Blacklights,skin and Chemtrails, a simple test

How To See Mystery
Chemtrail Aerosol Filaments
By Sue Miller
aka 'Looookinup'


The unusual phenomena being described here -- and at various
Chemtrail/Aerosol Activity Boards -- is being called by different
names. 'Aerosol polymer filaments and webs' (Mike Castle @Rense).
Chemtrail fibers; microfilaments; 'sky-webs''; chemtrail fall-out;
electrostatic filaments; CT particulates; perhaps
even 'Morgellon's' . "I like the term 'fibrils' as it implies a
synthesized microfiber with conductive properties."
(Moondog @ Carnicom).
But whatever they end up being called (personally, I lean
towards 'CT-UV fibrils' -- has a nice ring), they are REAL and
OBSERVABLE.

See for yourself -- it's simple...

These CHEMTRAIL/AEROSOL/ UV/ FIBRIL/ FILAMENTS are very easy to
observe under the right conditions.

To actually WITNESS these filaments covering you, and your children,
your pets, your home, your plates, your pillow and your possessions
can be very shocking.

They are all over us.
They are floating in the air.
They are entwined in all that extra 'dust' you have been wiping up
lately throughout your home...and the 'dust' on your car.
They are clogging your A/C and furnace filters.
They are landing on your food between the plate and your mouth.
We are all wearing them, eating them, drinking them, breathing
them...
And they are virtually INVISIBLE -- EXCEPT under ultraviolet light.

In mid-April, 2000, Djebemon, a respected poster at Clifford
Carnicom's Chemtrail Board -- since renamed the Aerosol Operations
Board (links below) -- discovered that there were THOUSANDS of
tiny 'particles' or 'filaments' on his hair, clothing, skin, carpet
and walls. These transparent 'filaments' are about three times
thinner than a human hair or pet hair, about 0.5-3 mm long, and are
virtually INVISIBLE in normal light -- even if you are staring right
at them.
However ... under UV 'blacklight' , they fluoresce with a blue glow.
This caused quite a stir for several months, and a lot of material
got added to his original topic, which is now ( 7-31-03) 10 pages
long.
It has been especially notable that no debunkers came forward to
contest our findings
(and 2000 was a record year for debunking attempts!)
But then, after the initial shock subsided, we got used to it, we
bought our air filtration units, and attention turned elsewhere.

(It is really unpleasant to live daily with
the realization that part of life is way out of our control.)

But the filaments never went away. They are still here, in even
heavier concentrations.
A magnifying glass or reading glasses may help if your vision isn't
really sharp. But, if they are present, you can't miss them.
You need to have one simple tool. Get an 18" long fluorescent tube-
type ultraviolet / blacklight that comes in a plug-in fixture --
they are sold at stores like Walmart and Radio Shack for about
$19.99 - $24.99. (I bought an 18" GE brand one in the bulbs section
at our local Walmart and a Radio Shack one. Both work well.) The
cheaper smaller fluorescent tubes, the 60 watt screw-in bulb types
and the UV battery light units do not work for this purpose. You
really need to get the 18" long tube light -- there is something
more effective about the wavelength it emits.

Put on a dark cotton knit shirt (like a T-shirt), wear it around
awhile (including outdoors), then go in a dark room -- it should be
DARK! -- turn on the UV light, and look...
You are looking for tiny filaments about 1/3 the diameter of a hair
in a range of sizes from about 1/32 "-1". They glow bright blue. If
they are around, you will see them almost instantly.

You may be astonished to find them ALL OVER -- your skin. your rug,
your mirrors (they seem 'attracted' to mirrors!)... They're in the
air, swirling and floating on the slightest air currents. Check your
hair -- it is exposed outdoors -- it can 'host' hundreds! Your
clothes can glow like galaxies of miniature stars are on
them. 'Dust' on every flat surface in your home can be filled with
them.
Some wave and squirm, almost as if they're alive.

If you have children, check their hair, eyebrows and exposed skin.
(Finding 'strange' material on your child
tends to accelerate one's questing processes... )


The first time I saw them, I immediately thought they were lint --
there were far too many of them everywhere -- they HAD to be lint!
Or pet hair. Or acrylic fibers from the wall-to-wall carpet...
(Such D-E-N-I-A-L! It was just too overwhelming! )

Some of what you'll see IS simple lint.

But these mystery filaments are NOT lint.
NOT carpet fiber.
NOT pet hair.

Pet hair doesn't glow under UV light. Nor carpet fiber. Check it
out.
Yes, lint can certainly glow under UV. Fiberfill strands can glow.
And some detergents contain optical brighteners that fluoresce.

But these CT-UV fibrils are NOT lint.

First of all, you can SEE lint on your clothes. You CANNOT see these
filaments in regular light EVEN if you are looking right at them.
Catch one with tweezers under UV light, keep a firm grip, and turn
on the room light. It 'vanishes'! Turn the room light off, turn the
UV on, and it's still there.

Secondly, there were a lot of people in the 1970's who owned UV
lights of this type for illuminating posters and creating a party
mood. No one from that era claims to remember this material.

Thirdly, to quickly and permanently dispel the 'lint theory', all
you need is a microscope.
(A decent hobby or toy store has ones adequate for this -- around $30.)
Pick up a known piece of lint, thread or carpet fiber with tweezers
and put it on a clean microscope slide. Look at it under 20x or 40x
magnification. Note the twisted fibers -- they look like rope. These
are solid (not translucent) , dusty-looking, and have bushy ends.

Now pick up a suspected 'CT-UV fallout' filament with tweezers and
put it on a clean microscope slide. (You want to choose a very
slender one about 1/3 -1/2' long that seems responsive to movement.
This will make sense when you start really looking at them.) Look at
it under 20-40x magnification. They are transparent/ translucent.
They seem to made of some sort of prismatic flat filament that
twists -- extruded looking, about 1/3- 1/5 the diameter of a human
hair laid side-by-side -- obviously NOT fiberous. Even to a layman's
eye, they look 'manufactured' . And , what are these BARBS on them --
like sharp raspberry thorns? Spaced apart -- engineered looking --
explains why they cling so tenaciously. ..

And... what are those intermittent clumps or beads or crystals of
material embedded along the strand?

After you see them magnified, you will NOT want to breathe them, or
ingest them in any form. But, THERE IS NO CHOICE!

(Asthma is at record rates. Any relation?)