June 24 Safe Tech International News and Notes
David Stetzer, New German EHS Paper, Paris Marx-Data Centers, Native American Opinion-Massive Tower in Bears Ears National Monument, Towers, Acetylcholine, Havana
I am going to be off-line for most of the week, traveling without access to hardwired internet.
I know many of us are anxious to hear about the MA Pittsfield Tower proceedings and hope you can follow your other sources, including MA4SafeTech news.
Best, Patricia
FEATURED:
EMF REMEDY KEITH CUTTER: Interview with Dave Stetzer, co-inventor of the Stetzer Micro Surge Meter and the Stetzer Filter where we talk about dirty electricity including, analysis, remediation, common sources in the home, Russian research and experiences in classrooms and nursing homes. How Dirty Electricity Affects Your Home and Health (youtube.com) 55 minutes
FEATURED:
NEW EHS PAPER FROM GERMANY: Why electrohypersensitivity (EHS) is a biologically expected reaction to harmful radiation Peter Hensinger / Bernd I. Budzinski Is electrohypersensitivity (EHS), caused by mobile phone radiation, a fact or all in the imagination? It is comprehensible why the mobile phone industry declares this illness to be imaginary. It would be damaging to their business if their products were associated with the consequences of illness. However, the authorities responsible for health and radiation protection also claim that EHS is a psychological, anxiety-induced reaction. They deny connections with radiation exposure and claim that there is no underlying cause-and-effect mechanism. The available evidence for this correlation and the requirement for causality as a prerequisite for the recognition of a disease are the subject of this article, as are the reasons for discrimination against people with electrohypersensitivity.
Table of Contents
1. Electrohypersensitivity - an accepted effect of radiation until the 1990s
2. Mechanisms of action for electrohypersensitivity have been decoded
3. The claim of causality as a pseudo-scientific distraction
3.1. Violation of the constitution: Unprotected exposure to radiation without applying the precautionary principle
3.2. The limit values are unacceptable
4. The role of the psyche
4.1. Collective risk displacement
4.2. The unauthorized disease - some further arguments in the public discourse
5.1. Electrohypersensitive reactions meet with a lack of understanding ...
5.2. Misconceptions lead to underestimation of the risk
5.3. The thermal dogma is no longer tenable)
Article here: Peter Hensinger / Bernd I. Budzinski: Warum Elektrohypersensibilität (EHS) eine biologisch erwartbare Reaktion auf eine schädliche Strahlung ist - diagnose:funk (diagnose-funk.org) partially translates to English
English version of paper can be downloaded via Environmental Health Trust here: Why electrohypersensitivity (EHS) is a biologically expected reaction to harmful radiation - Environmental Health Trust (ehtrust.org)
NEWS AND NOTES
AIRLINES OT: Exclusive: US prosecutors recommend Justice Dept. criminally charge Boeing (Fraud) Boeing breached a 2021 agreement shielding it from fraud charge, Justice Department found, Relatives of crash victims urge prosecutors to seek $25 billion fine and criminal prosecution
AI: Exclusive: OpenAI Lobbied the E.U. to Water Down AI Regulation OpenAI proposed amendments that were later made to the final text of the E.U. law—which was approved by the European Parliament on June 14, and will now proceed to a final round of negotiations before being finalized as soon as January. Exclusive: OpenAI Lobbied E.U. to Water Down AI Regulation | TIME
AI: This year's Top Ten Emerging Technologies from the World Economic Forum are coming out this week – before they do, here's a recap of last year's top trends: The full list of top ten emerging technologies in the report includes:
Flexible batteries
Generative artificial intelligence
Sustainable aviation fuel
Designer phages
Metaverse for mental health
Wearable plant sensors
Spatial omics
Flexible neural electronics
Sustainable computing
AI-facilitated healthcare
The full World Economic Forum flagship report on the top ten emerging technologies of 2023 can be accessed at http://wef.ch/top10tech23.
HERE ON SUBSTACK
AIRPLANES: GPS Jamming of Commercial Flights Hit a Worrying Milestone This could lead to flight delays if it becomes widespread At issue here is the way that aircrafts use GPS when navigating over the Atlantic Ocean. Given the lack of radar systems over the ocean, aircraft must use GPS to navigate, and issues with GPS, the Resilient Navigation and Timing Foundation explained, requires aircraft to travel with more distance between them.[] Writing at Business Insider, Tom Porter observed that airlines in northern Europe have reported instances of GPS jamming in recent months. (points to Russia) GPS Jamming of Commercial Flights Hit a Worrying Milestone - InsideHook
APPLE HUMOR: How do you milk a sheep? sell them a new phone every year for $1200 (sorry no disrespect intended)
APPLE AUTOMOTIVE: The Next Generation of Apple CarPlay Is Going Wireless Apple appears to be doing away with a wired connection between an iPhone and the dashboard. In addition, Patel wrote, the new version of CarPlay will import at least some realtime data from your vehicle to your phone He described the reimagined CarPlay as more along the lines of “a design toolkit for automakers to use however they want.” The Next Generation of Apple CarPlay Is Going Wireless (msn.com)
AUTOMOTIVE RIGHT TO REPAIR: Tesla on Trial! Federal Judge OKs Repair Monopoly Case A federal judge approved an amended class action antitrust suit filed by Tesla owners, clearing the way for a trial. Also: Appeals Court ruling on DMCA could upset pro-repair exemptions. HERE
BIG TECH POLITICO: 5 questions for Data and Society's Tamara Kneese Tamara Kneese, director of the nonprofit Data & Society Research Institute’s Algorithmic Impact Methods Lab and author of Death Glitch: How Techno-Solutionism Fails Us in This Life and Beyond. She also worked on Intel’s “Green Software” team, studying the culture of the developers working on decarbonization software. What’s one underrated big idea? The Luddites are kind of having a resurgence right now because of work by journalists like Brian Merchant (“Blood In the Machine: The Origins of the Rebellion Against Big Tech”) and my friend Wendy Liu, who made her own “The Luddites Were Right” shirts. Workers are looking at the AI landscape right now and they're very conscious of the fact that management of course is going to use AI as an excuse to lay people off or pay them less, and the question is what workers can do about it. It isn't so much that there's a total refusal to work with technology; there might be ways that technology can in fact be useful to workers, can make their jobs easier and can even enhance their productivity in some ways. But if workers are not reaping the benefits of that increased productivity, and they don't have any say over how the technologies are going to be introduced into their workplace, then that is the problem. What’s a technology you think is overhyped? Climate tech is definitely overhyped. The worst part of the climate tech fervor has to do with speculation in the startup space where people are investing in the fantasy of things like carbon capture, or carbon offsets. The blockchain era was very much built on this idea that we're going to tokenize the rainforest in order to save it. Meanwhile, a lot of those companies were, in fact, just engaged in different forms of colonial extraction and taking advantage of indigenous communities and not consulting them at all in these schemes. What book most shaped your conception of the future? One is Simone Browne’s “Dark Matters.” It’s about the histories of surveillance and blackness, and thinking about the relationship between chattel slavery, the infrastructures required for the internet and the origins of predictive policing, which has a very obvious historical connection to the surveillance of enslaved people. There’s a relationship between the past and present when it comes to systems of oppression, but we can also look to the past to find forms of resistance. There is still a tendency within conversations about AI and the future of AI to to completely forget about these deeper histories. I don't think we can really have conversations about the future of technology without looking to histories of colonialism, racial capitalism and enslavement. [] Another is the novel “Wrong Way” by Joanne McNeil. It's incredibly bleak but it is one of the more realistic stories of a woman working in the tech industry. The woman has the “great honor” of working for a self-driving car company, that surprise, is not really self-driving. The cars are actually driven by humans who are contorted and squished up into the vehicles, in a very obvious Mechanical Turk metaphor. it offers a look at what kind of horrific AI present or future could take shape if we don't have collective action. What surprised you most in the past year? I have been pleasantly surprised by the attention to the environmental impact of AI. [] at least we're talking about the need for a much more comprehensive way of measuring impacts, not just in terms of carbon cost and water costs, but also downstream impacts on communities and how people are affected by data center noise pollution, or having data centers take all of their drinking water. All these issues are related to AI, which as a term is often used to obfuscate the reality of what the technology is. If we could just get rid of the word AI at this point that would be great. 5 questions for Data and Society's Tamara Kneese - POLITICO
BIG TECH/BANKING: Elon Musk hasn’t given up on his dream of making X a bank. - via Politico
BIG TECH CRITICISM/INTERNATIONAL: Paris Marx is joined by ‘German socio-technologist/Luddite tante’ to discuss why it’s hard for Europe to challenge the US and China on tech and why we should change how we think about innovation…”they couldn’t build a school there, but there was not enough water, but everyone wanted to build a tesla factory…self-driving cars are like guns in the US., very emotional..Open Ai is very good at lobbying, being there before the puck Can Europe Chart Its Own Path on Tech? w/ tante - Episodes - Tech Won’t Save Us (techwontsave.us) (overview of German/EU attitudes etc.) 1 hour
BIG TECH: Family whose roof was damaged by space debris files claims against NASA "Whatever NASA does is going to send a strong signal to the space industry."
https://arstechnica.com/space/2024/06/family-whose-roof-was-damaged-by-space-debris-files-claims-against-nasa/
BROADBAND INDUSTRY BENTON: The Close of the ACP (Affordable Connectivity Program) and Coming USF Reform (Universal Service Fund) As we debate USF, we need clarity on what functions we want all Americans to have and what must be done to enable those functionalities for all, everywhere, Enable consumer choice and promote flexibility to drive market responses, Use universal broadband to improve the outcome of government programs and lower government costs, Don’t cherry-pick data; have an honest dialogue about how the data can inform a programmatic course correction, Notes 1. The two most significant readjustments were in the wake of the 1996 Telecommunications Reform Act, in which USF had to adjust to a competitive framework, and in the early 2010’s, in the wake of the 2010 National Broadband Plan, when USF had to adjust to broadband being the dominant service. Notes 2. The 2010 National Broadband Plan team spent half the document writing about this. Ironically, but not surprisingly, the Department that appears to me to understand it best--the Department of Defense—was outside the scope of our mandate. https://www.benton.org/blog/where-puck-going-close-acp-and-coming-usf-reform
CELLPHONES Woody Harrelson Gave Up His Cellphone for Good, Refusing to Be ‘Readily Available’ at All Times The actor says he does like to keep in touch with people, but he doesn’t like the ‘appendage on my appendage.’ Actor Woody Harrelson says he enjoys restricting his use of modern technology. For him, that means forgoing a cell phone. He made the remark in an episode of his new SiriusXM podcast, “Where Everybody Knows Your Name,” alongside co-host Ted Danson. The two were interviewing actress Kristen Bell, who said she is trying to work through a phone addiction. It’s been over three years since Mr. Harrelson gave up his device for good. When he did have it, though, he said he tried to set usage limits for himself. Meanwhile, Mr. Harrelson joins a number of other celebrities who have taken part in a digital detox, like English singer-songwriter Ed Sheeran who recently admitted he hasn’t had a phone since 2015. The Grammy award winner is vocal about his stance against technology, and limits his usage and communication to emails, which he checks weekly. Canadian actor Michael Cera also ditched his smartphone, telling the Hollywood Reporter last year he never had any interest in the device but because everyone else uses one, it seems like a drastic decision. Woody Harrelson Gave Up His Cellphone for Good, Refusing to Be ‘Readily Available’ at All Times | The Epoch Times (There are many other article links about this topic, People, Men’s Health, Fox, etc.)
CHD EMF Updates: New Social Media Post: https://x.com/ChildrensHD/status/1800709857374339112 Despite RF radiation used by Wi-Fi networks posing serious health risks – including reproductive issues + DNA damage – @FCC will start funding the installation of Wi-Fi on school buses this year. New on CHD. TV June 17: CHD Legal Update, June 11: EMR News Update June 2024 Week 2, June 10: CHD Prepares Lawsuit Against Radiation at Home New in The Defender: June 24: Detroit Schools Get $6.8 Million From Cell Tower Company — Where Is the Money Going? Parents Ask June 20: State Ignored ‘Hundreds’ of Public Comments Alleging Smart Meters Harm Health, Group Says June 12: Florida Parents Reject ‘Absurd’ Active Shooter Narrative, Succeed in Keeping Cell Tower Off School Property The June 24 article “is the last in a series of articles on how the wireless industry targets schools for wireless infrastructure installation. Part 1 covered the recent surge and why parents are fighting back. Part 2 covered how T-Mobile put nine cell antennas on a private school in San Diego without parents’ knowledge or consent. Part 3 covered how parents defeated a tower proposal by debunking the claim that school kids needed the tower to be safe in an emergency.”
CHILDREN SOCIAL MEDIA MIT: Should social media come with a health warning? Yes, use of these platforms can sometimes harm. But it's not all bad. China has been implementing increasingly tight controls over how children use the internet. https://www.technologyreview.com/2024/06/21/1094075/should-social-media-come-with-a-health-warning/
See also: 2023 China is escalating its war on kids’ screen time What Beijing’s new restrictions on child internet use mean for privacy protection. In August last year, the country’s cyberspace administrator issued detailed guidelines that include, for example, a rule to limit use of smart devices to 40 minutes a day for children under the age of eight. And even that use should be limited to content about “elementary education, hobbies and interests, and liberal arts education.” Zeyi Yang had the story in a previous edition of his weekly newsletter, China Report. For better or worse, these moves have put China ahead of just about every other country in terms of controlling how minors use the internet. https://www.technologyreview.com/2023/08/09/1077567/china-children-screen-time-regulation/
See also: Read more from MIT Technology Review’s archive: Bills designed to make the internet safer for children have been popping up across the US. But individual states take different approaches, leaving the resulting picture a mess, as Tate Ryan-Mosley explored. AND Dozens of US states sued Meta, the parent company of Facebook, last October. As Tate wrote at the time, the states claimed that the company knowingly harmed young users, misled them about safety features and harmful content, and violated laws on children’s privacy. AND Last year, TikTok set a 60-minute-per-day limit for users under the age of 18. But the Chinese domestic version of the app, Douyin, has even tighter controls, as Zeyi wrote last March.
DATA CENTERS: re:publica 2024: Paris Marx - The Backlash to the AI-Fueled Data Center Boom The Backlash to the AI-Fueled Data Center Boom Generative AI is all the rage, but it’s very computationally intensive. To power their AI fantasies, cloud providers are planning a significant expansion of data centers, but their material costs are fueling a growing backlash. How much computation do we actually need to build a better world? HERE 1/2 HOUR VIDEO good international overview
EMF SHIELDING EMF Remedy Keith Cutter: RF Shielded Bed Canopy -- Unparalleled Opportunity to Reduce RF -- Must be Done Right RF Shielded Bed Canopy -- Unparalleled Opportunity to Reduce RF -- Must be Done Right (buzzsprout.com)
HEALTH EMF: (January 2024) Association of prolonged occupational co-exposures to electromagnetic fields, noise, and rotating shift work with thyroid hormone levels Long-term effects of noise, ELF-EMFs, and shift work on HPT axis were investigated. (Males) Significant changes were found in the levels of TSH, T3, and T4 hormones. A significant interaction was observed among noise, ELF-EMFs, and shift work. “You can see in Table 2 how we first categorized workers according to their working sectors. In the present work, we did not differentiate between workers with the same job title for estimating the levels of exposure to ELF-EMFs and noise. The calibrated 3-axis EMF meter (Tenmars TM-192D) was used to measure ELF-EMFs based on IEEE-644, and a Taiwanese TES-1358 sound analyzer was used to quantify noise according to ISO 9612.” Association of prolonged occupational co-exposures to electromagnetic fields, noise, and rotating shift work with thyroid hormone levels - ScienceDirect
HEALTH EMF: 8 Natural Ways to Improve Vagus Nerve Function The vagus nerve acts as a critical communication pathway between the brain and major organs, influencing both physical and mental health. 1. Touching 2. Posture and Spinal Movements 3. Eye Movements 4. EMDR 5. Breathing 6. Humming 7. Cold Water Exposure 8. Laughter Epoch Times
HEALTH THE POWER COUPLE: 4 Ways Sunglasses Harm Our Health Human photosynthesis | Ocular melatonin | Regulating our mood with light Here’s what we’ll learn in this article: 1. Two reasons why looking at the Sun is good for our eyes 2. Can wearing sunglasses cause sunburn? 3. Can wearing sunglasses increase our risk for depression? 4. How sunglasses degrade cognitive function 5. Do certain types of glasses increase our EMF exposure? 6. REDUCE EMF 101 Webinar: June 27th
HEALTH DOPAMINE/PARKINSONS: Dopamine Breakdown and Parkinson's Disease: Part 2 — Out-Thinking Parkinson's (outthinkingparkinsons.com)
HEALTH/INDUSTRY Research reveals what we see online affects us more than length of exposure It is what we are looking at, rather than how much time we are spending our time online that influences our health and well-being, according to a major new report. The study, published in the journal World Psychiatry, is a comprehensive examination of the latest scientific evidence on screen time and mental health, carried out by an international research team. Research reveals what we see online affects us more than length of exposure (medicalxpress.com)
HEALTH: OXALATE INTOLERANCE: How Your Gut Microbiome Affects Your Oxalate Tolerance There's no question that highly processed foods are bad for your health. https://takecontrol.substack.com/p/oxalate-intolerance-gut-microbiome (Westo Price) 1 1/4 hour See Also: Oxalate Dumping: 25 ‘Healthy’ Foods That Make You SICK (Sally Norton) 1 hour courtesy Paul
HOUSING OT: Study finds US does not have housing shortage, but shortage of affordable housing
INDUSTRY: For digital inclusion, broadband access is just the beginning PODCAST South Bend, Indiana's Madi Rogers explains how broadband access is just one aspect of reaching the goal of digital inclusion. At a Glance About South Bend's Wi-Fi on school buses program (03:18,) Making sense of AI for smart cities (07:03), The essential elements of digital inclusion are more than just broadband access (12:24) https://www.lightreading.com/digital-divide/for-digital-inclusion-broadband-access-is-just-the-beginning 33 MINUTES
LANDLINES: AT&T can’t hang up on landline phone customers, California agency rules State dismisses AT&T application to end Carrier of Last Resort obligation. https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2024/06/california-rejects-att-request-to-end-carriers-landline-phone-obligation/ AND https://www.kpbs.org/news/science-technology/2024/06/20/cpuc-rejects-bid-by-at-t-that-could-have-decimated-landline-service-in-california
MINING: Why the U.S. hasn't joined the race for deep sea mining in international waters https://www.cbsnews.com/news/why-the-us-hasnt-joined-the-race-for-deep-sea-mining-in-international-waters-60-minutes-transcript/
NATURE: Effects of 700 and 3500 MHz 5G radiofrequency exposure on developing zebrafish embryos (March 2024) Effects of 700 and 3500 MHz radiofrequency radiation studied in zebrafish embryos. Hypoactivity was induced at 700 MHz, but not 3500 MHz, Anxiolytic effect observed at 700 MHz but anxiogenic effect observed at 3500 MHz, Slower habituative learning caused by 700 and 3500 MHz exposure, Radiofrequency radiation altered acetylcholinesterase activity at 700 MHz. Our neurobehavioral profiles include a tail coiling assay, a light/dark activity assay, two thigmotaxis anxiety assays (auditory and visual stimuli), and a startle response - habituation assay in response to auditory stimuli. ZFe were exposed for 1 and 4 h during the blastula period of development and endpoints evaluated up to 120 hours post fertilization (hpf). Our results show no effects on mortality, hatching or body length. However, we have demonstrated specific organ morphological effects, and behavioral effects in activity, anxiety-like behavior, and habituation that lasted in larvae exposed during the early embryonic period. A decrease in acetylcholinesterase activity was also observed and could explain some of the observed behavioral alterations. HERE (NOTE: Acetylcholine is a neurotransmitter that plays a role in memory, learning, muscle movement and more “Acetylcholine, an ester of choline and acetic acid that serves as a transmitter substance of nerve impulses within the central and peripheral nervous systems. Acetylcholine is the chief neurotransmitter of the parasympathetic nervous system.” In the central nervous system, acetylcholine appears to have multiple roles. It is known to play an important role in memory and learning and is in abnormally short supply in the brains of persons with Alzheimer disease. See more including about the sodium-ion channels) here: Acetylcholine | Definition, Function, & Facts | Britannica (may play a role in ADHD and addiction)
PRIVACY: Google Is an Even Bigger Privacy Nightmare Than You Think
SPACE: Family whose roof was damaged by space debris files claims against NASA "Whatever NASA does is going to send a strong signal to the space industry."
https://arstechnica.com/space/2024/06/family-whose-roof-was-damaged-by-space-debris-files-claims-against-nasa/
TOWERS AND ANTENNAS HEALTH (EINAR): Long-term health effects from mobile masts: Now we know enough to act! A group of researchers has just published a field study that compares the effects on genetic material in two residential areas with weak and stronger exposure from mobile phone masts, respectively. Sachin Gulati, Wilhelm Mosgoeller, Dietrich Moldan, Pavol Kosik, Matus Durdik, Lukas Jakl, Milan Skorvaga, Eva Markova, Dominika Kochanova, Katarina Vigasova, Igor Belyaev: Evaluation of oxidative stress and genetic instability among residents near mobile phone base stations in Germany, http://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecoenv.2024.116486 PS. In the blog post 21.06.2024, a summary report of 7 case studies of serious and acute health effects from 5G installations was presented. In this study, a predisposition to serious long-term effects is demonstrated that fits well with all the previous epidemiological studies that have shown increased incidences of cancer the closer one lives to cell towers. Einar’s post translated from Norwegian HERE Germany Study: Evaluation of oxidative stress and genetic instability among residents near mobile phone base stations in Germany
TOWERS AND ANTENNAS Native American Opinion Piece about Massive Tower in Bears Ears National Monument For many years, the Navajo and other local tribes — Hopi, Uintah, Ouray Ute, Zuni and Ute Mountain Ute — worked together to gain federal protection for this land. But what we gained is now threatened by developments that defile and dishonor the cultural and spiritual significance held by Navajo and other Native peoples. The most recent example is the plan to build a 460-foot telecommunications tower on a parcel of land owned by a Utah state agency, the Trust Lands Administration. The land that would house the tower is in the heart of the Bears Ears National Monument. If erected, this alien-looking tower will be a spear in the heart of the Bears Ears area. I am also saddened to think there will likely be more inappropriate developments on Utah Trust Lands within Bears Ears, now that the state has derailed a proposed land exchange between the Trust Lands Administration and the federal government. The land exchange would have helped ensure that Navajo homelands are managed to protect our cultural and spiritual traditions. Now these lands — our heritage — face death by a thousand cuts. At every level, from county to state to the federal government, that history includes violations of voting rights, education and civil rights. All had to be litigated in federal court. Through all of that, Utah Navajos have fought to conserve and protect the public lands we traditionally used. https://www.vaildaily.com/opinion/writers-on-the-range-an-ugly-tower-threatens-bears-ears-national-monument/
WARFARE: How AI is changing warfare An AI-assisted general staff may be more important than killer robots In late 2021 the Royal Navy approached Microsoft and Amazon Web Services, a pair of American tech giants, with a question: Was there a better way to wage war? More specifically, could they find a more effective way to co-ordinate between a hypothetical commando strike team in the Caribbean and the missile systems of a frigate? The tech firms collaborated with bae Systems, a giant armsmaker, and Anduril, a smaller upstart, among other military contractors. Within 12 weeks—unfathomably fast in the world of defence procurement—the consortium gathered in Somerset in Britain for a demonstration of what was dubbed StormCloud. Marines on the ground, drones in the air and many other sensors were connected over a “mesh” network of advanced radios that allowed each to see, seamlessly, what was happening elsewhere—a set-up that had already allowed the marines to run circles around much larger forces in previous exercises. The data they collected were processed both on the “edge” of the network, aboard small, rugged computers strapped to commando vehicles with bungee cables—and on distant cloud servers, where they had been sent by satellite. How AI is changing warfare (economist.com) (unlock free trail to view) (Axios Comments: Most use cases for AI in battle are more advanced in theory than practice, Axios' Colin Demarest notes. Those bullish about AI's battlefield prowess argue it will be able to run thousands of simulations and produce results at lightning speeds. But what if an adversary poisons the training data before the operation takes place? https://www.axios.com/newsletters/axios-am-e037ce30-30cc-11ef-83c3-ab424b6f803a.html
Sarcasm Corner: You’re covered
EVENTS:
6/24 World EHS Day Symposium! Monday, June 24, 7 p.m. ET Co-hosted by Courtney and Amelia Gilardi, join us to give hope to those suffering and inspire others to take action by spotlighting what's happening right now to: Educate the public, Treat and prevent electromagnetic illness, Create accommodations, Protect children in schools, Adopt science-based local zoning code, Defend those injured, Enact laws for responsible technology and utility deployment Meeting Registration - Zoom Source: Massachusetts for Safe Technology (ma4safetech.org)
6/26 On Wednesday, June 26th, 2024 at 11:00 am ET, the IEEE will be holding a webinar on Havana Syndrome -- An IEEE Perspective. This month's webinar will feature members of the IEEE International Committee on Electromagnetic Safety and the IEEE Committee on Man and Radiation, discussing the engineering basis for getting to the bottom of this ongoing mystery. Hosted by IEEE Future Networks INGR Deployment Chair David Witkowski. Here is the link to register, talk will be recorded. https://zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_oGWcHCqnRsSW-XEf_
For those new to this issue, you are welcomed to read about how the high-level JASON intelligence group determined that crickets were to blame for the noises reported by diplomats.
In Defense of Crickets, Part 2 of 3; EMR Australia: Wireless Radiation, Hearing Problems, and Havana
In Defense of Crickets Part 3 of 3; Havana, Internal Electric Fields, Kilohertz Frequencies, Cell Signaling, & Sub-Carrier Waves (Paul Harding)
I really enjoyed listening to Keith's podcast with Dave. We'll be interviewing Dave in the next cpl weeks as well. (Not copying you Keith I promise!) Just a synchronicity.
We also interviewed Amy Harding,ND, who speaks about oxalates during an interview she gave for our EMF 101 course.
Thanks for sharing our article on sunglasses Patricia!
Did you know that cataracts act as yellow colored blue light filters? That blew me away, but makes sense.