"If you look at a thousand planes, you won't see one (chemtrail). But then all of a sudden you see one," the author of the Tennessee Senate bill told the Tennessee Lookout last month. "So we're just asking the question: Are they putting anything in the air that could be toxic?" The Minnesota House version of the bill was authored by GOP Rep. Jeff Dotseth of Kettle River and co-sponsored by Reps. Pam Altendorf of Red Wing, Dawn Gillman of Dassel and Krista Knudson of Lake Shore. The Senate version was authored by GOP Sen. Eric Lucero of Saint Michael and co-sponsored by Sens. Glenn Gruenhagen of Glencoe, Bruce Anderson of Buffalo, Nathan Wesenberg of Little Falls and Eichorn, the assistant minority leader. Some of the language in the bill is nonsensical. "I don't think xenobiotic electromagnetism and fields is a thing - it doesn't even make sense," Buck said. The lead authors of both chambers' bills did not respond to a request to define "xenobiotic electromagnetism," or to provide a real-world example of it.
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