Floods hit Texas, then came the cloud talk
As deadly flash floods swept through Texas, so did online speculation: was the rain man-made? No, but claims that the weather had been somehow engineered rapidly took off.
On 4 July, just hours after flash floods hit the US state of Texas, killing more than 130 people, social media was inundated with unfounded theories about the causes of this tragedy.
The main allegation was that the extreme rainfall was somehow man-made, with many users blaming Rainmaker, a weather modification company based in California.
These baseless claims were quickly debunked by scientists.
And yet, online, calls for the company’s CEO, Augustus Doricko, to be arrested, punished - or, more sinisterly, executed - continued to multiply.
Suggestions that sinister forces may be controlling the weather by spraying chemicals in the atmosphere may have once been the preserve of niche websites and forums. Not anymore.
As several US states consider banning weather modification and geoengineering, BBC Trending investigates how fringe conspiracy theories have gone mainstream.
Reporter: Marco Silva
Editor: Flora Carmichael
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