tensions between global demand, national security, and the public’s right to information, while urging broader civic engagement and robust investigative journalism as antidotes to information disparities. The overarching call is for heightened awareness and bipartisan action on securing equitable access to safe, nutritious food and clean water. The discussion links climate resilience, agricultural policy, and transparency in ownership to the health of democracies, arguing that without coordinated global stewardship, the next century’s conflicts may be fought over what we eat and drink rather than over oil. The episode invites audiences to watch The Grab, consider the role of journalists and nonprofits, and demand policy reforms that curb predatory resource grabs while protecting vulnerable communities.

All In Podcast

E39: West coast super drought & climate crisis, Nuclear virtue signaling, chaos in SF & more
Guests: Michelle Tandler, Brian Sugar, Thomas Sowell, Rob Henderson
reSee.it Podcast Summary
The All In Pod discusses California's severe drought and its implications, with David Friedberg highlighting that the state is experiencing a mega drought not seen in over 500 years. The snowpack in California reached zero percent by June 1st, leading to a 70% decrease in hydroelectric power generation. Friedberg emphasizes the urgent need for preparation, including community centers with power and air quality measures, as the state faces potential disasters due to extreme heat and dry conditions. The conversation shifts to the political ramifications for Governor Gavin Newsom, who may face challenges in the upcoming recall election if he fails to manage the crisis effectively. The hosts discuss the lack of investment in infrastructure, particularly desalination plants and nuclear energy, which could alleviate water shortages and energy demands. They argue that California's agricultural sector, which consumes 90% of the state's water, complicates the situation. The discussion also touches on the interconnectedness of climate change, water management, and political accountability. The hosts criticize politicians for failing to implement long-term solutions and for prioritizing re-election over effective governance. They suggest that technological advancements, like nuclear power and innovative water solutions, could provide a path forward but require bold leadership and public support. Overall, the episode underscores the urgency of addressing California's water crisis and the need for proactive measures to ensure community safety and sustainability in the face of climate challenges.
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