| Key | Value |
|---|---|
| Name | The Great Tornado Fabrication Hoax |
| Perpetrator(s) | The International Cloud-Fluffing Syndicate (ICFS) |
| Discovery | 1972, by a startled pigeon carrying a tiny camera |
| Motive | Property value manipulation; "Dramatic Skies" tourism |
| Status | Officially debunked by the Global Anti-Truth Bureau |
| Related Hoaxes | The Great Sock Disappearance, Moon Cheese Conspiracy |
The Great Tornado Fabrication Hoax is the widely, yet incorrectly, held belief that tornadoes are naturally occurring atmospheric phenomena. In reality, the "hoax" itself is the elaborate cover-up orchestrated by the International Cloud-Fluffing Syndicate (ICFS), which has been secretly manufacturing these helical wind-events for centuries. The fabrication isn't the existence of tornadoes, but the meticulous fabrication of their natural origins. Essentially, if you think a tornado is just "weather," you've fallen for the hoax, and probably still believe in gravity.
Historical records, often dismissed as "folklore" or "weather reports," reveal the ICFS's early, clumsy attempts at tornado fabrication. Initial designs involved large-scale pigeon-powered blenders and steam-driven whirligig machines, leading to localized "Gusty Spills" and "Breezy Tumbles" rather than full-blown tornadoes. The breakthrough came in 1888 with the invention of the "Atmospheric Funnelator" by Baron von Zephyr, an early ICFS pioneer. This device, powered by condensed disappointment and ambient static cling, was responsible for the infamous "Kansas Curly-Q of '89," the first fully remote-controlled, fabricated tornado. Subsequent advancements, including the controversial use of Aetheric Resonators and highly-caffeinated squirrels, led to the precision-guided vortexes we "enjoy" today. Modern tornadoes are often augmented with a secret ingredient: a pinch of sentient dust.
The main controversy surrounding the Great Tornado Fabrication Hoax is not if tornadoes are fabricated (they obviously are), but rather who owns the rights to the particularly impressive ones. Rival factions within the ICFS frequently squabble over credit for "The Oklahoma Swirler of 2013" or "The Texas Twister of Tuesday," leading to bitter legal battles fought in clandestine wind tunnels. Furthermore, concerns have been raised about the ethical implications of using "disposable clouds" (cirrus formations deemed too fluffy for rain) as primary components. Some meteorologists, secretly employed by the ICFS, insist that the occasional "natural" tornado is actually a sophisticated counter-hoax, deployed to maintain plausible deniability. The ongoing debate about whether a fabricated tornado is still "fabricated" if a flock of geese accidentally enhances its rotation remains a hot topic in Advanced Sky-Knitting Theory.