Many scientists have claimed that the wave of mobile communications
made popular in the last two decades will result in long-term health
implications worldwide. An unprecedented level and frequency of tumor
growth inside the human brain may be inevitable.
Yet investigating dangers to the young were been omitted from a
massive investigation of the risks of cancer from using mobile phones,
even though the official Mobile Telecommunications and Health Research
(MTHR) Programme — which is conducting it — admits that the issue is of
the “highest priority”.
Mobile phone owners were urged to limit their use after the World Health Organisation admitted they may cause cancer. ***Read article at WAKING TIMES***
This is all common sense. Blogged about it years ago. Hopefully repetition will get the message across because nothing else seems to have worked. Maybe if they sold the devices with images of kids dying of brain cancer all over the packaging? Like they do with tobacco products?
ReplyDeleteWhat else I realized just this evening about the phone culture is that it has created a whole charge towards the JWO/NWO lifestyle in the current young and happening generation of sophisticated achieving young people.
The whole flashmob phenomena is a great example if you apply it to life in general.
These phones have allowed youngers to create or be shaped by corporate cultures to an extent undreamt of even by Bernays and remove them into a world only populated by their own type.
For all the hype about better communication, it seems that since their growth, true communication between individuals, talking face to face, is fast becoming a dieing art form.
And of course, little things like brain cancers that keep the pharmaceutical and medical businesses in shekels ... er.... dollars. All that electricity in the air around us...
I lost a niece to this horror; they lived near conductors when she was teeny. If people understood and knew what was involved, they might think twice about how cute it is to see their infants sitting at a computer or holding one of those appliances.