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They're condensation trails, NOT "chemtrails"!

And there's nothing sinister about them. It's just water. That's it. Condensation, i.e. basically artificial clouds created by the particular conditions pertaining to the presence, at high altitude, of temperature and pressure differentials around jet engines.

Then again, since water is a chemical, the most abundant there is, one could, technically, call them that. But they don't cause infertility in the people below them on the ground, nor do they make one stupid, although I have to wonder about that sometimes, LOL. 😂

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AJS30 · 31-35, M
Chemtrails aren't contrails. Contrails disappear quickly. Chemtrails stay in a sky a long time, spread out and make the sky look like shit. I've seen contrails and chemtrails in the sky at the same time. They're two different things.
LordShadowfire · 46-50, M
@AJS30 Your profile says you're in your early 30's. That figures. You wouldn't remember the 1970's and 1980's when a person, for a fairly large sum of money, could pay a pilot to perform what they used to call 'skywriting'.
Messages could be written in the sky, and the message would last for a fairly long time before it dissipated. It's what people used to do before they could text each other, back in the ole Stone Age.
LordShadowfire · 46-50, M
@Bel6EQUJ5 I believe you can still find companies that do it to this day. I could be wrong, though.
swirlie ·
@Bel6EQUJ5
Those 'sky writing' services are still available and are widely used up and down the eastern seaboard coast of the State of Florida all year long. The chemical that is used for skywriting is a mineral oil-based liquid that is injected into the exhaust system of the aircraft where it turns to smoke as it becomes super-heated. Other applications use smoke-generators mounted underneath the wing which achieve the same objective.