Geoengineering Texas: The Hidden Hand Behind the Droughts and the Storms
A Deep Dive Into Weather Modification, NOAA-Approved Zones, and the Alarming Reality in the Lone Star State
What if the sky over Texas isn’t just cloudy—it’s controlled?
For years, Texans have watched their weather change in strange, unnatural ways—record droughts, torrential floods, sudden hail, and eerily consistent cloud patterns. But what few realize is that behind these atmospheric anomalies is a sanctioned program of geoengineering, rubber-stamped by federal agencies and carried out over dozens of Texas counties.
The image above makes it plain: Texas is carved into officially approved "Weather Modification Zones," authorized by the federal government and mapped by NOAA itself.
And right in the middle of this lies Kerr County—home to Hunt, TX and the scenic Camp Mystic—surrounded by the powerful rivers of the Guadalupe and the San Antonio basin. These natural waterways are the lifeblood of the Hill Country and much of South Texas. Yet they flow directly beneath zones approved for weather modification. The question becomes unavoidable: What happens when you interfere with the clouds that feed these rivers?
The Historical and Legal Foundation of Weather Modification
Weather modification isn’t science fiction—it’s public record. The U.S. government has authorized weather control experiments since at least the 1950s. Cloud seeding with silver iodide, hail suppression, and even hurricane disruption have all been explored under federal funding.
In 1971, Texas became one of the first states to officially allow weather modification through state licensing. Today, under the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation (TDLR), private and public entities can apply to modify weather “for beneficial purposes.” But who decides what’s beneficial?
NOAA tracks and approves these projects through its Weather Modification Reporting system. The document listed in the image confirms that entire swaths of Texas—including the regions around Camp Mystic—are active zones for such modification.
These aren’t isolated tests. This is policy.
Modern Evidence: Drought, Flood, and Unnatural Patterns
Texas has experienced some of the most severe weather swings in modern U.S. history. In 2022, 2023, and 2024, Texans witnessed dramatic drought conditions that crippled agriculture, stressed livestock, and dried up rivers—followed by sudden, damaging downpours that caused flooding in areas previously parched.
Is this just “climate change”? Or is it a controlled pattern of geoengineered extremes?
Cloud seeding, the most common weather modification tactic, disperses particulates (usually silver iodide or salts) into the atmosphere to induce rain. But rain doesn't just appear—it’s redirected. Inducing rain in one place can starve another region downstream. Seeding clouds over the Hill Country could deprive areas farther east or west of their natural precipitation. It’s not creation. It’s theft.
Furthermore, aerosol-based programs such as stratospheric spraying—while often denied officially—have been documented through leaked patents, whistleblower testimony, and data showing elevated levels of barium, aluminum, and sulfur in rainwater samples across Texas.
Civilizational Consequences: Who Controls the Weather, Controls the Land
The deeper issue is sovereignty. If weather becomes programmable, then so does agriculture, water access, and energy policy. Ranchers who depend on natural rainfall must now compete with aerial contractors licensed by the state to control clouds. Organic farmers lose the ability to predict seasons. Entire communities are subjected to drought, disease, or deluge—all without a vote, a warning, or recourse.
Even worse, weather modification opens the door for elite interests to profit from scarcity. Drought drives up crop prices. Floods increase federal aid. Insurance companies, hedge funds, and utility monopolies all benefit—while families lose homes, crops, or livestock.
Kerr County, like much of rural Texas, is land-rich and resource-rich. That makes it vulnerable. Weather manipulation becomes a silent weapon—one that leaves no fingerprints but achieves strategic goals.
A Call to Clarity: Sunlight Is the Best Disinfectant
If the people of Texas—and America—are ever going to reclaim control over their environment, it starts with exposure. This is not a conspiracy theory. It is a matter of public record. The NOAA-approved maps exist. The licenses are granted. The operations are active.
But the public remains uninformed.
We must demand full transparency from NOAA, the TDLR, and every contractor involved. We must push for open hearings, independent soil and water testing, and legal limits on weather modification near rivers, farms, and residential areas. And most of all, we must wake up our communities to what’s happening in the skies above.
Recommended Reading
"Angels Don’t Play This HAARP" by Dr. Nick Begich – Explores the High-Frequency Active Auroral Research Program and its weather-control implications.
"Weather Warfare" by Jerry E. Smith – A documented analysis of military and civilian weather manipulation projects.
"Geoengineered Transhumanism" by Elana Freeland – Connects weather control with broader themes of surveillance and biological manipulation.
"The Drought Delusion" by Mike Adams – A look at how engineered droughts create economic leverage for corporations.
"Under an Ionized Sky" by Elana Freeland – Examines electromagnetic manipulation and atmospheric control.
"Geoengineering: Governance and Technology" by National Academy of Sciences – Mainstream acknowledgement of the risks and mechanisms of geoengineering.
"Silver Skies: A Citizen’s Guide to Weather Modification" (Pamphlet) – A short but powerful primer on cloud seeding and its legal framework.
This is no longer a question of if weather modification is real. It’s a question of who benefits—and who suffers. Texans deserve better than silent skies and hidden hands. It’s time to demand the truth.

