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Archive for the ‘Ecological and Public Health Crisis’ Category

UNESCO Seminar: “Electromagnetic Fields: Mechanisms Of Action And Potential Threat As A Terrorism Agent”

Posted by seumasach on December 7, 2008

“However EMF also pose direct threats to human health through mechanisms that are poorly understood.”

So there you are then: in certain milieu, where the terrorists in question aren’t O2 or Vodaphone, it’s not even a question for debate.
November 2008

There is more and more use of electricity and RF communication frequencies in both civilian life and for military purposes. The clarification of cellular and molecular mechanisms of their biological effects is extremely important in order to rationally evaluate their harmful effects from the point of public health. Read the rest of this entry »

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Cholera outbreak in Iraq

Posted by smeddum on December 7, 2008

Life in Iraq Has Become “Unbearable,” Economist Stiglitz Says

WRITTEN BY SHERWOOD ROSS Faxts.com

WEDNESDAY, 03 DECEMBER 2008 14:10

The western media, true to form, is blaming Mugabe for the Cholera outbreak in Zimbabwe, without mentioning sanctions or the situation in Iraq

President Bush’s attack on Iraq has made daily life there “unbearable” for most people, two prominent American business authorities write.

“Five years after the United States occupied Iraq with the stated goal of bringing democracy to its people, the war has essentially ruined the country’s economy, society, and sovereignty,” writes Nobel Prize-winner Joseph Stiglitz with Linda Bilmes in “The Three Trillion Dollar War(W.W. Norton).” Bilmes is a former CFO of the U.S. Commerce Department. Read the rest of this entry »

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Questions and Answers on Dental Amalgam

Posted by seumasach on December 4, 2008

“Dental amalgams contain mercury, which may have neurotoxic effects on the nervous systems of developing children and fetuses. When amalgam fillings are placed in teeth or removed from teeth, they release mercury vapor. Mercury vapor is also released during chewing. FDA’s rulemaking (described in question 7) will examine evidence concerning whether release of mercury vapor can cause health problems, including neurological disorders, in children and fetuses.”

Mercury is just about the most toxic substance known to man: only a madman or a genocidal maniac would put mercury in people’s teeth. How long will the British dental establishment continue to stonewall on this issue and when will we get assurances that mercury in the form of thimerosal will not be injected into children, in particular? When will we get a serious examination of the mercury-autism connection?

For more, see EoE archives

FDA

1. What is dental amalgam?

Dental amalgam is the silver-colored material used to fill (restore) teeth that have cavities. Dental amalgam is made of two nearly equal parts: liquid mercury and a powder containing silver, tin, copper, zinc and other metals. Mercury concentration in dental amalgams is generally about 50% by weight, while the silver concentration ranges from 20-35%.

Read the rest of this entry »

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Science magazine concedes cell phone radiation damage to DNA

Posted by seumasach on November 30, 2008

Microwave News

November 27… Science has conceded the error: More than one lab has in fact shown that cell phone radiation can cause DNA breaks. Back in August, reporter Gretchen Vogel claimed that Hugo Rüdiger at the University of Vienna medical school was the only one (seeSeptember 3, below). Now, Vogel allows that a team from Zhejiang University in Hangzhou, China, had previouslyobserved DNA breaks in cells exposed to GSM radiation.

In a letter published in the magazine’s November 28 issue, Vini Khurana, a neurosurgeon in Canberra, Australia, advises that, “[T]here are many other peer-reviewed papers from laboratories in at least seven countries, including the United States, showing that cell phone or similar low-intensity EMFs can break DNA or modulate it structurally.” (Others have submitted similar complaints to the magazine’s editors.) In her response, Vogel writes, “My intention was not to imply that there were only two papers showing any effects of EMFs. There are many publications that show effects of EMFs on DNA, but the citations listed [by Khurana] do not directly contradict the quoted sentence.” That sentence which leads her August 29 article begins: “The only two peer-reviewed scientific papers showing that [EMFs] from cell phones can cause DNA breakage…” In an exchange with Microwave News, Vogel drew a sharp distinction between DNA “damage” and “breakage,” which, she said, allowed her to exclude many other papers, particularly one by John Aitken.

Khurana made international headlines earlier this year when he predicted that cell phone radiation would turn out to be a worse public-health disaster than either smoking or asbestos (see our April 10 post).

Posted in Ecological and Public Health Crisis, Studies and statements showing mobile phone health risk | Tagged: | 1 Comment »

Caroline Lucas- Correspondence about Mobile Phones and Electromagentic Fields

Posted by seumasach on November 29, 2008

 

Caroline Lucas MEP

 

Caroline has objected to a vast number of mobile phone mast applications – too many to list here. You can however, read her correspondence with the European Commission and the UK and other authorities.

She has called consistently for a moratorium on mast installations and the rolling out of new technology until there is sufficient independent evidence to guarantee their safety. This approach, in keeping with the precautionary principle, is in marked contrast to the position adopted by industry and government,  which assumes they are safe until proven otherwise. In recent years, Caroline’s focus has been to secure funding for research at EU level.

Read the rest of this entry »

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An RTE power line of very high voltage is declared to be the cause of disease in a herd of cattle.

Posted by seumasach on November 28, 2008

Next-up

14th November, 2008

 

TULLE  (Agence France Presse) – In ordering the management of the French company RTE (responsible for the distribution of electricity) to pay almost 400,000 euros to cattle farmers, the courts have established for the first time that there is a link between the effects of electromagnetic radiation from a very high voltage power line and symptoms of disease among animals. 

Read the rest of this entry »

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Food Prices Will Rise, Causing Export Bans, Riots

Posted by smeddum on November 27, 2008

Food Prices Will Rise, Causing Export Bans, Riots: Chart of Day

By Mark Gilbert

Nov. 25 (Bloomberg) — Food prices will rise next year, prompting a revival of protectionism from food-growing nations and risking a renewed bout of rioting, according to Jochen Hitzfeld, an analyst at UniCredit SpA in Munich. Read the rest of this entry »

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Could dying bees mean the end of apples?

Posted by seumasach on November 26, 2008

Emma Clark

StAlban’s Review

25th November, 2008

MILLIONS of bees disappearing from the world every year could mean the end to the fruits and nuts we love, a St Albans bee keeper has warned.

Eileen Remnant met Hertfordshire MEP Richard Hewitt last week to find out more about the virus responsible for killing off honey bees – which are relied on to pollinate a third of our food.

Eileen, who owns four colonies with a population of 40,000 bees in Potters Crouch, said: “People don’t realise how important bees are to our food supply.

“If the disease carries on killing as many bees as it is at the moment then I can see fruits and nuts becoming a real rarity – even fruits like apples and pears.

“It will happen in my lifetime if something isn’t done.”

In Britain, not-for-profit bee keepers are responsible for the pollination of crops but across the world, especially in large countries including America, pollination is a commercial industry with millions of bees transported around the country in trucks.

It is these bees which are prevalent with the virus. Mr Hewitt intends to raise the issue in European Parliament to insist on careful treatment of bees worldwide to help quash the spread of the disease any further.

Mr Hewitt said: “I’m calling for more research into this problem.

“The dissention of the bee population is more damaging to our environment that you might first think.

“I met with Eileen to get an idea of what’s happening on the ground.”

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Stubborn glaciers fail to retreat, awkward polar bears continue to multiply

Posted by alfied on November 25, 2008

Up until now, the image of the helpless Polar Bear floating away on a piece of ice has been synonymous with the Global warmist’s campaign. It looks like they have drifted off message and we, at Inthesenewtimes, would like  to thank the Polar Bear community for helping us expose the Global Warming Theory for what it is; a pre-meditated lie.

By Christopher Booker

The Daily Telegraph

Second only to the melting of the Arctic ice and those “drowning” polar bears, there is no scare with which the global warmists, led by Al Gore, more like to chill our blood than the fast-vanishing glaciers of the Himalayas, which help to provide water for a sixth of mankind. Recently one newspaper published large pictures to illustrate the alarming retreat in the past 40 years of the Rongbuk glacier below Everest. Indian meteorologists, it was reported, were warning that, thanks to global warming, all the Himalayan glaciers could have disappeared by 2035. Read the rest of this entry »

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What Is Killing The Bees?

Posted by seumasach on November 25, 2008

“This pesticide had been applied to rapeseed and sweet cornseeds in the Rhine River Valley. Piles of dead bees were discovered at the entrance of hives in early May 2008.”

This confirms what is well-known to beekeepers, namely, that pesticides can be lethal to bees. It also confirms that they are not the cause of CCD, which is characterised precisely by the fact that the dead bees are not found in the vicinity if the hive.


To get round this difficulty partisans of the insecticide thesis have come up with the idea that non-lethal doses of insectide can cause disorientation of the bees and therefore affect their capacity to get return to the hive. This would be surprising since bees with lethal doses manage to get back to the hive to die. As the Canadian Honey Council website notes:


“To the beekeeper, the most obvious sign of pesticide poisoning is the presence of an exceptional number of dead bees in front of the hives”

We would then have it that the affect of the toxin is in inverse proportion to the dose.

Taken together with the fact that the banning of pesticides in France was seemingly ineffective, the pesticide thesis, though fashionable and having helped fill the vaccuum left by the failure of the Penn State investigation, seems unlikely: in any event, less likely than the EM radiation thesis which has long provided a credible experimentally and theoretically verified basis for explaining CCD.

By Dr. James Howenstine, MD.

November 24, 2008

NewsWithViews.com

For several years I have been curious and concerned about reports from many parts of the world that bee colonies were vanishing or dying. Because of their ability to pollinate fruit and vegetables bees are of enormous importance to mankind. . Finally a breakthrough in understanding this problem has appeared on the scene. Whether this solves the whole bee problem or is simply one part of a more complex issue remains to be seen. Read the rest of this entry »

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Mystery of the vanishing sparrow

Posted by seumasach on November 22, 2008

 

 

So all we need now is to find out why the insects are disappearing. ITNT is not offering any prizes for peer-reviewed studies on this question since EM radiation is already being used commercially to eliminate insects. Given the growing level of electrosmog it is questionable how long this will continue to be commercially viable. Perhaps that is why they’re moving on to using it against rats, an inspirational business start-up in contemporary Britain. The effect of EM on insects has been confirmed to me by Duncan MacFadyean, chief scientific officer for Oppenheimer’s. What kind of future do we face without insects? A short one.

 

 

Independent

20th november, 2008

 

It’s taken eight-and-a-half years – but The Independent’s £5,000 prize for explaining the disappearance of the house sparrow from our towns and cities finally has a serious entry, with a serious theory.

Read the rest of this entry »

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