Conspiracy theorist Alex Jones accused Vice President Kamala Harris of having the ability to control hurricanes through so-called “weather weapons.”

Jones kicked off his Tuesday broadcast by promising to explain how he knew the government could control the weather.

“I’m going to be covering today, and I’ve sent the crew over 20 clips, and I’ve got over a hundred documents right here,” he explained. “I’m gonna do a big presentation for everybody on what’s really going on with weather weapons.”

Jones claimed to have interviews and government documents that would prove his point.

“Then we have the bold headlines that I put up on X that the Kamala Harris, you know, the Biden-Harris administration is in control of this hurricane,” he said of Hurricane Milton.

“So they have the power certified easily with just five or six big aircraft,” he opined. “And that’s the old technology, not the lasers that are all certified and the Doppler radar. They also have on ships and in large oil drilling platforms that they’ve launched. They could totally just make this thing stop and dump the water in the ocean.”

Jones insisted that the technology to control hurricanes was used before the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

“And on 9/11, the hurricane was gonna hit,” he asserted. “Remember in 2001, but that meteorologists never saw anything like it. It just turned away from the coast went away because that was gonna get in the way of some of the stuff the deep state was up to.”

Scientists have said it is currently impossible to control weather events like Hurricane Milton.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      121 month ago

      Can I thank the government for all the sunny days as well? I don’t understand how this work, can they only create bad weather or good weather as well?

    • @Cocodapuf
      link
      91 month ago

      I don’t think anyone’s said it better than that.

    • @Stupidmanager
      link
      English
      21 month ago

      Nah, need to update climate controller to version 2 and then we have to subscribe monthly in order to have that level of precision. /s

      I like the current theory that this is god smiting those sinners who have turned his words into hatred.

    • Billiam
      link
      1001 month ago

      Billion and a half.

      • @hemmes
        link
        English
        311 month ago

        A billion and a half so far!

        👉

    • HomebrewHedonist
      link
      fedilink
      501 month ago

      It’s truly unbelievable, isn’t it. It illustrates the degree to which people are truly a slave to their impulses and delusions. No external factors will ever reform this guy, and it’s really a sad thing to watch a person trapped in their own kind of hell.

      • @barsquid
        link
        281 month ago

        He knows what the truth is. He just wants money and cocaine, so he continues doing these.

      • @Coach
        link
        English
        181 month ago

        Kamala lives rent free in his head. I’ve heard, you know…on TV, that there’s a way to get her out and it involves a power drill with a long drill bit. But, shhh…don’t tell anyone - it’s a liberal secret.

        • @militaryintelligence
          link
          21 month ago

          If he drilled out his medula oblongata with a half inch drill bit, that would own the libs so hard

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        41 month ago

        If we don’t ever get to see the families of Sandy Hook take his money, I would at the very least hope to see Alex Jones incarcerated with no ability to reach a public audience. That’s not all though. His only source of news should be restricted to daily governmental briefings on what democratic elected officials are doing and left-leaning news organizations coverage. One more thing. We give him a recording session of 1 hour every month so everyone gets their dose of schadenfreud.

    • @acosmichippo
      link
      English
      51 month ago

      the thing is he wasn’t in trouble for his lies generally speaking, he was in trouble for specific lies that made the sandy hook families’ lives hell. As long as he’s talking about general conspiracy bullshit that doesn’t materially damage anyone, he can still say whatever the fuck he wants.

      • @orclev
        link
        3
        edit-2
        1 month ago

        🤔 Isn’t he making a specific lie about Kamala Harris here that could be shown to materially damage her election campaign? Plus all it would take is one of these nutjobs taking pot shots at airplanes or something to expand the scope of harm. He’s definitely playing with fire on this one.

        • @acosmichippo
          link
          English
          2
          edit-2
          1 month ago

          theoretically, perhaps, but remember you have to prove the damages in court somehow, and the jones was liable. The Sandy Hook families were dealing with very long list of direct consequences from his conspiracies, like people showing up at their houses and harassing them.

          I suppose if there was an assassination attempt with evidence of the perpetrator saying it was due to this conspiracy then yeah that would be similar. seems pretty unlikely there would be clear enough evidence for that though, given all the stuff people hate on democrats for.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    1571 month ago

    It’s mindblowing to us non-Americans that such a large percentage of a purportedly first-world country can be so utterly stupid. I can’t imagine that things were this bad even just 20 years ago. Why are y’all so dumb?

    • PorradaVFR
      link
      851 month ago

      Decades undermining and underfunding education. They want dumb consumers just informed enough to work a shit job and earn enough to survive but not thrive.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        191 month ago

        I have friends who are teachers, and the education policies in place even here in California are absolutely asinine. They are required to have extensive documentation to fail a student, in that kids who did fuckall that year are promoted to the next grade anyway. There are kids entering highschool are struggling with reading comprehension and basic arithmetic, nevermind have behavioral issues galore and just a general sense of apathy. Admin tend to side with insane parents instead of teachers in the classroom, exacerbating the behavior problems. It’s all bad news bears.

    • Billiam
      link
      441 month ago

      Decades of propaganda painting opposition to the GOP as literal Satan worshipping baby killing pedophiles, and when that’s who you’re running against, how could not vote for the GOP no matter how uneducated they are?

      • @acosmichippo
        link
        English
        14
        edit-2
        1 month ago

        i agree this is the main thing, plus social media. that’s a recipe for conspiracies to spread like wildfire. any asshat can make a spooky video and appear to know what they’re talking about, and people are not nearly skeptical enough. Not to mention algorithms designed to keep people clicking, tapping, and watching.

        sure education is facing challenges but i don’t think it’s THAT much worse than a few decades ago. it just hasn’t been able to catch up with the propaganda and social media.

        • @orclev
          link
          13
          edit-2
          1 month ago

          The attack on education is part of the long term strategy. The early indoctrination and propaganda gets people into the conspiracies and a lack of education makes sure they stay there and don’t stop to consider how utterly batshit insane they sound. I also think lead exposure due to usage of leaded gas prior to 1996 can’t be overlooked. There’s a very obvious correlation in violent crime rates that corresponds with the increased usage of leaded gas in the 60s and the sharp decline in the 90s following its phasing out starting in the 80s and outright ban in the mid 90s.

          • @acosmichippo
            link
            English
            41 month ago

            yeah I’m not denying education is under attack. I just don’t think it’s anywhere close to the same level of responsibility for conspiracy thinking as propaganda and social media.

            • @orclev
              link
              31 month ago

              It’s essentially a force multiplier. The propaganda wouldn’t be anywhere near as effective as it is without the attacks on education. The propaganda was the thin end of the wedge, and now that they’re established they’re attacking education to make sure they stay entrenched, as it’s the only thing that could really threaten them.

              • @acosmichippo
                link
                English
                01 month ago

                The propaganda wouldn’t be anywhere near as effective as it is without the attacks on education.

                yeah I disagree, but I doubt either of us are going to find conclusive evidence one way or the other.

        • @militaryintelligence
          link
          2
          edit-2
          1 month ago

          Yup. We are just eyeballs watching a screen to them. If they make us angry we engage more so ad revenue goes up. “They” is the media

    • @[email protected]OP
      link
      fedilink
      English
      251 month ago

      I’ve usually pointed towards our education system but I’m not so sure anymore. I think there’s more at play.

      I think it’s more about the inherit individualism in America, “the American dream”, capitalism, and the definition of The United States. There’s a strong rejection of community support and social services. There’s a desire to have more than we need. There’s a fear of “others” who threaten your domicile and prosperity. The country was founded on a distrust of government with the formation of semi-sovereign states and multiple forms of checks and balances.

      I think there’s an argument that to “be American” means to be in opposition to and skeptical of government. At first, in wake of the revolutionary war, this seemed reasonable. With slow moving news and a journalistic industry maintaining the fourth pillar of democracy, without the temptation of ad revenue or competition with social media, Americans were, frankly, sheep to a small group of organizations. As a 21st century first first world country, we really need to get together and reassess what the role of government should be and how to draft a constitution that meets the needs of a nation in an increasingly connected (and shrinking) planet.

      We are not afforded the tools to be competitive with the future of humanity.

      I actually believe our lack of faith in religion has had a negative impact. We used to be more connected with our community. We largely trusted one another. It was not that long ago that hitch hiking across the country was a normal practice for teens. I don’t believe in gods but I have respect for some aspects of some religious organizations. What seems to have replaced this is social media bubbles or tribes. Or internet forums like this.

      We’re an increasingly fractured nation that holds distrust of all things in high regard.

      Also, we’re a nation that defines wealth as the ability to acquire rather than the ability to give.

      • @AnUnusualRelic
        link
        91 month ago

        There’s also an apparent pride in anti intellectualism that seems to be typically American.

        • @orclev
          link
          5
          edit-2
          1 month ago

          I think that goes hand in hand with the attacks on education. They’ve painted themselves as being the voice of “working class” Americans and discredit experts that provide knowledge that runs counter to their propaganda as out of touch “liberal elites”. It’s truly ironic that they’re implying that your average American is stupid with that statement and yet their supporters fully agree with it. They point to the correlation between higher education and disbelief in their propaganda as proof that the highly educated are wrong in a weird cyclic argument. Their stance is basically if the intellectuals don’t agree with me, it’s because they’re wrong, not because I am.

          Basically this:

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          51 month ago

          I noticed that in the early 1980s in elementary school. The best students got teased and bullied by others who weren’t trying. It made no sense, if you don’t want to learn that’s on you but why try to hold others back?

        • @[email protected]OP
          link
          fedilink
          English
          31 month ago

          I don’t think it’s because people are choosing to be dumb. Knowing how to do things because you learned the hard way, because you failed over and over, or because your father taught you how to do it is praised more in this group. Gumption and grit is valued more than being told by “the elite” about how you’re supposed to do things. “Science ain’t got nothing on how my grandady’s done it”.

          It’s really very sad. Some people are so anti-establishment that they’d sooner see their younger generations struggle to prosper than to send them off to a university to educate themselves to make abetter life for the future of their family. Let’s not even consider how they’ve been brainwashed to believe “republicans” are anti-establishment and in favor of the working class.

          What I don’t understand is how easily people accept claims by random uncredited people on social media. It was not long ago that we all laughed at the people who took any cover of the National Inquirer remotely seriously.

          Context and intent aside, what’s the difference between this Hurricane Helene has brought a flood of AI photos and conspiracy theories to social media and this Bat Child Escapes!?

      • @orclev
        link
        61 month ago

        One point I disagree on is that the country was founded on distrust of government. I’d say rather it was founded on distrust of dictatorships and autocracy. From the outset it was designed in a way that attempted to distribute power in such a way that no single individual or group had absolute power. It was one of the reasons why several of the founders were highly skeptical of political parties and considered banning them outright but instead settled for voicing warnings about them. They feared that a single political party could eventually become dominant and become the de facto ruler of the country.

        In recent years there has been an effort to re-frame distrust of autocracy into a general distrust of government. I believe this has been primarily driven by powerful business interests in an attempt to remove regulations that get in the way of their maximizing profits at the expense of the public. They have rather successfully hijacked the anti-communism propaganda of the 50s and 60s and twisted it into an anti-government propaganda.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          9
          edit-2
          1 month ago

          The really weird move is how right-wing attitudes in the USA have gone from distrust of government and its “interference” in their lives, through distrust of autocracy, to strong support for fascist autocracy that would be highly oppressive and invasive into people’s lives. The last step is astonishing.

          • @orclev
            link
            71 month ago

            Absolutely, but it’s also easy to see how the change happened. The original goal was to prevent autocracy, so power was distributed and checks and balances were created to prevent any one person or branch from being able to have too much authority. The message was corrupted into distrust of all government and combined with the debunked trickle down capitalism theory (thanks Reagan) that wealthy companies would lead to a wealthy public. The GOP then ran on a platform of eliminating “corrupt government” and removing “government interference” that was supposedly preventing that sweet free market capitalism they had been promising from working and trickling down to everyone. This then allowed them to re-frame stripping regulations and power from various government bodies and centralizing it within the executive branch as removing “wasteful and corrupt government”, and removing checks and balances as removing laws and regulations that “protected corrupt government officials”.

            This also explains the “he’s not hurting the right people” crowd, as they were sold on the idea that the autocrats would be using their power to attack government institutions and politicians, not the public. They never bothered to follow things to their logical conclusion and ask “once you’ve established an autocrat, and removed all government regulations, what happens next?”, with the obvious answer “you have a dictatorship”.

              • @orclev
                link
                21 month ago

                Another important point that occurred to me on reflection is why they can simultaneously hold the belief in their head at the same time that all politicians are corrupt, and yet still have complete faith in Trump. They treat politicians like they’re some foreign species, like they’re not just normal people. In their mind there’s a clear distinction between “us”, and “politicians”. But they don’t consider Trump to be a politician, they’ve internally classified him as “business man”, hence he’s not corrupt, because he’s not a politician.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        51 month ago

        Thanks for this interesting and deeper take. I hadn’t made that link between individualism and this phenomenon, but it seems very plausible because we see less of this in countries that aren’t as antisocial.

    • @orclev
      link
      131 month ago

      Because the Republicans have spent the last 40 years slowly demolishing public education. That combined with a steady feed of propaganda on AM radio and Fox News, plus mild lead poisoning from leaded gas usage prior to the 90s has resulted in multiple generations that lack even the most rudimentary critical thinking skills or scientific knowledge and are primed to believe whatever absurd conspiracy reinforces whatever their pastors and favorite talking heads are saying.

      They’re absolutely convinced that the US government has been infiltrated by “communists” that are engaged in grand sweeping conspiracies to destroy the US, and the only solution is to remove all power from the US government. They’ve been steeped in propaganda for decades that tells them all governments are corrupt and only corporations can be trusted, that the “free market” is the solution to all problems.

    • @hushable
      link
      81 month ago

      20 years ago my country used to look up to the US educational system and tried to adopt their methodologies, I’m glad we didn’t

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      81 month ago

      Decades of FUD. It’s the same strategy totalitarian regimes follow around the world. You don’t expect people to believe this shit. You just need them to question reality enough so that they don’t believe the truth.

    • @Benjaben
      link
      7
      edit-2
      1 month ago

      One of our political parties discovered they can reliably achieve short term goals by politicizing facts and science. The success of this strategy points out that it’s available to anyone who wants to use it, which over time has meant that group of voters just got continually flooded with nonsense, until we got here.

      There’s (almost) no one pushing back from that side - the strategy is too successful, the margins of victory for the party are too small, and most politicians in general want what’s best for them and would put the long term health of the group they’re representing as a distant priority, if at all.

      Doesn’t even really require coordination/cooperation. With enough people willing to employ this strategy for enough time, by now the distrust of science and official communications is extremely entrenched.

      If you’re looking for the “why” we’re susceptible to it, it’s the same old story - people angry at how things are going can often be manipulated into blaming people and things other than the true causes, with obvious advantages / incentives for those doing the manipulation.

    • kn0wmad1c
      link
      fedilink
      English
      61 month ago

      Systemic regression of education priority + non-stop conspiratorial propaganda. I was born and grew up in the US and have seen the shift first-hand.

      At least what you’re seeing here is still just a very loud minority.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      61 month ago

      Why are y’all so dumb?

      this is the wrong question, The real question is:

      Why are y’all so mean?

      See, the people believing this shit are the ones who, if being able to create a hurricane, would do it in an instant to harm their political opponents, so it makes sense to them others would do it. They would steal an election, they would get rid of elections once elected, they would pretend to be a shooting victim if paid enough money… Once you leave all morals behind and get on the me and my version of America first train, everything is possible and thinkable. It is not about “is this possible” or “can they do it” it is all about “if I could do it I would so they are doing it”.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        31 month ago

        Oh, this is interesting, and it ties into the other comment about it being essentially antisocial behaviour.

    • partial_accumen
      link
      6
      edit-2
      1 month ago

      Why are y’all so dumb?

      There were truthful realities that some people didn’t like. Those realities were communicated by experts. Instead of people accepting those realities, there was an attack on experts. This happened in two ways:

      • credentialed experts were discredited
      • non-credentialed people claim the mantle of “expert” for themselves where they pushed whatever narrative they wanted.

      Because there are now two groups calling themselves experts, and they are giving contradictory information, further loss of trust occurs. So the masses are picking and choosing which experts to listen to with whatever criteria they determine, and I’m not seeing a lot of informed decision making or critical thinking questioning sources.

      Couple that with Clarke’s proclamation: “Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic”.

      So our technology has evolved to do so many amazing things, those without understanding of the technology assume it can do so much more, and don’t question things like “Dems control the weather”.

      So a whole bunch of us are dumb now.

    • @leadore
      link
      5
      edit-2
      1 month ago

      Several reasons that I know of and probably a lot more that I don’t, but basically ignorance and lack of critical thinking skills.

      1. Our educational system is underfunded and has cut a lot of things that used to be taught, like Civics/Government, so no one knows how things work and assume the only important office is the presidency, and that it has control over everything. Other subjects and extracurricular activities that help teach critical thinking like Speech/Interpersonal communication, Current Events, Logic, Debate, etc. have been dropped or cut back to only superficial coverage. Watch some old videos of schoolchildren being interviewed about various topics and you’ll be amazed at how informed and thoughtful they were for their age back then compared to now (not to mention polite).

      2. The information bubbles of social media and the algorithms that amplify disinformation on places like Facebook, X/twitter, YouTube, etc. They suck people deeper and deeper into rabbit holes of insanity. Foreign powers such as Russia, Iran, and other enemies of democracy exploit this by injecting and amplifying their own disinfo to sow anger and division.

      3. and finally one of the worst offenders: FOX “News”. Ever since this station started it has been a brainwashing tool. Most of the people you are talking about, who believe all this crap, especially the older ones who are more into TV watching are avid FOX news viewers, used to listen to Rush Limbaugh on the radio and are also listening to people like Alex Jones and others like him. It all feeds on itself.

    • nifty
      link
      41 month ago

      It’s just statistics, honestly. Greater population means greater number of dumb people. FYI, you can be rich and dumb, or college educated and dumb, too.

      America also doesn’t implement strict control over information or discourse like other countries with greater populations, like China. The problem is that outside of gerrymandering America does have free and fair elections, which is why the greater swaths of “dumb” people can present an actual danger.

    • @BetaBlake
      link
      11 month ago

      As an American southerner I don’t appreciate your cultural appropriation

    • @militaryintelligence
      link
      1
      edit-2
      1 month ago

      Its contagious. There’s fascist uprisings going on everywhere, not just in the US. I think a lot of “Trump supporters” we see online is astroturfing, making it seem he has more supporters than he does

    • The Pantser
      link
      -21 month ago

      US citizens have always been this dumb. But the Internet has made it cheap and easy for the idiots to gain a platform. The media was expensive 20 years ago and complicated so the idiots didn’t have the skills to use it.

  • madjo
    link
    fedilink
    English
    741 month ago

    Why does this sentient piece of excrement still have a platform?

    • @Zron
      link
      261 month ago

      He needs money to live now that the courts have started selling his business to pay off the last people he hurt by spreading insane conspiracy theories.

      He’s a one trick pony, only thing he knows how to do is lie and sell snake oil pills that turn you red.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      81 month ago

      Because stupidity, hatred and lies are acceptable platforms for political discussion in a world where humans profit from harming others.

    • @andros_rex
      link
      41 month ago

      There’s a push to sell off the InfoWars name and branding - to liquidate the entire business to pay off the Sandy Hook families. He plays shell games with money though - even if he’s forced to give up the “InfoWars” name, he will find a way to get back on the air.

    • @ulkesh
      link
      21 month ago

      Because idiots listen to him.

  • kn0wmad1c
    link
    fedilink
    English
    73
    edit-2
    1 month ago

    The sad thing is there are actual people out there who would believe this sooner than they’d see climate change as the cause.

    • @villainy
      link
      301 month ago

      And some, or at least one, of them is a member of Congress.

    • @Wogi
      link
      131 month ago

      That’s a human nature thing. We are really much happier as people when there’s a “logical” course of real events that lead to any disaster. We can understand “evil group did evil thing” better than “the collective actions of humanity over the last 200 years caused a fundamental change to our world that we cannot reverse in our lifetime.”

      We aren’t good at nuance.

      Some random wacko deciding to kill Kennedy because of mental illness and a general hostility towards his world view is harder for us to accept than a secret plot to seal power. Bad guys make sense to us. Chaotic elements just don’t.

      • @Wrench
        link
        61 month ago

        “Scapegoat” is the term. Humanity has always loved a good scapegoat to blame all their problems on. Whether it’s true or not doesn’t matter. Has never mattered.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        1
        edit-2
        1 month ago

        We are really much happier as people when there’s a “logical” course of real events that lead to any disaster.

        Even with quotation marks you’re really stretching the meaning of logical. It’s less about “logical” and more about “believable course of events”. There’s nothing logical about weather weapons, but people who already believe democrats are evil and deep state exists etc. have no problem throwing another make-believe ontop of their layered make-believe cake. And why wouldn’t they? They already believe all the other nonsense that’s necessary to believe this nonsense, they’re just getting a bigger cake.

        And just to throw it out there, they could’ve believed “Gods did this” as that’s what we’ve historically believed. Weather weapons isn’t the only option to believe in, it’s just the one they choose to believe in.

    • @kerrypacker
      link
      -261 month ago

      If you believe this is caused by ‘climate change’ you’re just as deluded. This shit just happens.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        171 month ago

        Is this a joke or does my block list need enlargement?

        Climate change obviously doesn’t directly cause natural disasters but various changes and knock on effects resulting from man made climate change make cyclones far more common, have a much higher range, and have the potential to be stronger.

      • Flying Squid
        link
        41 month ago

        Let me guess, it’s the sunspot cycle. That’s what folks like you used to claim before we went through a couple of those and things kept getting worse.

  • @leadore
    link
    501 month ago

    Wait, this asshole still has a radio show? I thought he was bankrupt and had to liquidate all his assets to pay damages in the Sandy Hook lawsuit. How can he be broadcasting? Who is paying for it?

    • @CitizenKong
      link
      191 month ago

      Ah, but your entire brand image probably isn’t agressively lying.

    • @Clent
      link
      21 month ago

      There can’t be snake-oil salesmen without customers willing to buy snake-oil.

      We harshly punish those who purchase drugs and treat snake oil purchaser as victims but the outcome is the same; they are purchasing a high that is incredibly addictive.

  • @[email protected]OP
    link
    fedilink
    English
    481 month ago

    In my opinion, the real concern here is that this may be the demise of the need to address climate change. Just as these wackos convinced millions of people that vaccines were a government plot, they’re setting the stage for the climate change hoax. There will be a large swath of people who convert to believe the government is in control of the weather and the change we’ve experienced in our climate. This should be a grave concern for all.

    • @chetradley
      link
      371 month ago

      2000’s conservative: “Climate change isn’t real”.
      2010’s conservative: “Climate change is real, but it’s not caused by human activity”.
      2020’s conservative: “Climate change is caused by human activity, and IT’S THE LIBERALS AND THEIR HURRICANE MAKING SPACE LASERS”.

      • @Alwaysnownevernotme
        link
        41 month ago

        2030’s we need to band together to stop this threat of climate terrorism 2040’s we need to create our own hurricane creation array

        And with that the monkeys paw curled it’s last finger, fell limp and dissolved to ashes.

    • @acosmichippo
      link
      English
      71 month ago

      i dunno, these people were never gonna be on board anyway. maybe i’m just being cynical.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      31 month ago

      I was a conspiracy nut for a while, (not that I believed everything, I just really wanted UFOs to be aliens lol) and a rather large conspiracy from “back in the day” was HAARP, a series of antenna in Alaska if I remember correctly. They were claiming similar things that long ago, that HAARP was responsible for weather modification and not climate change. While it was Myspace and not Facebook that was the popular thing, this didn’t really spread all that far.

      Maybe now that Twitter is fully right wing trash and Facebook is just as bad this might catch on more, but I kinda doubt it. Some things really are just too stupid for a large enough percentage of people to actually believe.

      • @[email protected]OP
        link
        fedilink
        English
        -21 month ago

        Except there is a bit of truth to this. The government does seed clouds to impact rainfall. It’s not that far of a stretch for a regular person to believe getting as bunch of these planes together could plausibly nudge a hurricane into existence.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      21 month ago

      This should be a grave concern for all.

      I think that actions have consequences. I am not ‘concerned’, I am just expectant that a large number of people deciding to act badly will have worse consequences than otherwise.

      I don’t feel emotionally attached to being human and I am middle-aged without children.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    311 month ago

    Here’s the thing… If we can control the weather so easily, why can’t the Republicans? Have they not figured it out yet? I don’t want to vote for someone who can’t even destroy Florida on a whim with a few clouds.

    • @Donjuanme
      link
      161 month ago

      This, it’s free advertising for the prick

  • @bamfic
    link
    English
    231 month ago

    Didnt this guy just get bankrupted?

    • Eugene V. Debs' Ghost
      link
      fedilink
      English
      51 month ago

      If Trump can be convicted for his actions and still get more money and still run for president, Alex Jones can lose lawsuit after lawsuit from being a total fucking moron and still be a total fucking moron.

    • Phoenixz
      link
      fedilink
      21 month ago

      Yep, fuck you Jones and hope you make a lot of money’s for the sandy hook parents

      See legal eagle on YouTube for more info

  • @Freefall
    link
    231 month ago

    Weather devastated a place they don’t like : god is punishing sinners

    Weather hits their dirty little chode-land: THE DEMZ CONTROL THE WEATHER!

    K, got it…

    • @Veneroso
      link
      English
      51 month ago

      Fascism 101: my enemies are strong and simultaneously incompetent.

  • Erasmus
    link
    English
    221 month ago

    They stopped with the ‘it’s God punishing sinful States’ when it became apparent that all the states that kept getting hit with natural disasters were mostly Republican controlled ones. 😂

    • pachrist
      link
      English
      61 month ago

      Perhaps the strongest argument that it is God punishing sinful states. The old switcheroo right there.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      21 month ago

      when it became apparent that all the states that kept getting hit with natural disasters were mostly Republican controlled ones. 😂

      Yeah. Almost like electing a long string of sociopaths makes the citizens more vulnerable to disaster impacts…

  • MobileDecay
    link
    191 month ago

    Isn’t he supposed to be liquidating his equipment and not using it to get into more trouble. 🤔