Conspiracy theory that Hurricane Milton was 'engineered' explained by psychologists

When faced with uncontrollable climate change, people often embrace conspiracy theories to regain a sense of control.

A man walks through a flooded city street at night with water up to his ankles
Hurricane Milton was the second most intense ever recorded in the Gulf of Mexico. 
(Image credit: Joe Raedle via Getty Images)

Hurricane Milton slammed into the west coast of Florida on October 9, becoming the second powerful hurricane to hit the state in just two weeks.

While most people turned to meteorologists for explanations, a vocal minority remained skeptical, proposing that the hurricanes were engineered, that Florida's weather was being manipulated, or even that it was targeted at Republican voters.

Iwan Dinnick
Research Fellow, Psychology, University of Nottingham

Iwan Dinnick is a postdoctoral research fellow working with Daniel Jolley (University of Nottingham) and Lee Curley (Glasgow Caledonian University) on a three-year Leverhulme funded project investigating whether a conspiracy mindset may bias juror decision-making. Prior to his postdoc, he completed my PhD at Keele University which sought to refine understanding of intergroup conflict.