LANCE FRY / Scroll Illustration
Weatherman blames storms on foreign mafia
Tina Bosen
BOS05003@BYUI.EDU
Scroll Staff

Weather forecast for Rexburg: partly cloudy with a slight chance of snow. Weather forecast for New Orleans: Killer hurricane created by Japanese Mafia.

Now introducing Scott Stevens, Idaho weatherman and his “distracting” weather theories.

The former weather forecaster for KPVI News Channel 6 in Pocatello resigned after nine years of work to pursue his premise.

“For years this massive global project has been under way, but only now is it making it to the forefront of the consciousness of those with curious minds,” Stevens said.

Stevens believes Japanese gangsters, the Yakuza, used a machine developed by the Russians in 1976 to create Hurricane Katrina to get back at America for the attack on Hiroshima in 1945.

“After closely watching high-resolution visible satellite imagery, there is no question in my mind that these storms [were] altered and guided to their final destinations — no doubt what so ever,” said Stevens in an email to www.urbansurvival.com.

Stevens hosts a Web site at www.weatherwars.info that costs him hundreds of dollars per month, according to the Idaho State Journal, but to him it’s worth it.

Stevens’ Web site hosts information on everything abstract in weather from satellite images of Hurricane Katrina to abnormal jet streams. Stevens has been forming his theory for years, but just recently received notoriety.

The day he resigned from his position as news meteorologist, Stevens got 30 requests for radio interviews. He spoke on Coast to Coast AM, a radio station noted for their “out of this world” stories.

“No doubt Stevens will take some heat for going public here, and we are careful not to give his station affiliation, but it appears he’s doing good basic science: making observations and trying to correlate them with known phenomena. When things don’t fit, he’s asking the obvious question,” said George Ure from urbansurvival.com.

“I’m going to miss that broadcast, but I’m not going to miss not getting home until 11 p.m.,” said Stevens of his resignation from KPVI. Stevens now devotes full time to the study of weather abnormalities.

A simple Google search of Stevens’ name will bring up multiple sights. Blogs can be found discussing his theory and sharing a laugh. But Stevens is not alone in his weather theories. Multiple Web sites, including urbansurvival.com, support a theory called “scalar energy” to prove it.

“What the masses of human beings all over the world have not been told is that it is possible to control and manipulate weather with a technology called ‘scalar energy’,” said Michael Shore on www.suite101.com.

“Scalar Weapons could literally destroy the world and it is of the utmost urgency that human beings all over the world be told of the existence of this devastating technology.” The Web site has multiple references to scientists and weather related articles to back up their claim.

Weather war is not so foreign to the United States either. The United States passed a policy act in 1976 allowing for research on weather modification technology.

Senators are seeking legislation to allocate funds towards more weather war research.

On March 3, a bill to establish a Weather Modification Operations and Research Board was introduced by Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-Texas). The bill states that the act, cited as the Weather Modification Research and Technology Transfer Authorization Act of 2005, would take effect Oct. 1 and allocate $10 million to the Weather Research and Development fund over the next nine years.

At a time when weather war is on the government’s agenda, Stevens seems to be using the perfect opportunity to develop his theory.