New Florida Law Bans the Engineering of Weather: Sayer Ji Explains
“They were intending to alter the trajectory of hurricanes using things like silver as a way to change the precipitation and intensity of these storms. Later, in Vietnam, for example, they used it for increasing weather, such as precipitation, on the so-called ‘enemy.’ Project Popeye [using cloud-seeding] is well-established to have been a successful weaponization of the weather. So, there is a pretty long history of weather modification and militarization of weather modification technology,” says Sayer Ji, chairman of the Global Wellness Forum and founder of GreenMedInfo.com.
“What the main concern is, is that there are other operations that are clandestine [where] we don’t actually know what the agenda is, outside of official acknowledgement that solar radiation management technologies are being deployed, which include using things like sulfur, calcium, titanium—various elements to create a dimming effect,” he said.
Views expressed in this video are opinions of the host and the guest, and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.
RUSH TRANSCRIPT
Jan Jekielek:
Sayer Ji, such a pleasure to have you on American Thought Leaders.
Sayer Ji:
Thank you. The honor is mine.
Mr. Jekielek:
Sayer, Florida just made history. The first bill in America has been passed that criminalizes geoengineering and weather modification. But wait a sec. Hold the presses here. Why do we even need such a thing? Is this something that’s happening in reality? Is it something that’s common? Explain this to me.
Mr. Ji:
Absolutely, yes. First of all, we have the evidence of our senses, which is that anyone who’s lived long enough—I’ve been in Florida for 25 years—has noticed a dramatic shift in the appearance of the sky from relatively blue with regular rain patterns, for example, shifting to this hazy effect that ultimately is related to the dimming that they’re trying to induce through geoengineering.
So there is a long history, it’s very publicly acknowledged, of operations that are intending to, ostensibly, neutralize global warming, right? But what they’re doing is they’re using agents that are highly toxic to public health and the environment, and this is something which is now becoming such a huge issue in states like Florida that we’ve seen a mass grassroots mobilization around passing this legislation.
Mr. Jekielek:
You’re going to have to unpack this for me because I think for a lot of us, I had frankly no idea for most of my life that anything like this was happening at all. When did this start?
Mr. Ji:
If you go back to the history of weather modification, Florida was actually ground zero for some of the operations. They were intending to alter the trajectory of hurricanes using things like silver as a way to, you know, change the precipitation and intensity of these storms. So later, you know, in Vietnam, for example, they used it for increasing weather such as precipitation on the so-called enemy. Project Popeye is well established to have been a successful weaponization of the weather.
So there is a pretty long history of weather modification and militarization of weather modification technology. In Florida, you see this very hazy, misty, you know, and tracks in the sky that look like cobwebs, for example. It’s a very obvious change in what we know is supposed to be natural weather. So that’s what’s really gotten many people—legislators and the public—up in arms about really wanting to get disclosure on these operations.
Mr. Jekielek:
Why don’t you guide us to where we can learn through official documents about all these things?
Mr. Ji:
We know that weather modification is a big part of the agenda in many states where, for example, the agricultural industry would like to increase precipitation. Generally speaking, it just translates directly into greater crop growth and greater revenue. So it’s well established that they’re using things like silver in order to increase precipitation.
But what the main concern is, is that there are other operations that are clandestine, that we don’t actually know what the agenda is outside of the official acknowledgment that solar radiation management technologies are being deployed, which include using things like sulfur, calcium, titanium, and various elements to create a dimming effect. So that’s one of the primary things that we’re looking to get disclosure on because the public fallout, in terms of health consequences, is severe.
There are metals that are now being found in the soil and foods. We’re breathing those in. It’s a complex topic because you have, you know, weather modification that is looking at just increasing precipitation. In Florida, we don’t actually have many of those programs. They’re found in other states, but there are well-known consequences of the aviation industry having fuel that contains many of the metals that have been found through independent testing, which include aluminum and barium, other compounds of concern. And that’s a big issue because commercial aviation is under the jurisdiction of the federal government, the FAA [Federal Aviation Administration].
And so even with our bill in Florida, it’s one step towards ultimately opening up the larger topic, which is that we all want to breathe clean air. We have to. So this is one of the primary efforts. And we’re only one of now 34 states that has introduced legislation to ban or get increased oversight over weather modification operations in this country.
Mr. Jekielek:
I’m definitely going to dig into that because you’re an important part of getting this law passed in Florida. But he just reminded me, you know, Bobby Kennedy himself on the Dr. Phil show, he was asked about this issue in general. I’ll quote him here: “That is not happening in my agency. We don’t do that. It’s done, I think, by DARPA [Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency]. And a lot of it now is coming out of the jet fuel. So those materials are put in jet fuel. I’m going to do everything in my power to stop it. We’re bringing on somebody who’s going to think only about that, find out who’s doing it, and hold them accountable.” So there is some interest at the federal level.
Mr. Ji:
Absolutely. Yes, in fact, in April, Bobby went ahead and he responded to our announcement that there were, at the time, 24 states that had introduced legislation, which was incredible. And he said that every MAHA [Make America Healthy Again] needs to support this initiative and that HHS [Dept. of Health & Human Services] at least acknowledges that the environment, the air we breathe, you know, the water goes into the soil, the metals go into the food.
We have to address this issue as a priority. And he does acknowledge that, which was the first time the executive branch signaled in such a powerful way that they back this highly grassroots movement. You know, this is we the people rising up saying, let’s acknowledge what we’re seeing around us and let’s do something about it.
Mr. Jekielek:
This is the perfect opportunity to kind of find out a little bit more about you, where you come from, what you’re about, how you’re connected with MAHA.
Mr. Ji:
I started out as a grassroots activist by putting together a website early in my career in 2007 called greenmedinfo.com. It was a project of mine. It was sort of an obsession to index all the research I could find on research that supports natural interventions and also looks at unintended adverse effects of conventional interventions. It could be anything from mammography to vaccination.
And because of that website, which now has 100,000 studies, it’s been very controversial because before MAHA became a big thing, and even before Whole Foods and all the natural health advocacy became mainstream, we were considered on the fringe. Natural health, it seems a little bit wooey, based on anecdotes, for example. But what I decided to do was to find all of the so-called scripture of the medical monotheism that dominates America, which is the peer-reviewed and published research to support empowering people to make an informed choice.
Mr. Jekielek:
It’s been astonishing to me to learn over the last however many years how much peer-reviewed research exists in a whole lot of areas. For example, the medicinal properties or positive medical effects of certain types of food. I remember Dr. Paul Marik that I had on the show about some of this. He discovered that berberine is written about quite a bit in the scientific literature to treat diabetes or compounds that have anti-carcinogenic properties.
He’s been running AI, looking through, again, peer-reviewed research showing that green tea and turmeric, for example, have strong prophylactic qualities against cancer and things like that. I mean, fascinating stuff you don’t generally hear about, right? And you’ve been documenting this for years on your site. And then you became involved in, you know, MAHA. What is MAHA? I don’t think I’ve had that question answered on the show yet.
Mr. Ji:
I believe it’s a populist movement to embrace alternatives to the conventional medical model, which is very largely driven by pharmaceutical interests, as we know. It doesn’t mean that they’re nefarious. It’s just that it’s a good business model. You suppress symptoms, often with some of the very chemicals—basically patented xenobiotic chemicals, drugs—that are actually not addressing the root cause. Many of the symptoms of disease are caused by poisoning with some of these same chemical types. So it’s this very paradoxical situation where we’re told that the standard of care requires that we adopt interventions which we just cognitively realize are actually chemicals; they’re not natural compounds.
And natural medicine advocacy has always been around acknowledging that our body is a natural entity and that we should be able to use the medicines that really for countless epochs we’ve used to survive as a species and thrive in certain scenarios. So it’s really a revival of ancient wisdom combined with the advances of modern science. And I think that my work has simply been to celebrate that research. And I didn’t intend for it to be very controversial because one of the 10,000 databases on the non-safety and non-efficacy of various vaccines. And that’s what politically became quite an issue.
Mr. Jekielek:
Now you’re involved in the Global Wellness Forum. The Global Wellness Forum was, I think, instrumental in passing this legislation in Florida. And frankly, you know, which is actually being used by many other states. I think it’s up to—is it 36 now or something?
Mr. Ji:
It’s 34, but there are others in the works.
Mr. Jekielek:
Okay. The point is, it’s not just something about Florida. You know, sometimes people say Florida is a little bit weird. But no, it’s something that, you know, a great many states are taking very seriously. And again, I just don’t know if this was so much in the public consciousness, to be honest. Like it wasn’t in mine.
Mr. Ji:
If you are like me and you live often in the realms of social media, it is just unbelievable how many posts there are, many of which are viral on the topic of so-called chemtrails. Colloquially, that term has been used to describe the obvious changes in weather that are artificial. People don’t know the cause. That’s a big reason why there are so many now looking to legislate, you know, a populist movement, and it’s really all about taking back our basic right to bodily sovereignty.
I think after the four or five years of the declared pandemic, there was a mass awakening around bodily choice, informed consent. And what we’re seeing, I think, truly is a nonpartisan movement that is embraced by the majority of Americans. And I would say this is becoming a really beautiful movement of sovereignty. And it’s just, we have to address the 800-pound gorilla of what’s going on in our skies and what we’re breathing in daily.
Mr. Jekielek:
What about the Global Wellness Forum? Where does that come from?
Mr. Ji:
Maria Maples and I, along with Dr. Ed Group, decided because we have such a beautiful history of working together as activists, if you will, behind the scenes for natural health advocacy, to bring together the coalitions that over the course of now several decades have proven independently that they represent the will of the people and that they are in alignment with very basic values, which include things like transparency, radical honesty, and radical responsibility. And these are the things that we are now bringing together in national and international coalitions in order to move issues like the geoengineering issue forward.
Although we have 16 councils, you know, because MAHA is very old, the bones of the movement are parents, for example, who had vaccine-injured children and were gaslit by the media, the medical establishment, and told that they were wrong. And for example, the vaccine-induced brain damage their children suffered. And now we have advocates like Bobby in positions of great influence who are, you know, now articulating what we the people really want.
Mr. Jekielek:
When I think about MAHA, I think about people who have engaged with the existing medical system and, in some way, been wronged by it. And that’s what kind of changes them. Almost all the people that I’ve met who would describe themselves as MAHA were of that ilk. There could be many reasons for why. But then there would be some kind of, like you mentioned, suddenly they’re on the wrong side of an issue. They’re speaking the unspeakable thing. And they’re like, hey, but I’m just looking out for my kid’s health. And they’re trying to figure out solutions to problems, which the dominant system doesn’t even kind of acknowledge in some ways, right?
So there’s this whole subculture that has developed over decades, right, of people who found each other and said, hey, so how do you deal with this problem? I need this problem. The system isn’t really giving me any solutions. But actually, it turns out there are a lot of different solutions or approaches or at least good research being done and so forth. And it’s also very interesting to me that you have, you know, Maria Maples, yourself, and a group kind of coming from quite different backgrounds and quite different interests. You know, a group who I just recently met, actually, you know, is working on gene therapies and so forth. So it’s a, I mean, it’s a kind of a range of interests, a range of outlooks, right?
Mr. Ji:
Yes, I think that’s what’s so beautiful about this movement is it embraces really everyone who shares these basic values, but that doesn’t mean that we are beholden to or subsume ourselves to any type of political caste or affiliation, you know, because what we’re anchoring is this innate knowledge we all share that our default state is to be happy and healthy. I think that’s the basis for MAHA.
Mr. Jekielek:
And a key feature, I think, is going after root causes of disease as opposed to dealing with symptoms, from what I heard.
Mr. Ji:
Yes,100%. Outside of that model of actually resolving the roots of the disease, you know, it’s a very good perpetual subscription model for a business, right? Like medicine is one of the most successful businesses on the planet and has a larger standing army of, you know, representatives from the pharmacies to the, you know, the staff at hospitals, etc., than actual armies. But they’re also going through a reform process.
I think after what everyone experienced with coerced and mandated interventions, many who experienced the collusion and felt the ethical dissonance are now excited about MAHA. They realize, wow, there is another path that we can learn from our past and move forward in a positive way. And there is a really good place for allopathic medicine, obviously, you know, as far as interventions that can save your life in emergency scenarios. But for chronic disease, of course, you want to identify the cause and remove it.
Mr. Jekielek:
You mean that not all disease comes from pathogens, basically, that’s what you’re saying, right? So some of it comes from just bad dietary choices.
Mr. Ji:
I’m a student of biomedical literature. I’ve looked through 2 million citations just to amass 100,000 on GreenMedInfo. And one of the things that was most amazing to me and disturbing in 2000 was a supernova of literature around the microbiome and the discovery that the majority of the genetic material in our bodies is actually attributable to the viruses, the fungi, the bacteriophages, the little germs that we’ve been told are at the root of most of our disease. So that’s called the holobiont. It’s this notion that we are this entity that is totally merged with the planetary microbiome and that we need these exposures, right?
In other words, yes, infections are real. Opportunistic infections exist. But if you’re feeding as a substrate, let’s say it’s high fructose corn syrup to these certain bacteria in your microbiome that thrive on that, it’s going to create some disease. But they’re not the cause of the disease. It’s usually an environmental factor, dietary exposure, or psychogenically, even the fear that’s induced by believing that invisible particles and genes are at the root cause of your disease because we’re told you can’t control that outside of maybe not exposing yourself.
Mr. Jekielek:
So this is, and this is partially, you know, there’s what comes with sovereignty is accountability. So you actually have to, you know, assume some responsibility for what you’re eating. That’s part of the movement as well.
Mr. Ji:
Absolutely. In fact, Dr. Ed Group came up with this phrase, make yourself healthy again, as a way to remind people that it really is about taking radical responsibility for your health choices and even your disease. Because if you’ve co-created it or created it, then you can uncreate it. And that’s part of the beauty of radical responsibility in healthcare versus the allopathic model, like a time bomb that just goes off suddenly. That’s very fatalistic, and it’s not in alignment with what the new biology shows us, which is that largely it’s what we do or do not eat, and again, exposures.
Mr. Jekielek:
Wonderful. Let’s talk about some of the things you’ve discovered in terms of food. You’ve described yourself as a lifelong student of the healing properties of food, right? I believe in conversation. Well, right here, we have matcha, which I’m a little bit obsessed with, as my producer over here will attest. And I’ve always had a sense that it’s fantastic. But you’ve kind of been validating my biases here. So tell me about green tea and especially matcha.
Mr. Ji:
The beauty of matcha as an alternative to coffee, for example, is that it has a number of components that help with things like the neuritogenic effect in the brain, where you stimulate neural stem cells to regenerate. Coffee doesn’t necessarily have that property, although there is some evidence that it can help boost brain function. But matcha has other superpowers, which include L-theanine, which is an amino acid that reduces cortisol, whereas generally coffee drinkers tend to have elevated cortisol as a result of, you know, some of the other effects, which makes you more jittery. Blood sugar stays elevated, and you have a hard time sleeping, whereas matcha actually helps with sleep, assuming you drink it earlier in the day.
But one of the other amazing things about it is in terms of the biomedical literature, we have actually researched on our website, GreenMedInfo, over 500 diseases that have been studied that it would either prevent, mitigate, or reverse using a green tea component. And it’s because the polyphenols, which are known as antioxidants, have such a powerful effect on mammalian metabolism.
So it’s a way of understanding nutrition differently and actually looking at the information it contains, because most people don’t realize this, everything you eat has microRNAs, which sounds small, but they have a huge effect. They’re basically ways to silence the expression of protein-coding genes in your body. And most of these genes require certain microRNAs in order for you not to, for example, have cancer.
So that’s one of the keys here, is that matcha actually contains essential software for the hardware of our body, and that could account for why it’s so therapeutic. The primary thing that people don’t realize is it has chlorophyll in high concentrations, which goes into the mammalian mitochondria and helps to increase the production of ATP and greatly enhance longevity because humans actually are able to capture photonic energy in the mitochondria with a chlorophyll metabolite and turn it into metabolic energy.
We’re actually photoheterotrophs. Like most people think, oh, plants are, you know, autotrophs who are sitting there absorbing the sun. We don’t have that capability, we’re told. And then heterotrophs have to eat other things. It turns out in 2012, there was a study proving that mammals actually take the chlorophyll into the mitochondria and they can convert sunlight into metabolic energy.
Mr. Jekielek:
Yes, through the intermediary, of course.
Mr. Ji:
Yes, so it’s like having solar panels in your body. It’s similar to melanin. Melanin does something similar. So my feeling is that because Americans don’t get enough chlorophyll, that’s one reason why you see such a radical improvement in your health when you start drinking matcha instead of coffee or instead of a second cup, just use matcha instead.
Mr. Jekielek:
And as I mentioned, it also has these apparently significant anti-carcinogenic properties. It’s like the top of the list of these AI studies looking through all sorts of studies on how various foods and compounds impact the development of cancer.
Mr. Ji:
Absolutely. In fact, we have 150 different pharmacological actions that have been indexed that green tea expresses in the body. So it’s like this multi-armed goddess that’s able to articulate all of these different functions in real time in a way that no pharmaceutical can reproduce because these are monochemicals. They’re extremely difficult to operate within the really fractal system of the human body. Natural compounds again are informational as well as containing chemistries. So what they do is they work on an energetic and informational level with our body. So it’s a totally different scenario.
Mr. Jekielek:
Fascinating. Never heard of that before.
Mr. Ji:
Yes, we’ve got the research on my website.
Mr. Jekielek:
Why don’t you pick for me a few things that you discovered through your research that will be shocking like this or even better? Like, I mean, sort of things we should do or help us.
Mr. Ji:
One of the most amazing things, especially for women, because most of the natural health movement really has been successful because of the women in the family who often have to think about taking care of their loved ones, is that many women don’t realize this. As they age, their ovaries start to reduce production of essential steroid hormones and when you’re stressed the adrenal glands steal progesterone from the ovaries to make more cortisol so you can get an accelerated aging process.
So when you get into the paramenopausal, menopausal zone, many women start to get depression, midsection fat, their bone density decreases and bone quality turns out if they take advantage of the ovaries of these fruiting plants, which are known as angiosperms. It’s 70% of all food on the planet that comes from this family. It’s as if they replace the function of their ovaries entirely. In the animal model, what they do, they take the ovaries out of the female rats or whatever animal they’re choosing, and they suddenly undergo all these changes of life.
But if you feed them things like plum or orange, and the best of all is pomegranate, it’s as if they never took their ovaries out. And this helps people to understand, like, if you look at the ovary of the pomegranate bush and you slice it in half, it looks just like a mammalian ovary. And it has bioidentical estrone, which is one of the three estrogens that mammals produce. In fact, it even has testosterone, so men need to know that.
So it’s part of the law of signatures in the beautiful way in which we co-evolve with plants is that there’s a cosmic wink of this food that can feed this organ. And now we have the biomedical validation to show that it’s actually a natural HRT [Hormone replacement therapy] alternative, which explains why the world over pomegranate is used for longevity and prosperity. It has all these benefits.
But even better than that is that it is able to reverse plaque buildup in the arteries so pomegranate if you ever put it in your mouth right it’s astringent mm-hmm that the phthalo tissue in your mouth is the same that lines your blood vessels and arteries so it has this cleansing effect on the arteries and there was an Israeli study that found a 30% reversal of plaque buildup in the carotid arteries simply by consuming pomegranate juice so if this was not a threat right to the pharmaceutical industry and people really embraced the principles of MAHA, this would be international news because this is the number one killer of people in the Western world, which is heart disease. And it’s something as simple as pomegranate would alleviate so much suffering.
And it’s such a beautiful testimony to the way nature just kind of puts the solution right in front of you. It bleeds like a heart. It looks like a heart. It cleanses your heart, it looks like an ovary, it replaces the ovary, and there’s all these other great examples of it, like the walnut. It’s the perfect example of it.
It has a bihemispheric nut full of omega-3 fats, which are indispensable to your brain. You can barely find it in any other nut or seed. And it has this meninges-like coating that has compounds that have already been shown to have neuroprotective effects in conditions like Alzheimer’s. And it’s just the perfect symmetry too. It looks just like a human brain.
Mr. Jekielek:
Right. When I was interviewing Dr. Marik about what he found in cancer literature, right, because he’s been looking at all the papers about cancer, the studies that have been done about cancer that we didn’t know about, that he didn’t know about for most of his life. And one of the things he found was that this combination of omega-3s, exercise, and vitamin D was actually, you know, in a quite robust study, reduced the incidence of contracting cancer by like 40%.
So like, you know, you look at the study, you go, that is an absolutely astounding result, right? And it’s, you know, it’s a, I looked at the study, it’s a robust finding, it’s replicable. So, you know, again, you would think how many people’s lives would be saved by just knowing that, of course, you know, it’s not one-to-one. But the point is, if people were actually doing this, there would be a lot less incidence of cancer, for sure.
Mr. Ji:
There are many other examples, too. I mean, there was a recent clinical study that found that just using black seed oil in combination with honey radically reduced mortality from those diagnosed with COVID. And so that’s just one example of where many of these non-patented compounds that are pretty freely available are able to support us in a way that there is not a known medical intervention that was ever approved by the FDA that comes even close to that.
If you look at Alzheimer’s research, which Bobby just recently called out as a complete failure, right? What they did is they put just literally billions of dollars into this notion that, you know, it’s a prion-based disease unrelated to metal exposures or any of the other known causes of brain damage. And there’s so much research on being able to reverse Alzheimer’s pathology using things like curcumin. You know, this is an established set of studies that no one has actually reported on in the mainstream that I know of. But it exists, it’s in the literature, and there are literally 100,000 examples of that, that I’ve been so happy to be able to identify these clinical pearls.
Mr. Jekielek:
We were talking a little bit earlier about eyesight, because this is something our viewers will have noticed that I’m wearing glasses more often. Tell me about, are there things that can help with that? And of course, I just want to caveat something here. This isn’t like a one-to-one thing where you are 100% guaranteed everything. This is a panacea. It solves all your problems. It doesn’t work like that, right? But what have you found about eyesight?
Mr. Ji:
One of the most amazing studies I ran into was done on an animal model of cataracts where they used wheatgrass extract and found that after just several months of feeding them essentially just powdered wheatgrass, not even fresh, they were able to reverse the lens opacity by up to 40%, which is a really big deal because obviously cataracts are a precursor to blindness and many people in our age group are starting to form them and to know that you can reverse it with something as simple as a basic plant extract is just revolutionary.
One of the reasons happens to be because these plant cells have an immortal cell line called meristematic cells. You know, where does all the biomass on the planet come from, including our own? It comes from the last universal common ancestor [LUCA] of all cells, going back about 3.4 billion years, and it’s been replicating forever. It’s an immortal line. It’s in our sperm, in women, it’s in the ovaries. And wheatgrass is actually one of the compounds from a plant side of the equation that has these immortal cells.
So my understanding of it is that it’s more than what is demonstrable through the biochemistry explanation. We have to acknowledge that there is an aspect to how life works that’s still a mystery. But when you see these results, it’s clear that you can awaken a reversal of aging quite easily using these compounds.
Mr. Jekielek:
What’s next for the Global Wellness Forum in your work?
Mr. Ji:
We’re working a lot with states now and various leaders in various positions of influence to draft model legislation and to provide educational support. One of the primary ways in which we’ve been able to support the movement known as MAHA is through one of our coalition partners, which is Stand for Health Freedom. I’m a co-founder.
It’s a 501(c)(4). And we’ve driven a lot of legislative change through facilitating grassroots activism, really. So one of the things we’re doing is just working with other coalition members to support the new administration in these initiatives. So the Global Wellness Forum has global partners. We have the World Council of Health. So this is really an international movement that is truly an inspiration because even with Bobby’s confirmation, we saw so much interest.
We put a petition up and we had a hundred different countries that were, you know, the respondents were like, we really want Bobby to be confirmed. So the Make America Healthy Again movement is actually, I think, a global movement. And that’s really what the Global Wellness Forum is here to support.
Mr. Jekielek:
Sayer Ji, it’s such a pleasure to have you on the show.
Mr. Ji:
The honor is mine. Thank you so much.









