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Marjorie Taylor Greene says ‘they can control the weather’ after Hurricane Helene’s devastation
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Marjorie Taylor Greene says ‘they can control the weather’ after Hurricane Helene’s devastation

Marjorie Taylor Greene says 'they can control the weather' after Hurricane Helene's devastation

Republican leader Marjorie Taylor Greene made a row after she posted a mysterious two-line message on X Hurricane Helenethe devastation in the land. “Yes, they can control the weather. It’s ridiculous for someone to lie and say they can’t,” she wrote, puzzling social media users about who they are.
“Reminder: This is a conspiracy theory based on anti-Semitism and claims that Jewish people have the technology to manipulate the weather and create freak storms that wreak havoc on the world,” Shannon Watts, a gun violence prevention activist, wrote on X.
Marjorie is a known conspiracy theorist and such statements are no surprise to her. In 2021, she suggested that the devastating California wildfires were caused by laser beams controlled from space by the wealthy Rothschild family.
In another to influence”.

After making landfall as a Category 4 hurricane on September 26 and barreling through Florida’s Gulf Coast, Helene plowed north through Georgia and toppled the Blue Ridge Mountains, washing away roads, causing landslides and disrupting electricity and cell service for eliminated millions of people. people.
Across western North Carolina, towns were destroyed, water and fuel supplies were disrupted, and residents found themselves in a communications black hole, scrambling for Wi-Fi to reach friends and family. Officials rushed to rescue survivors, locate victims and restore flood-damaged water systems.
The chaos in the state was part of a path of destruction that Helene swept through the region, including parts of Tennessee, South Carolina and Virginia. As of Friday, there were 215 confirmed deaths from the storm.
Helene is the deadliest tropical cyclone has hit the continental United States since 2005, when Hurricane Katrina caused nearly 1,400 deaths on the Gulf Coast, according to statistics from the National Hurricane Center.