Another excellent German study. When can we expect something similar from British doctors and specialists? Are trolls and agents the only people who are given a voice on these questions in Britain?
Posted by seumasach on June 30, 2008
Another excellent German study. When can we expect something similar from British doctors and specialists? Are trolls and agents the only people who are given a voice on these questions in Britain?
Posted in Ecological and Public Health Crisis, Studies and statements showing mobile phone health risk | Tagged: masts depression | 6 Comments »
Posted by seumasach on June 30, 2008
This mismatch between this disaster and the remedies posed is grotesque, such as the claim that “All Americans can help now with pollinator-friendly practices in their own backyards”. Our back yard is a paradise for bees and pollinators but there are simply none to be found. Further north in the Scottish highlands wild bees are also disappearing and I wouldn’t have thought heavy pesticide use would be much of an issue there. If these people really thought pesticides were the problem surely they would campaign to have them banned.
Last year all the talk was about the Penn state University investigation. Unfortunately that drew a blank. Now it’s open season for scientists to blame anything they like, especially with multi-causal, nothing in particular, explanations; always on the condition that EM radiation isn’t one of them.
Last year they admitted the bees were disappearing; this year they are admitting it is already causing crop loses and that all the other pollinators are also going. We can all see the ecological disaster unfolding around us, but nothing substantial is being done.Unfortunately everyone looks to the experts who for the most part are incapable of thinking globally and who in any event would never risk telling the truth. If anyone ever looks back on this period of history they will characterise it as “la trahison des clercs”, the treachery of the professionals.
Carolyn Lochhead, Chronicle Washington Bureau
Friday, June 27, 2008
Could strawberry ice cream disappear from our lives? What about vanilla Swiss almond?
The folks at Haagen-Dazs are worried enough that they and others have mounted a campaign to halt the shocking decline of honeybees and other pollinators of strawberry plants, almond trees and the rest of the roughly 90 percent of terrestrial plant life that needs pollination.
Posted in Ecological and Public Health Crisis | Tagged: disappearing bees and pollinators | Leave a Comment »
Posted by seumasach on June 29, 2008
Jan 31 2008 by Kerry-Lynne Doyle, Glamorgan Gazette
MOBILE phones and wireless internet could be behind Bridgend’s growing suicide rate, according to a microwave expert.
Posted in Ecological and Public Health Crisis | Tagged: Bridgend Wi-Fi suicides | Leave a Comment »
Posted by seumasach on June 29, 2008
This is the town where there have been so many tragic suicides amongst young people. Depression has been linked to EM exposure, most recently in an article quoting Roger Coghill, a scientist involved with SAGE, an advisory body to the government. However, that article failed to point out Bridgend’s historic first as a Wi-Fi hotspot.
Apr 14 2005 David Williamson, Western Mail
INTERNET history is on the verge of being made in Bridgend.
The council will be the first in England and Wales to establish a wireless “WiFi” network in the town centre where people will be able to access the internet, regardless of which service-provider they use.
Most wireless “hot spots” – locations where laptop users can access the internet – have been operated by individual companies. Bridgend’s initiative means the town has the potential to become Britain’s biggest open-plan office by offering the first multi-service provider network.
Posted in Ecological and Public Health Crisis | Tagged: Bridgend Wi-Fi first | 1 Comment »
Posted by smeddum on June 29, 2008
The Independent
Electrical currents given off by the life-saving machines shown to have a negative effect on babies’ heart rates, new research shows
By Geoffrey Lean
Sunday, 11 May 2008
Life-saving incubators may cause babies to die later from cot death, startling new research suggests.
The findings will add to growing concern about the effects of the thickening “electrosmog” given off by electrical equipment which is thought to interfere with the tiny currents that help to drive the human body and govern the heart. The findings could also imply that placing infants near to clocks, radios and other electrical devices may be dangerous. Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in Ecological and Public Health Crisis | Tagged: cot death, electrosmog | Leave a Comment »
Posted by seumasach on June 28, 2008
May 2008
Nearly 80 rail cars containing 6,700 tons of contaminated sand from Gulf War I are being shipped by American Ecology Corp. to its hazardous waste disposal site near Grandview, 70 miles southeast of Boise. The sand arrived by ship at Longbeach, Washington on May 12.
Posted in Ecological and Public Health Crisis | Tagged: DU | Leave a Comment »
Posted by smeddum on June 28, 2008
By ALISON BEJAMIN and BRIAN MCCALLUM
Yet another article that downplays the role of electromagnetism,(see our right sidebar). However, the authors stress the danger of the bee’s extinction is to humanity
The mountains of southern Sichuan in China are covered in pear trees.
Every April, they are home to a strange sight: thousands of people holding bamboo sticks with chicken feathers attached to the end, clambering among the blossom-laden branches.
Closer inspection reveals that children, parents and even grandparents are pollinating the trees by hand.
Key to life: Bees pollinate our crops and without them we’d have seriously limited food supplies Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in Colony Collapse Disorder, Ecological and Public Health Crisis | Tagged: The Disappearing Bees | Leave a Comment »
Posted by smeddum on June 28, 2008
Unreported knowns transformed into unknown knowns.A little peace of obfuscation and nonsense, presumably from someone on the corporate payroll. The key passage is the attempt to stealthily atribute the decline of the bees to climate change.As if millions of years of climate change ever threatened to wipe out the bees. Contrary to the author’s claim that this is an “unknown” there are decades of scientific study showing the effect of EM radiation on the orientation of bees.
The Guardian
How to explain the global plunge in hive populations? Look to the unknown knowns
Slavoj Zizek
The Guardian, Saturday June 28, 2008
Article history
For the past two years, a mysterious disease has been wiping out honeybees in the US and Europe. This catastrophe could have a devastating effect on our food supply: about a third of the human diet comes from insect-pollinated plants, and the honeybee is responsible for 80% of that pollination. This is how one should imagine a possible global catastrophe: no big bang, just a small-level interruption with devastating global consequences. Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in Ecological and Public Health Crisis | Tagged: electrosmog, The Disappearing Bees | 1 Comment »
Posted by seumasach on June 27, 2008
Or has it already led to higher prices?Bit by bit, they introduce us to the enormity of this crisis whilst studiously avoiding any reference to the EM radiation connection
Stephanie S. Garlow • ASSOCIATED PRESS • 27th June, 2008
WASHINGTON — Food prices could rise even more unless the mysterious decline in honey bees is solved, farmers and businessmen told lawmakers Thursday.
“No bees, no crops,” North Carolina grower Robert D. Edwards told a House Agriculture subcommittee. Edwards said he had to cut his cucumber acreage in half because of the lack of bees available to rent.
Posted in Ecological and Public Health Crisis | Tagged: crop losses, disappearing bees | Leave a Comment »
Posted by smeddum on June 26, 2008
Posted in Ecological and Public Health Crisis | Tagged: 9/11, first responder | Leave a Comment »
Posted by alfied on June 25, 2008
This film was produced in the year 2000, and is still in high demand worldwide. Public Exposure was the first film to explore the potential health risks and social concerns triggered by the proliferation of transmitting antennas and rapid consumer adaptation to wireless communications technology. The film evaluates the state of the science and the public policies from an international citizen’s rights and consumer advocacy perspective.
Part 1
Part 2
Posted in Ecological and Public Health Crisis | Tagged: mast danger | Leave a Comment »
Mobile Telecommunications in Kempten West(not yet sourced)
Blood levels alarmingly altered
The Citizens Initiative Kempten West , which was established after the installation of the T-Mobile transmitter on the bank building (in Lindauerstraße) is now able to present the first results of the blood tests. Unfortunately, the results confirm the fears of the Initiative.
Read the rest of this entry »