Other recent conspiracy theories that have dominated social media have been directed toward the Federal Emergency Management Agency, a long-standing target of anti-government narratives. Some have falsely claimed that the agency was intentionally withholding relief to punish Trump-supporting enclaves or that the organization had spent all its money on the border and foreign wars.
Those conspiracy theories, parroted by Donald Trump and other high-profile Republicans, have muddied the zone and hampered relief efforts. âThe GREAT people of North Carolina are being stood up by Harris and Biden, who are giving almost all of the FEMA money to Illegal Migrants,â Trump wrote in one of many posts shared to Truth Social.
Over the weekend, the White House put out a memo titled âFighting Hurricane Helene Falsehoods With Facts,â debunking some dominant narratives about FEMAâs relief effortsâstating that, for example, no money had been diverted from disaster response needs toward the border.
âDisinformation of this kind can discourage people from seeking critical assistance when they need it most,â the memo said. “It is paramount that every leader, whatever their political beliefs, stops spreading this poison.”
This hasnât stopped other accounts online from weighing in. Private equity manager Grant Cardone, who holds a yellow-ticked âverified organizationâ account on X, claimed that heâd never seen a hurricane follow a path like the one Milton was on. (Readers added context, noting that while itâs an uncommon track, it has been seen at least six times in the Gulf of Mexico since 1851). âDo you think Govât is using technology to manipulate weather patterns & storms?â Cardone asked in a post thatâs been viewed over 5 million times.
âCloud seeding or manipulating the weather is real,â wrote a user on X in a post thatâs been viewed 180,000 times. âKills Americans, catastrophic events JUST BEFORE AN ELECTION. Voting becomes impossible for many. October surprise??â
Experts tell WIRED that there is absolutely no truth to any of these claims that the hurricanes could be engineered by scientists.
Joshua Horton, a senior program fellow studying solar geoengineering at Harvard University, says he has worked in the field of geoengineering for 15 years and had never once encountered lasers being used. Horton noted that in the 1960s, there were attempts to use weather modification to steer hurricanes away from coasts. In perhaps 30 years, he says, solar engineering research may have advanced to the point where scientists could know how to reduce the severity of hurricanes. One theory thatâs being explored is whether shooting seaspray into low-lying marine clouds to make them more reflective over areas in the ocean where it gets very hot could potentially reduce the severity of hurricanes. But at this stage, thatâs still âtotally speculative,â says Horton.
âScientists cannot control the weather in the ways that MTG is claiming,â says Leah Aronowsky, an assistant professor of climate at Columbia Universityâs Climate School.
Aronowsky says that the field of geoengineering, which involves intervening in Earthâs atmosphere, oceans, and soils to mitigate the effects of climate change, is controversial and worthy of some âreal conversations.â But itâs also a field frequently targeted by conspiracy theorists, who envision nefarious actors using emerging complex technology for political means.