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A Tennessee congresman is backing Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene's push to ban "weather modification" in the wake of devastating floods in Texas. What to know.
In response, Zeldin emphasized that those questioning geoengineering and contrails deserve to receive answers from the government. The EPA then announced two websites to address public concerns ...
The head of the Environmental Protection Agency on Thursday appeared to nod to conspiracy theories that have swirled around ...
The agency took the unusual step of creating websites debunking the conspiracy theory that chemicals are being sprayed in the ...
Instead of simply dismissing these questions and concerns as baseless conspiracies, we're meeting them head on,” the EPA ...
In the wake of deadly flooding in Texas, the Environmental Protection Agency has created two websites to combat conspiracy ...
We did the legwork, looked at the science, consulted agency experts, and pulled in relevant outside information to put these ...
For years, people who asked questions in good faith were dismissed, even vilified by the media and their own government. This ...
Lee Zeldin's social media posts about weather phenomena confused many into thinking he had endorsed conspiracy theories ...
Administrator Lee Zeldin said Thursday that Americans have “legitimate questions” about airplane contrails as his agency ...
The Environmental Protection Agency is now addressing concerns over "weather modification" as Marjorie Taylor Greene and ...