Wireless Pollution “Out Of Control” As Corporate Race For 5G “Microwave Spectra” Gears Up
Global Research, October 27, 2016
With the UK’s Digital Economy Bill
set to be finalised today, new 5G microwave spectra are about to be released
across the planet without adequate safety testing, writes Lynne Wycherley.
Global neglect
of the Precautionary
Principle is opening the way to corporate profit but placing humans and
ecosystems at risk, and delaying a paradigm shift towards safer connectivity.
In Drowning in a Sea of Microwaves, the late
geneticist Dr Mae-Wan Ho – a visionary
voice who opposed GMOs – identified pollution from wireless technologies as a
pressing issue of our times.
Noting evidence for “DNA damage … cancers, microwave sickness, [and],
impairment of fertility”, she concluded:
“Evidence is emerging that the health hazards associated with wireless microwaves are at least comparable to, if not worse than, those associated with cigarette smoking.”
Since the advent of radar, followed
by mobile phones and dense WiFi networks, such anthropogenic radiation has
sky-rocketed. Although it is non-ionising, and does not destabilise molecules
directly, evidence of other harm has been growing since 1950s studies on radar
workers.
According to the updated Bio-initiative Report (2012+) by 29 precautionary
scientists, effects on biology feature in several thousand, peer-reviewed
papers. Yet troubling new findings rarely filter into the media. Or global
Green discourse.
Though many studies have reported ‘no significant effect’, research by
University of Washington biology professor Henry Lai, and others, reveals that wireless-industry funding
is far more likely to yield such findings.
“Toujours ils créent doubte” (‘they are forever creating doubt’), explains
former Luxembourg Green MP Jean Huss, whose research on the wireless industry
inspired the Council of Europe to call for many precautions (2011),
including protection of warning scientists, and wired internet in schools.
But wireless-product marketing has a loud voice. Few of us realise that genetic effects and free radical damage – both disease risks over
time – are the most common, cautionary findings. Device-crowded spaces, such as
our peak commuter trains or all-wireless classrooms, may be creating a subtly
toxic environment.
Wide-ranging, oxidative harm to animals has been found from
WiFi sources. And linked pre-diabetic and pre-cancerous changes.
Ground-breaking work by biochemistry professor Martin
Pall, Washington State University – winner of eight international
awards – reveals a viable mechanism for such harm. But as with other
‘inconvenient truths’, it is going unheard.
Bee-whispers: the sensitivity of life on
Earth
Life’s exquisite electro-physiology is still being discovered. Researchers at
Bristol University reported in May that bees’ hairs are highly
sensitive to flowers’ delicate EMFs. In controlled trials in Switzerland, bees reacted to mobile-phone signals
with high-pitched ‘piping’: a cue to desert a hive.
Other studies show that mitochondria, the tiny power houses in our cells,
are at risk from our new EMFs. And that even DNA, in its delicate antenna-like structure, may
be frequency-sensitive.
The long-term, ecological implications of our new, anthropogenic radiation are
not known. But peer-reviewed studies revealing harm to birds, tadpoles, trees, other plants, insects, rodents and livestock,
offer clues.
Biology professor Lukas Margaritis, at Athens University, for example,
uncovered harm to fruit flies from just a few
minutes’ exposure to our everyday wireless devices, including cordless phones,
Bluetooth, and even digital baby monitors. Reviewing research, India’s Ministry of Environment and
Forests warned that sensitive habitats may need some protection.
The UK’s Digital Economy Bill, about
to receive its final seal, has sensible proposals for increasing country-wide
access to fibre broadband: a technology that does not, in itself, stoke
microwave pollution, though wireless add-ons do so. But probe beyond the bill
to Ofcom’s 5G consultations, and new EMF exposures emerge: part of global
trend.
The worldwide rush towards 5G or ‘fifth generation’ wireless rollouts is set to
raise our pulsing pollution to new levels. Untested, high microwave frequencies
are being lined up to increase bandwidth, automation, and usage – at great
profit to the industry.
Source: laroccasolutions.com
The Wifi Alliance, Coming Soon to Your Neighborhood: 5G Wireless
These
millimetre and centimetre waves, though too weak to heat us, may pose possible
risks to our skin, and deeper surface tissue, including that of plants.
High-density transmitters are envisaged. A troubling prospect for the many
hundreds of patients seen by professor Dominique Belpomme‘s clinic
in Paris: patients whose disabling symptoms from wireless technologies are
supported by new brain scans and blood tests.
A delegation of scientists have petitioned for such electrosensitivity to be
recognised as an environmentally-induced illness,
with an International Disease Code (2015).
Rip-tides: when profits outpace caution
Pushing for fast rollouts, the wireless industry is also in conflict with the Internatonal
EMF Scientists’ Appeal to the United Nations. Signed by 223
scientists from 41 nations, it calls for remedial action – such as new safety
limits, wave-free zones, and education of doctors – to protect our DNA,
fertility, and nervous systems, plus children and pregnant women, from growing
wireless exposure. And from rising, mains-electricity fields.
Signs that such caution may be needed are growing. The pulsed, polarized, microwaves used by wireless
technologies pose more biological risks than
smooth or natural waves. Weak millimetre waves have a known potential to
increase antibiotic resistance: what
ecological effects might they risk, perhaps, if used universally?
Studies also reveal a risk to skin pain receptors. Published
associations between radio–masts and skin cancers, though at lower
frequencies, plus mobile-phone masts and EMF-sensitive cancers
(Adilza Dode, Minas Gerais University 2013), raise further questions.
In his summer press conference, Tom Wheeler – former head of the CTIA, the vast
telecoms lobby- group, and controversial chair of the Federal
Communications Commission – proposed unbridled “massive deployment”
of commercial 5G transmitters, taking off in 2020.
Anticipating “tens of billions of dollars” of economic growth, with US telecoms
“first out of the gate”, he warned “Stay out of the way of technological
development! Turning innovation loose is far preferable to expecting …
regulators to define the future”.
With no mention of health-testing, carbon costs, or corporate responsibility,
the FCC voted unaminously to go
ahead by releasing swathes of untested high frequencies for private sector
exploitation – so setting a trend. To questionable ends: added to other issues,
how will our communities be affected by addiction to 5G multi-stream videos?
How will it impact our spiritual communion with Nature?
Many American health activists, and cautioning scientists, are aghast. Dr Joel
Moskowitz, director of community health studies at the University of
California, warns “precaution is warranted before 5G is unleashed on the
world”.
Former government physicist Dr Ron Powell points out
the plans “would irradiate everyone, including the most vulnerable to harm from
radiofrequency radiation: pregnant women, unborn children, young children…the
elderly, the disabled, and the chronically ill… It would set a goal of
irradiating all environments”.
Fracking the air? Fault-lines in safety
This drive to mine the electromagnetic spectrum come-what-may has echoes of
fracking, and other headlong trends. In Captured Agency, the
Harvard ethics report on the FCC, and the wider wireless industry, Norm Alster exposes ruthless “hardball
tactics”, supported by “armies of lawyers”, at expense to our health.
Microwaves, Science and Lies (2014), filmed by
Jean Hêches across Europe, exposes similar patterns that are driving our pulsed
radiation to risky levels. Western “safety limits”, based only on high levels
that heat tissue, far exceed those of Russia,
China, and some other nations.
Professor Yuri Grigoriev, long-serving chair of Russia’s
non-ionising radiation protection body (RNCNIRP), warned the UK’s Radiation
Research Trust “ionising radiation is monitored…[but] levels of non-ionising
radiation are constantly increasing and ubiquitous: it is out of control …
Urgent action is needed”.
Stealthy pollution-raisers, such as the 5G Internet of Things – with 30 billion tiny
transmitters forecast for 2020 – and also, sadly, wireless smart-meters [1, 2*], vetoed by the American Academy of Environmental
Medicine, may run counter to a cherished Green goal: that of
nurturing healthy environments.
Can we manage our energy, perhaps, in more bio-sensitive ways? Court claims for
wireless-meter health harm, supported by medical testimonies – including by
neurology professor Andrew Marino (Louisiana) – are sweeping America.
Professor Pall explains such meters’ “high intensity” microwave pulses may be
more toxic than we realise: “We know from the nanosecond studies these can be
very damaging”.
Data obtained by a judge revealed all-hour, house-piercing pulses every few
seconds. New data-over-wiring
innovations (if free of “dirty electricity”) may offer inspiring, alternative
ways forward.
Chrysalis: a paradigm in waiting
To create – in Wheeler’s phrase – a global ‘5G ecosystem’ of wireless
super-saturated environments, at insidious risk, over time, to living
ecosystems, not least our own bodies, is dysfunctional. And spiritually
disturbing. It suggests a mindset deeply at odds with the orchid-like beauty of
the Earth.
But cleaner innovations, such as LiFi,
‘eco-dect-plus’ phones, and the latest fibre-optics, suggest a wiser course. A
new paradigm – safer connectivity, plus more balanced use – is emerging. And
reminds of other step-changes in awareness. From pesticides to organic, from
smoke-filled to smoke-free.
We can accede, if we wish, to our rising, planetary smog. To safety limits as
high as the moon, in many scientists’ eyes. And to wireless rollouts’ growing
carbon costs. Or taking pause, we may begin to call the industry to account –
plus governments lulled by it.
We may air helpful new findings, such as risks from tablet-like exposures (Alexander Lerchl, Jacob
Bremens University, 2015). And stark risks from passive exposure, bared by Leif Salford, medical professor at Lund
University. We may defend DNA, if we wish, from ionizing and published non-ionizing risks,
just as we defend our planet.
And alongside French Green Party MPs Laurence Abeille and Michèle Rivasi, plus the
interntional Baubiologie movement, we can explore
electromagnetic hygiene. Uplifting possibilities for a safer, cleaner world.
Lynne
Wycherley is a nature poet with
six published collections. Working in parallel with pioneering doctors, she has
been investigating non-ionising radiation for 5 years.
Notes
● Dr Mae-Wan Ho It seems fitting to begin with her voice, so well
known in Green / holistic circles (inc. Ecologist), following the sad news of
her death earlier this year.
● industry funding / manufacturing doubt ‘product defence’ strategies
to delay reform, as in Dr D Michaels’ ‘Doubt is their Product’, OUP, 2008
● Council of Europe (all 41 member states) Resolution 1815
● WiFi was also found to reduce growth/thyroid hormones in animals,
and trigger aggression/a racing heartbeat, and cordless phones to retard root-growth, harm bee-hives, alter gene
expression, and disturb the human heartbeat in blind tests (their stands
produce harsh, all-hour microwave readings).
● Mitochondria emerging as unusually vulnerable to microwaves (many
papers), including low-intensity (damaged mitochondria are a risk factor for
many chronic health conditions)
● Centimeter/millimetre waves penetrate less far, as you know, but
with more energy. The pulse will increase bio-risks (re: 25 years’ data on
pulsed v. pure sine waves). 5G will be additional to 2G,3G, 4G.
● Antibiotic resistance And other changes, found by other
researchers, in e.g. yeast / E Coli (Belyaev)
● EMF-sensitive cancers e.g. prostrate, breast, liver, lungs, skin…
(Adilza Dode, now professor, Minas Gerais University, reviewing research prior
to her peer-reviewed research on mobile-phone masts)
● the CTIA International umbrella group now known only by its
acronym; originally ‘Cellular Telephone Industries Association’ (Figures vary,
but telecoms revenue is catching up with fossil fuels’, it seems). Wheeler:
“Everything that can connected will be connected” – blanket electro-smog.
● Smart meters (overlap with 5G). I continue to realise, sadly,
under-acknowledged toxic risks need to be aired for ethical reasons. Professor
Martin Pall: “‘Smart meters’ should be abolished because they use short
high-intensity pulses [3, 4 ]1 of microwave radiation. We
know from the nanosecond studies these can be very damaging and act via VGCC
activation [his research] with activation continuing long after the pulse has
ceased”. Dr Andrew Goldsworthy, EMF biologist (to Parliament): “To carry out
compulsory mass exposure to pulsed microwave radiation [smart meters] without
the fully informed consent of the people affected is in contravention of the
Nuremberg code.”
This testimony, from journalist Amy Worthington (here) typifies so many
known to me (even UK): “Cindy deBac (Arizona, new meter)…’ I’ve never been so
sick in my life’, she says. ‘Nausea, a crushing migraine headache, and painful
heart palpitations laid me low right away’. Healthy and exuberant before the
installation, deBac…struggled with rashes and a chronically racing heart. For
respite she spent nights away in her car”. Australian GP Federica Lamech’s
peer-reviewed paper relates 92 such cases, herself included (sensitivity seems
to vary, re: allergies).
● dirty electricity kilohertz transients, creating complex EMFs with
emerging bio-risks
● Eco-dect-plus (cordless phones): emit microwaves at full power only
during calls, saving energy
● Professor Leif Salford (neurosurgery).Work on blood-brain barrier
1988-2010. Discovered passive exposure to other people’s mobile phones might
risk serious, delayed damage. “Those who might normally have got Alzheimer’s
dementia in old age could get it much earlier” Industry moves to fund diluting
research were exposed in, e.g., Microwaves, Science & Lies.
The original source of this article is The Ecologist
Copyright © Lynne Wycherley, The Ecologist, 2016
Comment on Global Research Articles on our
Facebook page
Become a Member of Global Research
No comments:
Post a Comment