CENTREX NEWS:
PUBLIC CORRECTION REQUIRED
ADDITIONAL CORRECTION REQUIRED
J. SKOUSEN PROVIDES CORRECTIONS
Clifford E Carnicom
Jan 21 2002
Post Edited Mar 05 2002
The repetitition of incorrect information to the public over an extended period of time requires that the following statements be affirmed:
"According to NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, contrails can only form at temperatures below minus 76 degrees, and humidity levels of 70 percent or more. Even in ideal conditions, contrails rarely last more than 20 minutes."
It is recommended that all journalists, citizens and researchers educate themselves in the fundamental physics of contrail formation vs. 'cloud' formation and the various sources of information that are available on this topic. Distinctions between CONTRAIL formation and 'CLOUD' formation are of critical importance within this process. It is hoped that a factual and accurate understanding of these matters by the general public can be brought to light in the near future.
Mar 05 2002
Clifford E Carnicom
Centrex News : Public Correction Required
The following letter has been sent to Mr. Joel Skousen regarding a recent article posted on CentrexNews.com, and
is made available to the public as well.
CE Carnicom
Jan 27 2002
"A FEW CORRECTIONS ON MY CHEMTRAILS ARTICLE
Other researchers have relayed to me that William Thomas is not a
reliable researcher. In particular, he misquoted from one technical article
by NOAA meteorologist Thomas Schlatter. In fact, the critical
temperature for contrail formation is -40 degrees F., not -76 degrees.
Thus, contrailing can occur even at low altitudes, especially in the
winter months up north. Secondly, I erred in stating that the US airways
are mostly east-west. I meant that most of the airway traffic is
east-west. Airways connect all major destinations. The important point
here is that rarely do chemtrail observations match airway intersections
or major air routes. Third, contrails at altitude can stop and start again,
but this only happens when aircraft are flying at the boundary of
contrail temperatures, which is not always even or uniform. The
resultant stopping and starting of contrails is therefore quite gradual and
takes at least a mile of air travel to complete. Such a phenomenon does
not explain the abrupt, sharp cessation of spraying at altitude that I
witnessed or that has been documented by the photos at
www.carnicom.com. "
Partial Quotations with attribution permitted.
Cite source as Joel Skousen's World Affairs Brief
(http://www.joelskousen.com).
I extend my appreciation and gratitude to Mr. Skousen for his prompt responsiveness
to any issues of concern and doubt that readers may have raised. In addition, his journalistic integrity is evident
within his work ; it is expressed clearly by his spirit of inquiry and the seeking of truthful disclosure.
Clifford E Carnicom
Mar 08 2002