October 4 Safe Tech International News and Notes
EHS, Courtney Snyder M.D, Dr. Christof Plothe, Smart Buildings, Wake me when IOT is over,
“These boots are made for walkin”* but this substack is not designed to amplify political discourse or to trigger readers.
Skim and only read what is of value to you personally and please stay centered - mainstream and alternative news is prickly and charged these days.
*1996 top hit song by Nancy Sinatra: “You keep lying, when you oughta be truthin'
and you keep losin' when you oughta not bet.”
FEATURED
I’ve discovered a number of wonderful new-to-me writers on Substack including Courtney Snyder M.D. of Holistic Psychiatry. She just published her article “Electromagnetic Hypersensitivity in Children & Adults Symptoms, Brain Impacts, Factors That Increase Vulnerability, Diagnosis, Treatment, MTHFR, COMT, & Why Children Are Especially Susceptible” which includes a very clear, excellent 24-minute audio overview of EHS. It is no longer only for paid subscribers; She has now graciously reposted it for free for everyone. Please have a listen and post a like.
Electromagnetic Hypersensitivity in Children & Adults (substack.com)
FEATURED
Building science and radiofrequency Radiation: What makes smart and healthy buildings Frank M. Clegg, Margaret Sears, Margaret Friesen, Theodora Scarato, Rob Metzinger, Cindy Lee Russell, Alex Stadtner, Anthony B. Miller PII: S0360-1323(19)30534-7 DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.buildenv.2019.106324 Reference: BAE 106324 To appear in: Building and Environment RAccepted Date: 1 August 2019 Please cite this article as: Clegg FM, Sears M, Friesen M, Scarato T, Metzinger R, Lee Russell C, Stadtner A, Miller AB, Building science and radiofrequency Radiation:What makes smart and healthy buildings, Building and Environment (2019), doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.buildenv.2019.106324.Parallel with rapid innovation in wireless technologies, and the increasing RFR both inside and outside building structures, building science must also innovate to include alternative, physically connected technologies and systems. This is important to achieve accessibility and a building's success. Ensuring that the health and safety of occupants are not compromised requires those in the building science professions to develop and apply needs and means assessments, as well as best practices for methods and models for communications, with RFR wireless technology as a less-preferred option. Research and knowledge transfer are needed to develop, publish, and encourage compliance with explicit directions for the integration of wired communications technologies in the design, planning, engineering, construction, operation and life cycle of a building. Building science has embraced ecology and sustainability as core tenets in building performance. Currently, modern technologies minimizing RFR exposures offer an under-addressed opportunity for “smart” buildings also to be healthy – for their occupants, and for natural and built environments. SCIENCE DIRECT
FEATURED:
ICBE-EMFs EHS statement https://icbe-emf.org/activities/electrohypersensitivity/
FEATURED
KEITH CUTTER EMF Remedy I’ve yet to encounter a physician as well-informed about synthetic EMF exposures as Dr. Christof Plothe. He shares his clinical experiences, observations, and insights on the benefits of reducing exposure. He emphasizes that prudent avoidance is critical and highlights two specific clinical observations that he believes point to synthetic EMF exposure, one you can do at home in front of the mirror. Dr Plothe also suggests a method of bodily tuning, using a tuning fork, that may quickly help uncouple the body from synthetic exposures once you've returned to a more pristine environment. 51 MINUTES
FEATURED:
NCD Electromagnetic and Chemical Sensitivity Panel This is a presentation on Chemical and Electromagnetic Sensitivities presented to the U.S. National Council on Disabilities (NCD) in May 2022 This is a presentation on Chemical and Electromagnetic Sensitivities presented to the U.S. National Council on Disabilities (NCD) in May 2022. We have four speakers as follows: Susan Malloy, Magda Havas, Sheena Symington and Elizabeth Kelley. The presentation lasts for 44 minutes and may be useful to those who are severely impaired by environmental contaminants and require assistance.
NEWS AND NOTES
AI: Erik Hoel Sticky humans in a post-AGI world Why pure AI tutoring won't work Interacting with a human is an aesthetic experience. It is pleasant to interact with an actual human. It is pleasant to read an actual human. It is pleasant to be taught by an actual human. We social animals will opt for such experiences even if the same services can be accomplished in cheaper ways. Sticky humans in a post-AGI world
AI JOBS REPLACEMENT POLITICS: AXIOS: Dock strike ends, for now After just three days, striking workers at docks all over the eastern U.S. agreed to suspend their strike until January. The alliance representing ports agreed to a wage increase to help end the work stoppage, under pressure from the White House. Our thought bubble: The strike had threatened to cause enough economic damage to impact the presidential election, Axios' Dan Primack writes. Instead, it may be the next president's problem. AXIOS
AI: OpenAI Stamps Feet, Says Investors Aren't Allowed to Back Its Rivals "If a company holds all the cards, they can force people to do things unnaturally." FUTURISM
AUTOMOBILES: Connected vehicle tech could help nationwide e-tolling, officials say The federal government sees potential for electronic tolling working with vehicle-to-everything (V2X) tech upgrades for vehicles and infrastructure. Different technology protocols historically prevented transponders from being read by different tolling entities. Tolling agencies also want to make sure their devices work with other regions accurately. But within two years, that E-ZPass network could extend to central U.S. states such as Texas, and a year after that, West Coast states could also be covered, Wilkins said. The expanded coverage would mean that national interoperability could become a reality, he added. Connected vehicles could also present a chance to abandon transponder boxes and possibly create a national clearinghouse, Wilkins said. https://www.smartcitiesdive.com/news/connected-vehicle-v2x-wireless-communications-safety-technology-electronic-tolling/728041/ courtesy M
AUTOMOBILES EVS: Auto giants are getting nervous about the prospect of mega fines as EV demand falters European carmakers face stricter emission targets from next year as the EU cap on average emissions from new vehicles sales falls to 93.6 grams of CO2 per kilometer. Renault CEO Luca de Meo reportedly said last month that if EV sales remain at current levels, the European auto industry may have to pay 15 billion euros ($16.5 billion) in financial penalties. Automakers operating in Europe face stricter emission targets from next year as the EU cap on average emissions from new vehicles sales falls to 93.6 grams of CO2 per kilometer (g/km), reflecting a 15% decrease from a 2021 baseline of 110.1 g/km. Exceeding those limits — which were agreed in 2019 and form part of the 27-nation bloc's ambition to reach climate neutrality by 2050 — can result in hefty fines. []Europe's top automakers are contending with a perfect storm of challenges on the path to full electrification, including a lack of affordable models, a slower-than-anticipated rollout of charging points and the potential impact of European tariffs on EVs made in China.Crisis-stricken Volkswagen and several other carmakers, including Ford and Mercedes-Benz Group, have all announced plans to delay earlier targets to phase out sales of internal combustion engine (ICE) vehicles in Europe. "Manufacturers are pretty much focused on conventional hybrids and ICE vehicles because they are much more profitable," ING's Luman said. MSN
CHILDREN: Katherine Martinko | The Analog Family 'Why Can't I Have a Smartphone?' A reader asks for advice on how to talk to kids who feel left out. [] Here’s roughly how our conversation goes. I tell them about the harms associated with excessive screen time, but this is not the focus of our conversation. Kids are not interested in statistics or studies. Their eyes glaze over, as if I’m lecturing them. So, while I do mention key findings that bolster my own resolve, I often flip the narrative back onto them.
CONSUMER PRODUCTS IOT Wake me when the Internet of Things is over Makers of smart washing machines and refrigerators should admit defeat and let dumb things remain dumb Back in 2013, fashionable people started wearing glasses with a small, but inevitably conspicuous built-in heads-up display and camera. These fashionistas were unusually distracted even for a distracted age — losing the threads of conversation, staring off into space, tilting their heads in odd ways, muttering strange commands (“Take a picture,” “record a video”) and every now and again reciting impressive, if irrelevant, lists of facts magicked up from the pages of Wikipedia. The glasses were called “Google Glass,” the unfortunate creatures who wore them “glass explorers.” The “glass explorers” were soon dubbed “glassholes,” the fad faded and the glasses are no longer available. Is the Internet of Things (IoT) a more prolonged Google Glass experiment — a cumbersome way of addressing a non-problem? Over the past 20 years companies have poured billions of dollars into the IoT. Consultancies gush in glossy reports about a wonderful future in which dumb objects are infused with intelligence — umbrella handles that glow when it is about to rain, pillboxes that yelp when you forget take your meds, intelligent ovens that produce a perfect roast, tennis rackets that feed data to your smartphone which then tells you how to improve your serve. The hype continues. A new report from the management consultancy McKinsey and Co estimates that “the total value potential for the IoT ecosystem could reach US$12.6 trillion by 2030.” Fusion Strategy, a new book by Vijay Govindarajan, distinguished professor at Dartmouth College’s Tuck School of Business and Venkat Venkatraman, professor of management at Boston University’s Questrom School of Business, predicts that the fusion of “big iron and big data, steel and silicon,” would produce nothing less than a fourth industrial revolution. Manufacturer surveys suggest that fewer than half of Internet-capable devices are connected to the Internet. Companies such as LG Electronics Inc and Whirlpool Corp have responded to these dismal figures by sinking yet more money into the IoT. However, many customers remain indifferent. “Why Has the Internet of Things Failed?” is the blunt title of a recent article by the tech blogger Pete Warden. [] The consumer benefit of attaching your household devices to the Internet is often small. How do you benefit by connecting your dishwasher to the Internet? You might be able to start it remotely (after you have used your thumb to activate your phone, found the app, clicked on the app and debated all the other things you could or should be doing on your phone). However, you still must be there to load it. What is the benefit of being able to control the temperature of your fridge remotely? Fridge-freaks might revel in this power, but most of us just set the fridge to the right temperature and forget about it. The same question goes for notifications that the washing machine has finished doing the washing, or that the kettle has boiled or that the oven has heated up. You might not have ever considered “the role of IoT in reusable cups.” Rest assured that the ever-inventive IoT industry has. “IoT-enabled return stations allow users to conveniently return their used cups” while providing cleaning staff with up-to-date information on how many cups are accumulating, the IoT For All Web site said. Wake me when the Internet of Things is over - Taipei Times
CONSUMER PRODUCTS IOT: Why has the Internet of Things failed? The biggest obstacle is the setup tax. All of our communication technologies, from WiFi to cellular, cost money to use, and so require authentication and billing accounts. This isn’t as big a problem with PCs and phones because we only replace them every few years, and they have screens and keyboards, so going through the setup process is comparatively straightforward. By comparison, your fridge or toaster probably doesn’t have a full-featured user interface, and so you’re expected to download a phone app, and then use that to indirectly set up your appliance. This adds multiple extra steps, and anyone who’s ever worked on a customer funnel means that every additional stage means losing some people along the way. If you also factor in that a household might have dozens of different devices that all want you to go through the same process, with different applications, accounts, and quirks, it’s clear why people suffer from setup fatigue and often don’t even try. ALSO USELESSNESS, ENERGY [] I’d much rather have us building machines that can understand us better, and figure out the monetization strategy after we’re providing value, instead of building features nobody uses because we think they can make money. PETE WARDEN BLOG
CONSUMER PRODUCTS PRIVACY SURVEILLANCE: Meta smart glasses can be used to dox anyone in seconds, study finds Linking Meta smart glasses to a face search engine can ID strangers in a glance. Two Harvard students recently revealed that it's possible to combine Meta smart glasses with face image search technology to "reveal anyone's personal details," including their name, address, and phone number, "just from looking at them." In a Google document, AnhPhu Nguyen and Caine Ardayfio explained how they linked a pair of Meta Ray Bans 2 to an invasive face search engine called PimEyes to help identify strangers by cross-searching their information on various people-search databases. They then used a large language model (LLM) to rapidly combine all that data, making it possible to dox someone in a glance or surface information to scam someone in seconds—or other nefarious uses, such as "some dude could just find some girl’s home address on the train and just follow them home,” Nguyen told 404 Media. This is all possible thanks to recent progress with LLMs, the students said. ARS TECHNICA AND Terrifying Smart Glasses Hack Can Pull Up Personal Info of Nearby Strangers in Seconds New fear unlocked. For years, privacy experts have warned that widely available facial recognition tools could make it possible to do things like dox strangers you see on the street or allow dangerous creeps to immediately look up personal information about women at the bar. FUTURISM
DATA: Dirty Cops, Dirty Data An analysis of Baltimore Police data shows how reform is regularly misrepresented to the public by political leaders and police. As the Baltimore Police Department goes through another year under the consent decree, with changes to the department slow going, TRNN found that Baltimore data transparency and retention has gotten worse and its numbers have become increasingly unreliable. This is a story of how much we do not know. [] There are flaws with UCR, including the problem with all law enforcement data: it is self-reported by law enforcement. [] ‘We have no idea what is happening’ TRUTHDIG
ENERGY MAX WILBERT: Green Jobs or Greenwashing? Unequal exchange, extractivism, and colonialism in the new energy economy There are two great ironies here. The first is that, because Thacker Pass is a lithium mine, and lithium is used in electric car batteries, the mining company, government, and big environmental groups all insist that despite the destruction it’s causing, the mine is “green.” The second is that the workers who are building the mine belong to a union: North America’s Building Trades Union. The lithium which they plan to extract will be shipped to General Motors factories across the United States, where more union laborers (these from the United Auto Workers) will use it to assemble electric car batteries. This is all an example of how today’s climate movement is attempting to bypass the “jobs versus the environment” debate that has raged for decades. []Today, many labor organizers who have already been grappling with the climate crisis are now recognizing the contradictions in the energy transition. “This new ‘green’ industrial growth is going to create massive environmental chaos and displace millions of Indigenous people,” says Chandan Kumar, national coordinator for an Indian coalition of labor groups called The Working People’s Charter. “But we don’t have an alternative framework yet. [Here] we are still stuck on basic questions like minimum wage. We have workers here in the Volkswagen, General Motors, and Mercedes supply chains making clutches or gears, and their salary is $100 a month. They don’t have enough food to eat.” SUBSTACK
ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH TRUST is publishing informative daily updates on a variety of platforms but does not offer sharable links. SIGN UP HERE: Newsletter Signup (everyaction.com), a recent video: Cell Phones Would Be Illegal If Radiation Tested In the Way They Are Used 4 1/2 minutes
FARMING RIGHT TO REPAIR: Senator Calls Out Deere For Clean Air Act Violations, Blocking Farmer Repairs In a letter to John Deere's CEO John May, Senator Elizabeth Warren calls out the companies efforts to thwart owner repairs, in violation of the Clean Air Act. []Deere “appears to be evading its responsibilities under the Clean Air Act to grant customers the right to repair their own agricultural equipment.” That is costing farmers an estimated $4.2 billion annually “causing them to miss key crop windows on which their businesses and livelihoods rely,” Warren writes, according to a copy of the letter shared with Fight To Repair Newsletter. [] In recent weeks, Deere faced criticism, including from Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump, after laying off close to 2,000 U.S. based employees at facilities in Iowa and Illinois, moving many of those jobs to facilities in Mexico. The company has also been repeatedly called out for complicating repair and service of its farm equipment - often relying on software locks and digital rights management to force farmers to use Deere dealers and authorized service providers for even the simplest repairs. []The letter from Warren notes the coincidence of such practices with soaring Deere profits. The company has seen its profits increase by 270% in the last four years, despite the disruptions caused by the COVID pandemic, labor strikes and other factors. Deere “keeps its profits streaming in by overcharging for repair services,” Warren writes. [] For the past decade, Deere has been a vocal opponent of proposed right to repair laws at the state and federal level, helping to defeat proposed legislation in a number of states. Central to its opposition has been an argument that providing access to repair tools and information would facilitate farmers’ in altering emissions systems on Deere equipment in violation of the Clean Air Act. FIGHT TO REPAIR
(Reminder also that Deere’s satellite connected tractors failed earlier in the year during a solar storm: Solar Storm Knocks Out Farmers' Tractor GPS Systems During Peak Planting Season (404media.co))
FCC: Rosenworcel: Fixed Wireless Driving Broadband Competition FCC Chairwoman says 'a lot of households are signing up. https://broadbandbreakfast.com/rosenworcel-fixed-wireless-driving-broadband-competition/
FCC: Musk blasts FCC for 'illegally' pulling Starlink award, says it would've helped victims of Hurricane Helene Billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk on Wednesday said that the Federal Communications Commission's decision to not move forward with an award for SpaceX's Starlink to provide rural broadband may have cost lives in North Carolina when it was hit by Hurricane Helene. Musk, the CEO of SpaceX, responded to a post on X from a user who noted that "North Carolina would have 19,522 working Starlink kits available today after Hurricane Helene had the FCC not revoked in bad faith the grant that was awarded to SpaceX as the winning bidder." []SpaceX's Starlink, which provides high-speed internet via satellite connections, was awarded $885 million by the FCC in 2020 to help expand high-speed internet access around the country in rural areas. The FCC rescinded that initial award in 2022, arguing Starlink wouldn't be reasonably capable of meeting the program's requirements, and reaffirmed that decision in Dec. 2023. An FCC spokesperson told FOX Business in a statement, "Chairwoman Rosenworcel stands by the FCC's thorough review of a program meant to provide long-term access to reliable and affordable broadband in rural communities." "In this instance, the agency denied public funds to more than a dozen companies – not just Starlink – who did not meet the program requirements. As an independent agency, the FCC takes seriously its obligation to ensure that taxpayer dollars only go to entities that fully comply with the rules and the law," the FCC statement continued. []The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) said in a press release Wednesday that it has provided 50 Starlink satellite systems to help with responders' communications. Starlink said Tuesday that a total of roughly 500 Starlink kits have arrived or will arrive in areas impacted by Hurricane Helene. Musk also announced that Starlink was working to make the system work in hurricane-affected areas regardless of payment status, essentially providing free access for those impacted by Helene. FOX ON MSN
FCC: Meet the Project 2025 Co-Author Who Wants to Run the FCC If Trump Wins Brendan Carr knows who’s calling the shots in the modern GOP, so when he’s not fawning over Trump — a prerequisite for any potential appointee — he’s busy buttering up the world’s richest internet troll: Elon Musk. What you might not know is that just one of Project 2025’s authors currently works for the federal government: Brendan Carr, the senior Republican on the Federal Communications Commission.
Carr has sided with big companies and against the public interest on nearly every important issue to come before the FCC.COMMON DREAMS
5G INDUSTRY: T-Mobile US flexed its sustainability credentials, revealing a university employed its 5G network as part of a conservation programme for Atlantic sturgeon, a fish protected as an endangered species by the nation’s government. The Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU) Rice Rivers Centre is working to protect Atlantic sturgeon in the James River near Richmond, Virginia, using tracking technology with telemetry acoustic receivers to notify a power station when tagged female fish enter their spawning habitat to lay eggs so the facility can decrease or stop its water intake to safeguard them. MOBILE WORLD LIVE
HAVANA POLITICS OT; Biden’s Cuba Policy Has the Island in Shambles By maintaining that the country is a state sponsor of terrorism, the administration has cruelly tightened the screws on anachronistic sanctions HAVANA (no mention of havana syndrome) — The sight of hungry people scavenging through dumpsters and panhandling was once more common in cities in the United States and Europe than in Havana. But a series of quiet moves, first by then-President Donald Trump and now by President Joe Biden, have produced a humanitarian crisis throughout Cuba. Cuba has been sanctioned for longer than any country in modern history. But almost a decade ago, the Obama administration softened sanctions on the island and restored diplomatic relations with Havana, admitting that over half a century of immiserating the island had failed to oust the communist government. The economic rebound was swift. But in the final weeks of the Trump administration, the White House put Cuba back on the State Department’s list of state sponsors of terrorism, alongside Iran, Syria and North Korea, for nakedly political reasons and without evidence. Cuba watchers expected that Biden would restore Barack Obama’s raft of achievements. After all, on the campaign trail in 2020 Biden promised that as president he would “reverse the failed Trump policies that inflicted harm on Cubans and their families.” The terror designation, together with more than 200 sanctions enacted against the island since Obama left office, has pulped the Cuban economy by cutting revenue to the struggling Cuban state. Economists calculate that the loss in tourism revenue resulting from the terror designation costs the state hundreds of millions dollars a year. The combined annual cost of the Trump-Biden sanctions, they say, amounts to billions of dollars a year.[] But the human cost for Monteagudo and millions like him is incalculable. The retired teacher was diagnosed with Parkinson’s three years ago. He can get his prescriptions — Cuba still has more doctors relative to population than any country in the world — but no medicine. [] The list of state sponsors of terrorism has always stood on the frontier between analysis and propaganda. No matter how bad their records, U.S. allies never make the list; adversaries do. []. Back in April 1960, as Washington planners were working out how to deal with the new revolutionary government, a senior State Department official penned a now infamous memo, which gives insight into the rationale behind the unfolding economic warfare. “Every possible means should be undertaken to promptly weaken the economic life of Cuba,” argued Lester D. Mallory, then deputy assistant secretary of state for Western Hemisphere affairs. “While as adroit and inconspicuous as possible,” he added, U.S. policy should make “the greatest inroads in denying money and supplies to Cuba, to decrease monetary and real wages, to bring about hunger, desperation and overthrow of government.” Biden has refused to break with this logic. On Cuba, this is his legacy. Biden’s Cuba Policy Has the Island in Shambles - Truthdig
HEALTH IEEE: Neuralink’s Blindsight Device Is Likely to Disappoint Elon Musk has made big claims for the artificial vision technology Restoring natural vision is beyond the reach of today’s technology. But among Musks recent claims, Troyk says that a form of infrared sensing is plausible and has already been tested with one of his patients, who used it for help locating people within a room. That patient has a 400-electrode device implanted in the visual cortex as part of a collaborative research effort called the Intracortical Visual Prosthesis Project (ICVP). By comparison, Blindsight may have more than 1,000 electrodes, if it’s a similar device to Neuralink’s brain-computer interface., In the short term, too much hype could mislead clinical trial participants. It could also degrade interest in small but meaningful advancements in visual prosthetics. “Some of the [Neuralink] technology is exciting, and has potential,” said Troyk. “The way the messaging is being done detracts from that, potentially.” https://spectrum.ieee.org/neuralink-blindsight
INFRASTRUCTURE WALLSTREET ON PARADE: Report: “Flash Flooding Is the Number One Storm-Related Killer in the U.S.” Few Cities or Towns in America Are Built to Survive Its Wrath Thousands of towns and cities across the U.S. are at serious risk of flash flooding as their storm drains were never constructed to handle the unprecedented amounts of rainfall now occurring per hour during major storm events. [] Tens of millions of Americans are living under the illusion that their city or town faces no catastrophic threat from flooding. A large part of that illusion stems from local politicians refusing to accurately report deaths from drowning during major storm events. HERE
INSPIRATION THE POWER COUPLE: Roman S Shapoval and Bohdanna Diduch: How to create atomic habits Habits of the rich & famous | subconscious habits vs conscious routines The power of atomic habits and the science behind them, Unusual habits of history’s rich and famous, Helpful habit-changing tips we can adopt today, How Roman deals with his coffee cravings 31 MINUTES SUBSTACK
POLITICS CENSORSHIP HACKS: Not All Hacks Are Created Equal The reaction by media outlets to the publication of the 271-page JD Vance dossier highlights the double standards at play in this year's election cycle. The journalist claims that his account suspension, which he reports to be permanent, is political [] Klippenstein reports that his publication of the Vance dossier is being censored not only by X, but by Meta (Facebook and Instagram) and Google: “The platforms said that the alleged Iranian origin of the dossier — which no one is calling fake or altered — necessitated removing any links to the document.” TRUTHDIG
SMART CITIES CANADA “Josh’s book is so vivid, and the way he described those meetings between Google tech bros and the incredibly conservative Canadian bureaucrats made me think from the outset there were dynamics here to exploit for humor,” Healey said in an interview.
Healey said he deviated from the facts of the story to add his own take on the nervous breakdowns he assumed many executives involved in the project suffered during negotiations, which included screaming matches documented in O’Kane’s book and bad press. O’Kane applauds Healey’s adaptation, saying it captured how “consistently Sidewalk Labs shot itself in the foot and how its own ambitions got in the way of its own goals.” https://www.smartcitiesdive.com/news/toronto-smart-city-sidewalk-labs-master-plan-play/728717/ COURTESY M
EVENTS
Reminder for those seeking community, knowledge, and support;
Thursday Nights: Make America Healthy Again David Goldberg 2nd Tuesday evening East Coast time - Canadians for Safe Tech 2nd & 4th Friday afternoons - the National Call 3rd Wednesdays -MA4SafeTech call, noon East Coast
10/3 -10/6 Montrealer Nick Pineault is hosting the EMF SUMMIT 2024 on the topic of electrosensitivity. Canadian scientist Dr. Magda Havas and building biologist Rob Metzinger are two of a wide range of speakers that are sure to present much interesting and relevant information on electrosensitivty. https://emfhazards.com/
10/4 The National Call EMS Committee Meeting, Friday Oct 4, 2024, 3:30-5pm ET https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZMpf--qrzIvG9ybrLKPubmiPMYSS4p-dQZG After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting. Our discussion will focus on the EMS Guidelines.
10/8 Tuesday, 8 October 2024 7:30 pm ET. CANADIANS FOR SAFE TECHNOLOGY WITH Kerry Krofton Ph.D. Author of Less Screen More Green: Finding freedom with The Mindful Tech Plan™ and the powers of nature, mindfulness and true connection for a healthier tech-life balance– Revised and Updated Second Edition Paperback – July 26 2024