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It is getting quite difficult to
imagine a world without mobile communications. Wireless internet access is set
to blanket the planet, just like cell phone networks already do. There has been
an explosive development - practically all during the last three decades - that
brought mobile to the farthest corners of the earth. But the technology is not
without danger. The microwaves that carry bits and packets of data also carry a
germ of destruction. Some people - as many as 120,000 Californians - and by
implication 1 million Americans - are actually unable to work as they suffer
from the incapacitating influence that this cacophony in the ether has on them.
We might say they are the unlucky
ones who have to suffer for progress to continue - but have you ever heard of
canaries in the mines? They were the first ones to die when a potentially deadly
but otherwise undetectable accumulation of "mine gas" threatened the lives of
the miners working underground. What if those 120.000 Californians and the one
million Americans and by extension tens of millions of people world wide are in
a very real sense our equivalent of deep-mine canaries? Are we not ignoring
their plight at our own very imminent peril?
Arthur Firstenberg, himself a
sufferer of what the Russians call "microwave sickness" has put together the
salient facts about the largest biological experiment ever, in a very readable
article published in the Eldorado Sun.
We cannot call ourselves informed in
the wireless debate unless we start looking at its dark side as well as all the
positive aspects. Firstenberg's article is as good as any to get us going in
this direction ...
In 2002, Gro Harlem
Brundtland, then head of the World Health Organization,
told a Norwegian journalist that cell phones were banned from her office in
Geneva because she personally becomes ill if a cell phone is brought within
about four meters (13 feet) of her. Mrs. Brundtland is a medical doctor and
former Prime Minister of Norway. This sensational news, published March 9, 2002
in Dagbladet, was ignored by every other newspaper in the world. The following
week Michael Repacholi, her subordinate in charge of the
International EMF (electromagnetic field) Project, responded
with a public statement belittling his boss’s concerns. Five months later, for
reasons that many suspect were related to these circumstances, Mrs.
Brundtland announced she would step down from her leadership post at the WHO
after just one term.
Nothing could better illustrate our
collective schizophrenia when it comes to thinking about electromagnetic
radiation. We respond to those who are worried about its dangers — hence the
International EMF Project — but we ignore and marginalize those, like Mrs.
Brundtland, who have already succumbed to its effects.
As a consultant on the health
effects of wireless technology, I receive calls that can be broadly divided into
two main groups: those from people who are merely worried, whom I will call A,
and those from people who are already sick, whom I will call B. I sometimes wish
I could arrange a large conference call and have the two groups talk to each
other — there needs to be more mutual understanding so that we are all trying to
solve the same problems. Caller A, worried, commonly asks what kind of shield to
buy for his cell phone or what kind of headset to wear with it. Sometimes he
wants to know what is a safe distance to live from a cell tower. Caller B, sick,
wants to know what kind of shielding to put on her house, what kind of medical
treatment to get, or, increasingly often, what part of the country she could
move to to escape the radiation to save her life.
The following is designed as a sort
of a primer: first, to help everybody get more or less on the same page, and
second, to clear up some of the confusions so that we can make rational
decisions toward a healthier world.

Fundamentals
The most basic fact about cell
phones and cell towers is that they emit microwave radiation;
so do Wi-Fi (wireless Internet) antennas, wireless computers, cordless
(portable) phones and their base units, and all other wireless devices. If it's
a communication device and it's not attached to the wall by a wire, it's
emitting radiation. Most Wi-Fi systems and some cordless phones operate at
the exact same frequency as a microwave oven, while other devices use a
different frequency. Wi-Fi is always on and always radiating. The base
units of most cordless phones are always radiating, even when no one is
using the phone. A cell phone that is on but not in use is also radiating.
And, needless to say,
cell towers are always radiating.
Why is this a problem, you might ask? Scientists usually divide the
electromagnetic spectrum into "ionizing" and "non-ionizing." Ionizing radiation,
which includes x-rays and atomic radiation, causes cancer. Non-ionizing
radiation, which includes microwave radiation, is supposed to
be safe. This distinction always reminded me of the propaganda in George
Orwell's Animal Farm: "Four legs good, two legs bad." "Non-ionizing good,
ionizing bad" is as little to be trusted.
An astronomer once quipped that if Neil Armstrong had taken a cell phone to the
Moon in 1969, it would have appeared to be the third most powerful source of
microwave radiation in the universe, next only to the Sun and the Milky Way. He
was right. Life evolved with negligible levels of microwave radiation. **
An increasing number of scientists speculate that our body's own cells, in fact,
use the microwave spectrum to communicate with one another, like children
whispering in the dark, and that cell phones, like jackhammers, interfere with
their signaling. ** In any case, it is a fact that we are all being
bombarded, day in and day out, whether we use a cell phone or not, by an amount
of microwave radiation that is some ten million times as strong as the
average natural background. And it is also a fact that most of this
radiation is due to technology that has been developed since the 1970s.
As far as cell phones themselves are concerned, if you put one up to your head
you are damaging your brain in a number of different ways. First, think of a
microwave oven. A cell phone, like a microwave oven and unlike a hot shower,
heats you from the inside out, not from the outside in. And there are no
sensory nerve endings in the brain to warn you of a rise in temperature
because we did not evolve with microwave radiation, and this never happens in
nature. Worse, the structure of the head and brain is so complex and non-uniform
that "hot spots" are produced, where heating can be tens or
hundreds of times what it is nearby. Hot spots can occur both close to the
surface of the skull and deep within the brain, and also on a molecular level.
Cell phones are regulated by the Federal Communications Commission, and you can
find, in the packaging of most new phones, a number called the Specific
Absorption Rate, or SAR, which is supposed to indicate
the rate at which energy is absorbed by the brain from that particular model.
One problem, however, is the arbitrary assumption, upon which the FCC's
regulations are based, that the brain can safely dissipate added heat at a rate
of up to 1 degree C per hour. Compounding this is the scandalous procedure used
to demonstrate compliance with these limits and give each cell phone its SAR
rating. The standard way to measure SAR is on a "phantom" consisting,
incredibly, of a homogenous fluid encased in Plexiglas in the shape of a head.
Presto, no hot spots! But in reality, people who use cell phones for hours per
day are chronically heating places in their brain. The FCC's safety standard, by
the way, was developed by electrical engineers, not doctors.

The Blood-Brain
Barrier
The second effect that I want to
focus on, which has been proven in the laboratory, should by itself have been
enough to shut down this industry and should be enough to scare away anyone from
ever using a cell phone again. I call it the “smoking gun” of cell phone
experiments. Like most biological effects of microwave radiation, this has
nothing to do with heating.
The brain is protected by tight
junctions between adjacent cells of capillary walls, the so-called blood-brain
barrier, which, like a border patrol, lets nutrients pass through from the blood
to the brain, but keeps toxic substances out. Since 1988, researchers in the
laboratory of a Swedish neurosurgeon, Leif Salford, have been
running variations on this simple experiment: they expose young laboratory rats
to either a cell phone or other source of microwave radiation, and later they
sacrifice the animals and look for albumin in their brain
tissue. Albumin is a protein that is a normal component of blood but that
does not normally cross the blood-brain barrier. The presence of albumin
in brain tissue is always a sign that blood vessels have been damaged and that
the brain has lost some of its protection.
Here is what these researchers have
found, consistently for 18 years: Microwave radiation, at doses equal
to a cell phone’s emissions, causes albumin to be found in brain tissue. A
one-time exposure to an ordinary cell phone for just two minutes causes albumin
to leak into the brain. In one set of experiments, reducing the exposure level
by a factor of 1,000 actually increased the damage to the blood-brain barrier,
showing that this is not a dose-response effect and that reducing the power
will not make wireless technology safer. And finally, in research published
in June 2003, a single two-hour exposure to a cell phone, just once
during its lifetime, permanently damaged the blood-brain barrier and,
on autopsy 50 days later, was found to have damaged or destroyed up to 2 percent
of an animal’s brain cells, including cells in areas of the brain concerned with
learning, memory and movement.1 Reducing the exposure level by a factor of 10 or
100, thereby duplicating the effect of wearing a headset, moving a cell phone
further from your body, or standing next to somebody else’s phone, did not
appreciably change the results! Even at the lowest exposure, half the animals
had a moderate to high number of damaged neurons.
The implications for us? Two
minutes on a cell phone disrupts the blood-brain barrier, two
hours on a cell phone causes permanent brain damage, and
secondhand radiation may be almost as bad. The blood-brain barrier is the same
in a rat and a human being.
These results caused enough of a
commotion in Europe that in November 2003 a conference was held, sponsored by
the European Union, titled “The Blood-Brain Barrier — Can It Be Influenced by RF
[radio frequency]-Field Interactions?” as if to reassure the public: “See, we
are doing something about this.” But, predictably, nothing was done about it, as
nothing has been done about it for 30 years.
America’s Allan Frey,
during the 1970s, was the first of many to demonstrate that low-level microwave
radiation damages the blood-brain barrier.2 Similar mechanisms protect the eye
(the blood-vitreous barrier) and the fetus (the placental barrier), and the work
of Frey and others indicates that microwave radiation damages those barriers
also.3 The implication: No pregnant woman should ever be using a cell phone.
Dr. Salford is quite outspoken about
his work. He has called the use of handheld cell phones “the largest
human biological experiment ever.” And he has publicly warned that a
whole generation of cell-phone-using teenagers may suffer from mental
deficits or Alzheimer’s disease by the time they
reach middle age.

Radio-Wave Sickness
Unfortunately, cell phone users are
not the only ones being injured, nor should we be worried only about the brain.
The following brief summary is distilled from a vast scientific literature on
the effects of radio waves (a larger spectrum which includes microwaves),
together with the experiences of scientists and doctors all over the world with
whom I am in contact.
Organs that have been shown to be
especially susceptible to radio waves include the lungs, nervous system, heart,
eyes, testes and thyroid gland. Diseases that have increased remarkably in the
last couple of decades, and that there is good reason to connect with the
massive increase in radiation in our environment, include asthma, sleep
disorders, anxiety disorders, attention deficit disorder, autism, multiple
sclerosis, ALS, Alzheimer’s disease, epilepsy, fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue
syndrome, cataracts, hypothyroidism, diabetes, malignant melanoma, testicular
cancer, and heart attacks and strokes in young people.
Radiation from microwave towers has
also been associated with forest die-off, reproductive failure and population
decline in many species of birds, and ill health and birth deformities in farm
animals. The literature showing biological effects of microwave radiation is
truly enormous, running to tens of thousands of documents, and I am amazed that
industry spokespersons are getting away with saying that wireless technology has
been proved safe or — just as ridiculous — that there is no evidence of harm.
I have omitted one disease from the
above list: the illness that Caller B has, and that I have. A short history is
in order here.
In the 1950s and 1960s workers who
built, tested and repaired radar equipment came down with this disease in large
numbers. So did operators of industrial microwave heaters and sealers. The
Soviets named it, appropriately, radio wave sickness, and
studied it extensively. In the West its existence was denied totally, but
workers came down with it anyway. Witness congressional hearings held in
1981, chaired by then Representative Al Gore,
on the health effects of radio-frequency heaters and sealers, another episode
in “See, we are doing something about this,” while nothing is done.
Today, with the mass proliferation
of radio towers and personal transmitters, the disease has spread like a plague
into the general population. Estimates of its prevalence range up to one-third
of the population, but it is rarely recognized for what it is until it has so
disabled a person that he or she can no longer participate in society. You may
recognize some of its common symptoms: insomnia,
dizziness, nausea, headaches, fatigue, memory
loss, inability to concentrate, depression, chest discomfort, ringing in the
ears. Patients may also develop medical problems such as chronic
respiratory infections, heart arrhythmias,
sudden fluctuations in blood pressure, uncontrolled
blood sugar, dehydration, and even seizures
and internal bleeding.
What makes this disease so difficult
to accept, and even more difficult to cope with, is that no treatment is
likely to succeed unless one can also avoid exposure to its cause — and
its cause is now everywhere. A 1998 survey by the California Department of
Health Services indicated that at that time 120,000 Californians — and by
implication 1 million Americans — were unable to work due to electromagnetic
pollution.(4) The ranks of these so-called electrically sensitive are swelling
in almost every country in the world, marginalized, stigmatized and ignored.
With the level of radiation everywhere today, they almost never recover and
sometimes take their own lives.
“They are acting as a warning for
all of us,” says Dr. Olle Johansson of people with this
illness. “It could be a major mistake to subject the entire world’s population
to whole-body irradiation, 24 hours a day.” A neuroscientist at the famous
Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, Dr. Johansson heads a
research team that is documenting a significant and permanent worsening of the
public health that began precisely when the second-generation, 1800 MHz
cell phones were introduced into Sweden in late l997.(5,6)
After a decade-long decline, the number of Swedish workers on sick leave
began to rise in late 1997 and more than doubled during the next five years.
During the same period of time, sales of antidepressant drugs also doubled. The
number of traffic accidents, after declining for years, began to climb again in
1997. The number of deaths from Alzheimer’s disease, after declining for
several years, rose sharply in 1999 and had nearly doubled by 2001. This
two-year delay is understandable when one considers that Alzheimer’s disease
requires some time to develop.

Uncontrolled Proliferation
If cell phones and cell towers are
really deadly, have the radio and TV towers that we have been living with for a
century been safe? In 2002 Örjan Hallberg and Olle Johansson coauthored a paper
titled “Cancer Trends During the 20th Century,” which examined one aspect of
that question.7 They found, in the United States, Sweden and dozens of other
countries, that mortality rates for skin melanoma and for bladder, prostate,
colon, breast and lung cancers closely paralleled the degree of public exposure
to radio waves during the past hundred years. When radio broadcasting increased
in a given location, so did those forms of cancer; when it decreased, so did
those forms of cancer. And, a sensational finding: country by country — and
county by county in Sweden — they found, statistically, that exposure to radio
waves appears to be as big a factor in causing lung cancer as cigarette smoking!
Which brings me to address a
widespread misconception. The biggest difference between the cell towers of
today and the radio towers of the past is not their safety, but their numbers.
The number of ordinary radio stations in the United States today is still less
than 14,000. But cell towers and Wi-Fi towers number in the hundreds of
thousands, and cell phones, wireless computers, cordless telephones and two-way
radios number in the hundreds of millions. Radar facilities and emergency
communication networks are also proliferating out of control. Since 1978, when
the Environmental Protection Agency last surveyed the radio frequency
environment in the United States, the average urban dweller’s exposure to radio
waves has increased 1,000-fold, most of this increase occurring in just the last
nine years.8 In the same period of time, radio pollution has spread from the
cities to rest like a ubiquitous fog over the entire planet.
The vast human consequences of all
this are being ignored. Since the late 1990s a whole new class of environmental
refugees has been created right here in the United States. We have more and more
people, sick, dying, seeking relief from our suffering, leaving our homes and
our livelihoods, living in cars, trailers and tents in remote places. Unlike
victims of hurricanes and earthquakes, we are not the subject of any relief
efforts. No one is donating money to help us, to buy us a protected refuge; no
one is volunteering to forego their cell phones, their wireless computers and
their cordless phones so that we can once more be their neighbors and live among
them.
The worried and the sick have not
yet opened their hearts to each other, but they are asking questions. To answer
caller A: No shield or headset will protect you from your cell or portable
phone. There is no safe distance from a cell tower. If your cell phone or your
wireless computer works where you live, you are being irradiated 24 hours a day.
To caller B: To effectively shield a
house is difficult and rarely successful. There are only a few doctors in the
United States attempting to treat radio wave sickness, and their success rate is
poor — because there are few places left on Earth where one can go to escape
this radiation and recover.
Yes, radiation comes down from
satellites, too; they are part of the problem, not the solution. There is simply
no way to make wireless technology safe.
Our society has become both socially
and economically dependent, in just one short decade, upon a technology
that is doing tremendous damage to the fabric of our world. The more
entrenched we let ourselves become in it, the more difficult it will become to
change our course. The time to extricate ourselves, both individually and
collectively — difficult though it is already is — is now.

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