An American farmer has caused a national sensation with a video showing his plants suddenly dying – while genetically modified varieties remain surprisingly resilient.
“Our soil contains five to ten times more aluminum than last year,” says the farmer, who relies on traditional methods and natural seeds. In his garden, which he has grown with the same variety of corn for years, the plants are barely growing. The sunflowers are turning away from the sun, and the yield of his cucumbers and peppers has dropped so drastically that he can barely sell them. “We used to harvest so much that we could give away vegetables. This year, it’s barely enough for our family.”
He had soil samples analyzed – the result: drastically increased aluminum levels, which coincided with visible condensation trails in the sky. “Something is wrong,” he says. “Something has changed in the air or in the rain.”
The video has also sparked a reaction in the political sphere. Republican Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene called for an immediate ban on geoengineering and weather manipulation programs, which she said are “poisoning our soil and threatening our food supply.”
Our skies are being sprayed and it’s hurting American farmers!!
This farmer just proved his soil has 5x more aluminum than before. His natural crops are dying, while GMO seeds grow just fine.
My Clear Skies Act stops dangerous geoengineering and weather modification programs… pic.twitter.com/Eqvj3Xb0kg
— Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene🇺🇸 (@RepMTG) November 11, 2025
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., now the U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services, had earlier announced at a campaign event with Donald Trump in Las Vegas: “We will remove the chemicals from chemtrails.” He later wrote on X: “We will end this crime.”
The farmer’s video is much more than just a personal observation—it symbolizes growing concerns about the possible connection between environmental change, geoengineering, and dramatic impacts on agriculture. More and more farmers are reporting similar phenomena: altered soils, lower yields, and plants behaving differently than before.
Whether by chance, climate change, or human intervention, the question of what is really falling from the sky is once again at the center of public debate.
