DWQA QuestionsCategory: Extraterrestrial AgendaOn April 7, 2025, an editorial in Scientific American’s Today in Science stated: “Yet another spate of devastating tornadoes struck last week in east Texas, Tennessee, and other southern and southeastern states. As we reported in 2023, tornado alley is shifting east, with more frequent and more intense twister touchdowns. The cause? You guessed it: climate change. Warmer and moister air rises, forming supercell storm clouds that fuel tornados.” How correct is this analysis?
Nicola Staff asked 1 day ago
We see this analysis as being wholly incorrect in its interpretation. Individual weather events, even an entire year's worth, is too small a sample in the larger scheme of things to constitute a change in trend, reliably. In this case, the presumed explanation being climate change, is a false assumption entirely, because tornadoes are not a natural weather event to begin with. So whether or not it is influenced by the starting temperature at the onset of the storm system or whether more storm systems arise because of global warming and thus are more frequently available as a target to piggyback on an extraterrestrial foray to aggravate things and raise the intensity to tragic levels, are minor issues. This is truly just speculative handwaving with little value because it misses the point entirely about who is doing what to whom here. So this article is nicely contributing to the alien cover story for their manipulations by offering disinformation.