A claim has been circulating that President Trump accused someone of geoengineering the weather to sabotage America’s 250th anniversary celebrations. We dug into it — here’s what we actually found.
While a heat dome and severe thunderstorms did disrupt the July 4th festivities (delaying Trump’s speech by nearly two hours and forcing a lightning evacuation of the National Mall), there’s no verified reporting that Trump made this specific accusation.
What is real: a growing number of Republican figures — including Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene and former national security adviser Michael Flynn — have pushed weather-modification and geoengineering conspiracy theories after other disasters, most notably last year’s deadly Texas floods. EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin has since released public resources specifically trying to debunk chemtrail and weather-control myths.
🔍 In this video:
Where this “Trump blamed geoengineering” claim actually comes from
What weather really caused the July 4th disruptions
The real GOP figures pushing weather-modification conspiracy theories
What the EPA and NOAA say about geoengineering claims
#FactCheck #Trump #Geoengineering #July4th #America250 #WeatherConspiracy #Politics2026
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