If European studies show that microwaves from wireless devices and systems cause breaks in our DNA strands, then why do our government agencies encourage the telecom industry to continue on its gluttonous rampage? Radiation assault is something you will not be able to avoid. We're a wireless nation and proud of it. Cell towers are popping up everywhere and phones are as common as bottled drinking water. The price of constant connection appears to be radiation sickness -- symptoms ranging from sleep disturbance to chronic fatigue to psychiatric problems and tumors. In our unregulated indoor/outdoor world of WiFi (no sheriff in this town!), the industry is crazily adding new networks, transmitters and more powerful antennas everywhere. And not a single public-health study has been commissioned by the FDA or NIH since this mania began.
Why don't we know about the dangers of these information-carrying waves? For the same reasons people never heard anything about the dangers of tobacco. Smoking was marketed as "cool," and going wireless is even cooler. But electromagnetic radiation that cooks you is not cool, and even the effect of transmitters on people who don't use WiFi is considerable. The telecom industry is aware of all this, having hired public-health researcher George Carlo, MD to conduct a $28-million study (1999).  Coordinating the work of 200 experts, Dr. Carlo found that communications radiation from wireless technology definitely causes genetic damage, and foreign researchers have documented a rise in cancers and nerve-system debilitation. Yet today's office buildings, coffee shops and even street lamps and park benches are loaded with routers, so what's a body to do? Be informed, for one.  Read The Idaho Observer's lengthy article by Amy Worthington on radiation poisoning here, and Dr. Joseph Mercola's postings on the subject here. To order your own portable microwave detector, click here.
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Last Updated on Monday, 23 November 2009 22:54 |