Rothschild Weather Control / Space Laser Wildfires

Overview
In January 2021, a Facebook post from November 2018 resurfaced and turned Marjorie Taylor Greene — newly elected to Congress from Georgia’s 14th district — into the unwilling author of one of the internet’s most viral conspiracy memes. The post, written before Greene entered politics, speculated that the catastrophic 2018 Camp Fire in Paradise, California, might have been deliberately started by a space-based solar energy beam, connected in some unspecified way to Pacific Gas & Electric, the Rothschild family, and a speculative space solar company called Solaren Corporation. Greene’s post wove together real companies, real technologies (in their embryonic form), and real tragedy into a narrative that media quickly condensed into two words: “Jewish space lasers.”
The phrase became an instant cultural phenomenon — a meme, a punchline, and a shorthand for how modern conspiracy theories remix old antisemitic tropes with cutting-edge technological anxieties. But beneath the meme lies a genuinely important case study in how conspiracy theories are constructed: take a real tragedy (85 people died in the Camp Fire), a real corporate villain (PG&E’s negligence was criminally prosecuted), real technological concepts (space-based solar power is a legitimate field of study), and a centuries-old scapegoat (the Rothschild name), and stitch them together into a narrative that feels more satisfying than the mundane truth — that a rusty hook on a hundred-year-old power line killed an entire town.
Origins & History
The 2018 Camp Fire
On November 8, 2018, the Camp Fire ignited near the town of Paradise in Butte County, California. Driven by high winds and tinder-dry vegetation after a historic drought, the fire became the deadliest and most destructive wildfire in California history. It killed 85 people, destroyed 18,804 structures (including 13,972 residences), and burned 153,336 acres. The town of Paradise was essentially obliterated — 95% of its structures were destroyed.
The cause was quickly identified by the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CAL FIRE): a worn C-hook on Tower 27/222 of PG&E’s Caribou-Palermo transmission line had failed, allowing a high-voltage electrical conductor to contact the tower’s steel framework. The resulting electrical arc threw hot metal particles into the dry vegetation below. A second ignition point was traced to nearby vegetation contacting PG&E power lines.
PG&E had a long history of deferred maintenance, safety violations, and wildfire involvement. The company had been found responsible for the 2010 San Bruno pipeline explosion (8 deaths) and was implicated in multiple previous wildfire seasons. In June 2020, PG&E pleaded guilty to 84 counts of involuntary manslaughter and paid over $25 billion in settlements, fines, and victim compensation.
Greene’s November 2018 Facebook Post
In the weeks after the Camp Fire, Marjorie Taylor Greene — then a private citizen and business owner from Georgia — published a lengthy Facebook post speculating about the fire’s cause. The post was discursive and conspiratorial, but its core argument can be summarized:
- PG&E had a 2009 power purchase agreement with Solaren Corporation, a startup proposing to beam solar energy from orbiting satellites to ground-based receivers using concentrated solar beams.
- Rothschild Inc., a financial advisory firm, was referenced in connection with PG&E-related financial dealings.
- Former California Governor Jerry Brown had supported high-speed rail projects through fire-damaged areas.
- Therefore (in Greene’s reasoning), the Camp Fire may have been caused by a space-based solar energy beam, potentially connected to these corporate and political interests, aimed at clearing land for the rail project and enriching connected parties.
Greene did not actually use the phrase “Jewish space lasers.” That was coined by media commentators who noted that naming the Rothschild family — the single most prominent target of antisemitic conspiracy theories for two centuries — in the context of a space-based weapon theory carried obvious antisemitic implications, regardless of whether Greene consciously intended them.
The Post Goes Viral
The post attracted little attention when first published in 2018. It resurfaced in January 2021, when Media Matters for America and other outlets reviewed Greene’s social media history following her election to Congress. Coming in the immediate aftermath of the January 6 Capitol attack and amid scrutiny of QAnon-adjacent members of Congress, the “Jewish space lasers” story became a media sensation.
Greene initially dismissed the coverage, calling it a distortion. She later expressed regret for some of her social media posts but did not specifically retract the Camp Fire claims.
Key Claims
- Space-based solar energy beams exist and are capable of starting fires on the ground.
- PG&E’s partnership with Solaren gave the utility access to (or knowledge of) orbital energy beam technology.
- Rothschild Inc.’s involvement in PG&E-related financial dealings connects the Rothschild family to the conspiracy.
- The Camp Fire was deliberately started to clear land for a high-speed rail corridor or other development projects benefiting political insiders.
- California wildfires in general may be caused by directed energy weapons rather than the officially cited causes of drought, climate change, and utility negligence.
Evidence
What Is Real (But Irrelevant)
- Solaren Corporation is real: The company was founded in 2008 and did sign a power purchase agreement with PG&E in 2009 for a proposed space-based solar power system. However, Solaren has never built a satellite, never generated any power, and the project has remained in the concept/patent stage for over 15 years. It is a speculative startup, not an operational weapons system.
- Space-based solar power is a real concept: NASA studied SBSP in the 1970s, and research continues at various agencies and universities. The concept involves collecting solar energy in orbit (where sunlight is stronger and uninterrupted) and beaming it to Earth, typically as microwaves, for conversion to electricity. No operational SBSP system has ever been deployed.
- Rothschild Inc. exists: It is a legitimate financial advisory firm. Its connection to PG&E was in an advisory capacity — the kind of routine financial services work that large advisory firms perform for utility companies.
- PG&E negligence is real: The company’s catastrophic safety record and criminal liability for the Camp Fire are well-documented. But this negligence — not a space laser — is the actual cause of the fire.
What Is False
- No space-based weapon caused the Camp Fire: CAL FIRE’s investigation, confirmed by independent expert analysis, definitively identified the cause as PG&E equipment failure. There is no physical evidence of directed energy weapon involvement.
- SBSP cannot start targeted fires: The physics of space-based solar power transmission involve diffuse microwave beams spread over large receiving areas (rectenna farms), not concentrated laser beams capable of pinpoint ignition. The energy density of proposed SBSP systems is intentionally low — comparable to sunlight, not a weapons-grade laser.
- Rothschild Inc. is not the Rothschild banking dynasty: While the firm shares the name, its connection to the broader Rothschild conspiracy mythology is based on the name alone. There is no evidence linking the firm or any Rothschild family members to any wildfire, space laser, or PG&E cover-up.
- No evidence of land-clearing motive: The high-speed rail corridor does not depend on fire-cleared land, and the Camp Fire’s path did not meaningfully align with proposed rail routes.
Debunking / Verification
Status: Debunked. The Camp Fire was caused by PG&E equipment failure, as determined by CAL FIRE’s investigation and confirmed by the company’s own guilty plea to 84 counts of involuntary manslaughter. No space-based energy weapon exists with the capability to ignite targeted ground fires. The connections drawn between PG&E, Solaren, Rothschild Inc., and the California governor are circumstantial at best and do not suggest any conspiracy.
The theory is a textbook example of apophenia — the tendency to perceive meaningful connections between unrelated things. A utility company’s financial advisors, a speculative space solar startup’s decade-old contract, a governor’s infrastructure policies, and a devastating wildfire are treated as evidence of a coordinated plot when they are, in reality, unconnected data points in a complex state economy.
Cultural Impact
The “Jewish space lasers” episode had impact far beyond its specific claims:
Antisemitism awareness: The incident became a high-profile teaching moment about how antisemitic conspiracy theories are embedded in modern political discourse. The Rothschild name’s deployment in the context of a secret weapon theory was recognized by the Anti-Defamation League, the American Jewish Committee, and historians of antisemitism as a contemporary example of centuries-old tropes.
QAnon crossover: Greene’s post exemplified the merger of QAnon-adjacent thinking with elected political office. The willingness of a sitting member of Congress to publicly entertain (or, at minimum, to have recently entertained) a theory this detached from reality raised alarm about the infiltration of conspiracy thinking into mainstream politics.
Wildfire conspiracy genre: The Camp Fire theory was not an isolated incident. A broader genre of “directed energy weapon” wildfire theories had been circulating since at least 2017, with conspiracy theorists examining aerial photographs of fire damage and interpreting the patterns of destruction as evidence of laser or DEW involvement. These theories typically note that some structures were destroyed while adjacent ones survived — a phenomenon that fire scientists attribute to differential fuel loads, construction materials, and ember exposure, but which theorists claim is impossible without targeted energy weapons.
Meme immortality: “Jewish space lasers” became one of the most durable political memes of the 2020s, referenced in comedy, editorial cartoons, and political commentary well beyond the original context. It joined “chemtrails” and “tinfoil hat” in the lexicon of shorthand references to conspiracy thinking.
In Popular Culture
- The phrase “Jewish space lasers” became a widely used internet meme and political shorthand
- Saturday Night Live, The Daily Show, Last Week Tonight, and other programs produced segments on the theory
- Multiple editorial cartoonists referenced the theory
- The phrase appeared on protest signs, merchandise, and as a self-deprecating joke within Jewish communities
- The incident is referenced in academic studies of political conspiracy theories and online radicalization
Key Figures
| Figure | Role |
|---|---|
| Marjorie Taylor Greene | Then-private citizen (later US Congresswoman) who authored the 2018 Facebook post |
| Solaren Corporation | Startup that signed a speculative SBSP agreement with PG&E in 2009; never built an operational system |
| PG&E | California utility whose equipment failure caused the Camp Fire; pleaded guilty to 84 counts of involuntary manslaughter |
| Rothschild Inc. | Financial advisory firm named in Greene’s post |
| CAL FIRE | California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection; investigated and determined the Camp Fire’s cause |
Timeline
| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| 2008 | Solaren Corporation founded |
| 2009 | PG&E signs speculative power purchase agreement with Solaren for proposed SBSP project |
| Nov 8, 2018 | Camp Fire ignites near Paradise, California; kills 85 people |
| Nov 2018 | Marjorie Taylor Greene publishes Facebook post speculating about space-based energy beams and the fire |
| May 2019 | CAL FIRE officially determines Camp Fire was caused by PG&E equipment failure |
| Jun 2020 | PG&E pleads guilty to 84 counts of involuntary manslaughter |
| Nov 2020 | Greene elected to US Congress from Georgia’s 14th district |
| Jan 2021 | Media Matters surfaces Greene’s 2018 post; “Jewish space lasers” becomes viral meme |
| Feb 2021 | House votes to strip Greene of committee assignments (over this and other conspiracy theory endorsements) |
Sources & Further Reading
- CAL FIRE. “Camp Fire Investigation Report.” California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, 2019.
- Kaplan, Alex. “Marjorie Taylor Greene Penned Conspiracy Theory That a Laser Beam from Space Started California Wildfire.” Media Matters for America, January 28, 2021.
- Anti-Defamation League. “Space Lasers, Rothschilds, and Antisemitic Conspiracy Theories.” ADL resource page, 2021.
- Manson, Mark, et al. “The Camp Fire: What Happened.” Sacramento Bee investigative series, 2019.
- National Space Society. “Space-Based Solar Power.” NSS technical overview.
- Wines, Michael. “PG&E Pleads Guilty to 84 Counts of Involuntary Manslaughter.” New York Times, June 16, 2020.
Related Theories
- Rothschild War Profiteering — The broader Rothschild conspiracy tradition from which this theory draws
- Rothschild Waterloo Myth — The foundational Rothschild financial conspiracy myth
- HAARP Weather Control — Parallel claims about government weather manipulation technology
- Directed Energy Weapons — The broader DEW conspiracy theory genre applied to wildfires
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the 'Jewish space laser' theory?
Does space-based solar power technology exist?
What actually caused the 2018 Camp Fire?
Is Rothschild Inc. connected to PG&E or Solaren?
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