Just days before the most catastrophic flooding in Texas history, a private weather modification company called Rainmaker was conducting cloud seeding operations directly over the affected region.
Now, the company’s 25-year-old CEO, Augustus Doricko, has confirmed the flights — but insists the floods that followed are nothing more than a coincidence.
According to Doricko, Rainmaker deployed its aircraft on July 2 over South Central Texas with the goal of “enhancing precipitation” through targeted cloud seeding — a controversial process that introduces silver iodide particles into the atmosphere to stimulate rainfall.
The company, which touts its mission as “stewarding the natural world,” reportedly shut down the operation later that same day due to already high moisture levels. Then, just two days later, historic floods ravaged the same region, leaving over 60 dead and entire towns underwater.
BREAKING: CEO of a weather modification technology company has confirmed that cloud seeding operations took place in Texas just two days before the flood occurred, says it does not mean they are connected.
— Leading Report (@LeadingReport) July 8, 2025
Doricko insists that there is no connection between Rainmaker’s activities and the deadly deluge. In a social media statement, he expressed sympathy for victims but dismissed any causal link between the cloud seeding and the subsequent flooding.
“We didn’t fly after July 2,” Doricko said. “We were not involved in anything that could have caused this.”
But critics — and a growing segment of the public — aren’t buying it.
The timeline is impossible to ignore. Cloud seeding flights on July 2. Flood warnings by July 3. Then, by the Fourth of July weekend, massive rainfall drenched Hill Country and surrounding areas, overwhelming dams, washing away homes, and killing dozens.
For many, the idea that this was all a “coincidence” strains credibility — especially when the entire goal of Rainmaker’s operation was to increase precipitation in an already storm-prone region.
Mainstream meteorologists and corporate media have rushed to dismiss the link. Experts cited in outlets like The Houston Chronicle and Scientific American insist that cloud seeding could not have caused such widespread flooding.
But here’s what they don’t explain: Why was a private, unregulated weather startup spraying the skies just two days before this deadly flood? Why did Rainmaker — a company backed by powerful interests, including Thiel Fellowship money — choose to operate in a region already forecasted for heavy rain?
And why are federal agencies continuing to work with private cloud seeding firms without public disclosure, consent, or oversight?
.@ClintonGlobal has done incredible work for global water infrastructure
— Augustus Doricko (@ADoricko) April 19, 2024
It was a pleasure discussing how cloud seeding can enhance water supplies with # 42 @BillClinton ! pic.twitter.com/m0d7Yqgdo6
Rainmaker’s founder, Doricko, is not just a tech entrepreneur. He’s a Peter Thiel Fellow, awarded $100,000 from a billionaire whose empire includes Palantir, the defense and surveillance tech firm with deep government and intelligence ties. He’s also linked to former President Bill Clinton. That alone raises serious red flags about who’s influencing modern weather and why.
Whether you call it weather modification, geoengineering, or just another elite-funded experiment, one fact remains: the skies over Texas were sprayed just two days before its people drowned in record-breaking floods.
Coincidence? Or something far more calculated?
По материалам: http://www.planet-today.com/2025/07/rainmaker-ceo-admits-spraying-texas.html