THE MOST DANGEROUS TECHNOLOGY EVER INVENTED Part Three Cell Phones Are Not Here to Stay On
the day digital cell phone service began in New York City, I was away
from home at a three-day law conference. The day I returned home I
became dizzy. Within a few days I was also nauseous and I had
uncontrollable tremors. I had the first asthma attack of my life. My
eyeballs felt like they were bulging out, my lips felt dry, fat and
puffy, I felt pressure in my chest, and the bottoms of my feet hurt. I
became so weak I couldn’t lift a book. My skin became so sensitive I
couldn’t bear to be touched and I could hardly stand to wear my clothes.
My head was roaring like a freight train. After the fourth day I could
not sleep or eat. During the sixth night my larynx went into spasm three
times. Each time that happened I couldn’t draw a breath in or out and I
thought I was going to die. I left home the next morning, never to
return.
This did not happen
only to me, or only to a few people. Beginning November 14, 1996, the
day Omnipoint Communications turned on all those cell towers, hundreds
of thousands of New Yorkers became suddenly ill. Many thought they were
having a heart attack, a stroke or a nervous breakdown. The Health
Department called it an influenza epidemic, and it lasted until the
following May. They did not stop to wonder why it hit only New York and
not any nearby cities at that time. Weekly mortality statistics from the
Centers for Disease Control revealed a 17 percent rise in mortality in
the city beginning the week of November 17, lasting 11 weeks, that
killed 2,300 people. The
epidemic did not hit Boston until the following year, when Sprint began
service there on November 12, 1997. Mortality spiked by 15.5% for 16
weeks. It hit San Diego when Pacific Bell began service there on
November 1, 1996, lasted for 17 weeks, and raised mortality by 14.5%. It
did not hit nearby Los Angeles until the following summer, when Pacific
Bell began service there on July 3, 1997, and mortality rose by 30% for
the next 15 weeks. It hit Philadelphia in the spring, when Sprint began
service there on April 3, 1997, and Detroit in the fall, when Sprint
began service there on October 15, 1997. It hit Jacksonville, Florida
the previous fall, when Powertel began service there on October 15,
1996. It hit Chicago, Milwaukee, Austin, San Antonio, Fort Worth,
Houston, Atlanta, Fresno, Spokane, Portland, Sacramento, Charlotte, and
Tulsa, beginning in each city on the day digital cell phone service
became available in that city.
I
learned, in 1996, that power levels do not matter. After microwave
radiation had nearly killed me in Brooklyn after only six days of
exposure, I was sure the radiation levels must be sky high, and I hired a
professional engineer, Stuart Maurer, to go to my house with his
spectrum analyzer to measure the radiation. I came down for the day from
my motel room in upstate New York to watch him. To my astonishment, the
highest level he measured, anywhere in my house, was 0.0001 microwatts
per square centimeter. Clearly I still had a lot to learn about
microwave radiation, and many things I thought I knew were wrong.
The
same thing is happening now with 5G, only this time instead of blaming
an influenza virus, society is blaming a coronavirus. And this time, it
is happening everywhere at once instead of one city at a time. On
October 13, 2020, Verizon issued a press release announcing the
availability of its 5G network throughout the United States, and on the
same day Apple issued a press release announcing the launch of its 5G
phone, the iPhone 12. The iPhone 12 and 12 Pro were available in stores
October 23, and the iPhone Mini and Max were available in early
November. And in every state except two, mortality began to suddenly
rise the week of October 24 or soon after, and not later than the week
of November 21. The two exceptions were Wisconsin, where the mortality
spike began the week of October 17, and Hawaii, which did not have a
significant rise in deaths last winter. Nationally, mortality rose an
average of 25% for 20 weeks, and 300,000 people died.
It
is happening everywhere at once also to birds, insects, wildlife, and
plant life. A correspondent in Knoxville, Tennessee wrote to me last
week:
“These past couple of
months I've noticed 5 bumblebees now on our flowers that have appeared
paralyzed to me. We unfortunately have Verizon's 5G Ultra Wideband very
close to our home, which is only available outside, and I think they are
being impacted by that. We brought 4 of them into our house, each at
different times, and 3 of the 4 revived within about 5 minutes, so I
then released them back outside. The 4th one took a little over an hour
to revive before it was able to fly off.”
Another observer, in East Dover, Vermont, wrote, a couple of days ago:
“We
grow 3 acres of blackcurrants, 200 blueberry bushes (11 varieties) and a
smattering of other novelty berry plants. Our small farm is certified
organic with 8 open acres certified (only 3 planted) and the remainder
of the 31 acres is wooded. The blackcurrants are early bloomers and our 4
varieties all bloom within a few days of each other. There are so many
different pollinating insects that come to the fields including a
certain type of bumblebee with a red middle. It is wondrous to see and
hear all the different shaped insects noisily working away.
“This
spring, as I walked down the rows and admired all the blossoms in the
front field, I suddenly stopped because it was almost completely quiet.
There were two bumblebees among the 2,225 blackcurrant bushes and their
buzzing was so noticeable because everything was so silent. When I
mentioned this to a fifth generation apple farmer, he said that not only
were there no pollinators this year, the timing of everything was off.
For example, his asparagus was two weeks early (ours was, too). Compared
with 2020, our blackcurrant blooming times were 2 weeks early this
year. It was a cold spring but I would think that would delay blooming.
So that is another reason the insects weren’t around yet. Two weeks is a
huge amount of time! The blueberries were also generally early and the
usual succession of blooms through the varieties was altered.
“The
next day, I raced over to Forever Wild, a honeybee farmer, and secured a
pallet of four hives. It was too cold for them to fly so they stayed in
their hives in the middle of a gorgeous bloom of blackcurrants.
Apparently, bumblebees will fly when it is in low 50s but honeybees need
it to be at least 59 degrees. The honeybee farmer said they pollinate
one quarter of the whole state (Vermont) and that all the guys up north
(mostly apples) were talking about the same thing -- no pollinators and
specifically no bumblebees.
“Another
curiosity this year was the fact that we had very few Japanese beetles.
This could be because it was an extremely wet year but it is
interesting to note that the beetles and bumblebees both winter
underground. Also, when I visited my parents in September in Concord,
MA, my mother pointed out how all the oaks had dark spots on them. All
our tree leaves have the same spots here in southern Vermont and
especially on the beech and quaking aspens. I planted our first berry
plants in 2014 so I don’t have a vast wealth of personal experience
owning and running a farm but I hope to continue my observations and
plan on recreating that experiment with aluminum screening that Katie
Haggerty did except with blackcurrants.”
A naturalist in Greece, Diana Kordas, wrote in October from the island of Samos in the eastern Mediterranean:
“I
live in the country a few kilometers from the capital town of Samos,
Vathi, which sits at the end of a large bay, and opposite the tourist
village of Kokkari. In July of this summer, 2021, a pilot 5G cell tower
was turned on above Kokkari. This cell tower is across the bay from us,
one of its two panels points directly at us, and it is at the same
height above sea level as our property. It is approximately 6 kilometers
away.
“Where we live we
are surrounded by cell towers and boosters (14 total) operating at 2G,
3G, and 4G frequencies. There has been a gradual diminution of insect
and bird life in the last few years, especially since 2014, when 4G came
here. Many species are affected; we lost the last of the fireflies (we
used to have many) two summers ago. It has been years since we had a bug
splattered on the windshield of the car as we drove along. But since
that 5G cell tower across the bay went live, we have lost nearly all the
pollinators and a great deal more besides.
“In
the early part of the summer we had a great many pollinators:
bumblebees, honeybees, many sorts of wild bees, carpenter bees, wasps of
all kinds, and hoverflies. We tend to notice them as we grow all our
own fruit and vegetables. Our early summer crops were pollinated without
any problem, but melons, tomatoes and courgettes (zucchini) which we
planted in early July have produced very little fruit as they did not
get many pollinators though there were many blossoms. Not a single
courgette has been pollinated and the tomatoes produced only 3 fruits;
the melons (not as many as we would have expected) seem to have been
pollinated by tiny night-flying moths.
“We
own three and a half acres of land, which a big property for the
island. It has many large trees (pines, cypresses, carobs, wild
pistachio, olives, almonds and a grove of extremely rare gum mastic
trees) and some fruit trees (apricots, plums and pears) as well as
fields of grasses and wild plants. I should note here that we do not use
pesticides of any sort, and we do not have any adjoining neighbours who
use any pesticides; also, most of the land surrounding us is wild both
up the mountain and down to the sea. Our own land has never had any
pesticides and I would say the same is most likely true for most of the
land around us. This is NOT a pesticide problem.
“We
also keep our land as wild as possible, and except for the plots we
cultivate the wild plants are allowed to grow freely: grasses, flowers
(many orchids), and a lot of wild fennel. There are many bushes and
hedges (I don’t know the English names for these plants). Many of the
trees are over 100 years old, and some of the cypresses are over 300
years old.
“When planting
we tend to intercrop and also plant flowering basils and zinnias, which
attract pollinators, among the other plants. We also put out saucers of
water for them to drink from -- bees get thirsty. We usually get lots of
bees, butterflies, hoverflies, wasps, etc., of many species, and we had
many pollinators until recently. The decline began in July when the
tower went live.
“The bees
and other pollinators, and indeed most of the insects, are now almost
all gone. We know this for several reasons: one is what we see (or don’t
see) on the vegetable beds, one is what we are seeing generally (or not
seeing, which is hardly anything) and the most important is what we are
not seeing on the carob trees. Every year at this time, the male carobs
flower abundantly and draw in hundreds of pollinators: bees of all
sorts, wasps, hornets and hoverflies. You can’t go anywhere near these
trees without being aware of a loud buzzing, and the insects are busy on
them all day. These trees bloom for about a month, they are in full
flower, and to date there has been virtually nothing on them: one
bumblebee, one honeybee, a few hornets, a few flies of different
species, a couple of tiny wild bees. We check many times a day, every
day.
“This is NOT due to
the weather, either. Since the carob trees went into flower we have had a
variety of weather patterns, from strong northerly winds to fairly
strong southerlies, interspersed with a good many still days. It has
rained once. The temperatures are about average for the time of year.
Wind or no wind, warm or cool, there are virtually no pollinators on the
carobs.
“One day we also
checked for bees on every male carob we could find between here and
Kokkari, and we couldn’t find any insects on any other flowering
carob—or any insects at all, except a few flies.
“The
flowering carobs are a good indicator of pollinators because they
attract so many. Certain plants are good for this, like traveller’s
joy/cat’s claw, a thorny climbing vine which has very sweet-smelling
flowers and blooms in this season (we haven’t seen any pollinators on
them either) and onion flowers, which will attract every type of wasp
and hornet there is (but not bees). We do not have onion flowers at this
time, but on past occasions when we have had, we got large numbers of
wasps and hornets, including many species we did not recognize.
“On
our land, as I write this, we have lost not only bees but all sorts of
other insects: beetles of all sorts including cockchafers and ladybirds,
web-spinning spiders, mantises, moths and butterflies (we always get
great clouds of graylings on the pines in July-August, but hardly any
this year), dragonflies of all sorts, grasshoppers and crickets. October
is the season for dragonflies, and we presently have the warm, still
weather when they arrive in the thousands. This year we have maybe
1/100th of the usual number. We have a few hornets (not nearly as many
as usual), horseflies (fewer than usual) and flies (which seem of all
the insects to be the least affected).
“We
still have mosquitoes, but I believe the reason for this is that they
breed in our cistern, which has stone walls two feet thick and a cement
roof -- it is protected from electromagnetic fields. The mosquitoes get
in through the overflow pipe and tiny gaps in the stones that cover the
drain holes. Our neighbour, who has an open-topped cistern, had
thousands of mosquito larvae in the water (and a big mosquito problem)
earlier in the summer, now has no mosquitoes. I checked, and there are
no larvae in the water of his cistern any more.
“I
can only think that the 5G cell tower has caused these things to
happen, because nothing else accounts for the sudden, severe drop in the
number of insects here. The tower went live in July and the losses we
are seeing have happened since July. I also think that we are seeing a
drop in the number of small rodents: rats, mice and voles. We are not
losing fruit and vegetables to mice or rats, which we always do. Also,
on a wild bit of land like this, one tends to find traces of them, or to
catch tails whisking away in the beam of a torch at night, or to hear
them (tree rats can be quite noisy), and it seems they too are gone or
going. My neighbour keeps finding dead rats, yet he never poisons them
so they didn’t die from that.
“We
are also seeing changes in animal behaviour. We feed a number of golden
jackals which are having problems hunting due to a lack of wildlife in
the area. The bay of Samos is/we are already surrounded by many cell
towers and boosters in addition to the new 5G cell tower and wildlife
including insects and birds has been declining for years. However, over
the past few weeks the number of jackals coming to us has tripled and
they are exhibiting symptoms of extreme anxiety, following us around in
the evenings and now starting to appear in the daytime as well (they are
primarily nocturnal). These are wild animals that we do not treat as
pets, but some of them are becoming positively clingy, approaching to
within several feet and sitting for periods of time just a few feet
away. Some of them, which were not aggressive before, have started to
become very aggressive with other jackals and fights are always breaking
out.
“The area is also
experiencing problems with wild boar, which are also looking for food.
We have had several too-close encounters with these large and dangerous
animals (which are also appearing at times when they shouldn’t, before
sunset) and digging up large portions of our land at night. I was
charged by one and so was my husband. Many people are seeing them in
daytime, and they have dug up gardens, groves and the sides of the road.
This has never happened before.
“Bird
numbers are diminishing. We have still got fairly large numbers of
great tits and sardinian warblers, which tend to stick to the deep cover
of thick hedges and large trees, but we have lost all the chiffchaffs
and chaffinches. We have a few blackbirds but it is a long time since we
have seen a songthrush, or a wren. The robins have not arrived from
further north, though they should have by now. We have a pair of tawny
owls but little owls have disappeared. We get jays and crows, a few
ring-neck doves (diminishing) and wood-pigeons, which have become few in
number lately. Gull numbers (yellow-legged gulls) are falling and the
shags which were always on the beach below our land have disappeared
entirely. We are getting fewer raptors -- we usually have sparrowhawks,
Eleanora’s falcons, goshawks, buzzards and short-toed eagles, but they
are avoiding this area now though we see them elsewhere, as well as
ravens.
“We have seen
virtually no migrating birds in this area this fall: a few flycatchers, a
couple of red-backed shrikes, and a flock of Little Gulls flying out to
sea is all. We heard but didn’t see a flock of bee-eaters, which didn’t
stop here as they usually do.
“In
conclusion, cell towers in general have diminished the number of
insects and pollinators in this area, along with bird numbers and
wildlife generally. The new 5G cell tower has had a devastating effect
in a very short time, but it is impossible to know the full consequences
until next spring at the earliest.”
_____________ Those
of you who remember car windshields splattered with insects, gardens
ablaze with butterflies and abuzz with bees, loud choruses of crickets
on land, and of frogs in ponds, and thick flocks of songbirds singing
their joy at life, will understand what I am about to say. Cell phones
are not here to stay. Whether people will willingly give them up is another question.
If
people will willingly give up cell phones, the sudden and dramatic
improvement in everyone’s health and sense of well-being, and the return
of all our lost and disappearing cousin species who are still trying to
share the Earth with us, will restore hope to the human species and
catalyze other changes that will suddenly become possible, most
importantly the ending of the mining and use of fossil fuels, which are
converting the oxygen in our air to carbon dioxide, acidifying our
oceans, polluting our rivers, lakes, streams and groundwater, and
filling oceans, land, atmosphere, and ourselves with particles of
plastic.
If people do not
willing give up cell phones, then our planet does not have long to live,
and cell phones will die with the Earth. In either case, they are not
here to stay. Please join me in working toward the restoration of our
home. If you have not yet signed it, sign the International Appeal to Stop 5G on Earth and in Space.
If your organization has consultation status at the United Nations and
has the ability to formally submit this Appeal to the U.N., get in touch
with me. If your organization opposes 5G and you have not yet done so,
contact me at info@cellphonetaskforce.org about signing the amicus brief
supporting our case in the Supreme Court. Please download, save, and
distribute Part I, Part II and Part III of this series. If you still own or use a cell phone, please throw it away, now, and if you do not have a landline, get one. REFERENCES Anderson, John. “‘Isle of Wight Disease’ in Bees. I.” Bee World 11(4): 37-42 (1930).
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