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EMFSafetyZone December 6, 2012 This video provides a simple, yet profound lesson. The radio frequency radiation being transmitted from your wireless router or modem is extremely toxic and detrimental to your health. Notice how high the measurements are on the RF meter! Most of us are living and working in this type of RF radiation exposure every single day and night. - See more at: www.forbiddenknowledgetv.com...
The fix, or remediation is simple: Plug your modem or router into your computer using an Ethernet connection (hardwire), and "disable" the wireless function on your modem or router. - See more at: www.forbiddenknowledgetv.com...
Originally posted by princeguy
reply to post by ManFromEurope
I don't think you read any of the information about the effects of RF radiation on the human body. This is more than psychosis.
Originally posted by Sandalphon
If ever there was some way to have special viewing apparatus to see the wifi radiation I would be convinced it poses a problem.
The cell phone towers do lend an effect. Several years ago I lived out of cell phone range, then as the phone company added more energy there was a subtle difference. There is a noticeable calm in a place not littered with transmission radiation.
THAT is right!
Measured alone, well the electrical outlets give off energy, and I don't see activists saying to build houses with no wires in the walls.
I don't see them complaining about the patterns of energy put through radio waves or TV channel waves but those would influence people subtly just the same. Ideally, naturally, that airspace should be nothing except cosmic sounds, earth sounds, and the occasional wave from a whale or an elephant, but now it's loaded with junk, plus that SSSS stuff triangulating cars on the freeway.
I'd say to mitigate the effects take more minerals than average, like magnesium and calcium. Learn a way to build a house surrounded by water or other insulating materials. I imagine the side effects are like the health effects of too much radar. Don't stand too close to it, turn it off when not in use, and precautions like that.
Originally posted by Jauk3
Well, better get used to it, as sooner or later there wont be escaping from it.
But than doesn't matter, our bodies will adapt too it and we will become immune for it.
Originally posted by ManFromEurope
Originally posted by Sandalphon
If ever there was some way to have special viewing apparatus to see the wifi radiation I would be convinced it poses a problem.
That is impossible, I would guess - its a field, not some kind of directed radiation. You can't observe a field directly, only by its effects on the surrounding. Just like gravity.
Originally posted by abeverage
I sleep the same if not a little worse when I am 100 miles from a wifi spot or even electricity at our cabin...
Must just be me right?
Radon is a chemical element with symbol Rn and atomic number 86. It is a radioactive, colorless, odorless, tasteless[1] noble gas, occurring naturally as an indirect decay product of uranium or thorium. Its most stable isotope, 222Rn, has a half-life of 3.8 days. Radon is one of the densest substances that remains a gas under normal conditions. It is also the only gas under normal conditions that only has radioactive isotopes, and is considered a health hazard due to its radioactivity. Intense radioactivity has also hindered chemical studies of radon and only a few compounds are known.
Radon is formed as one intermediate step in the normal radioactive decay chains, through which thorium and uranium slowly decay into lead. Thorium and uranium are the two most common radioactive elements on earth; they have been around since the earth was formed. Their naturally occurring isotopes have very long half-lives, on the order of billions of years. Thorium and uranium, their decay product radium, and its decay product radon, will therefore continue to occur for tens of millions of years at almost the same concentrations as they do now.[2] As radon itself decays, it produces new radioactive elements called radon daughters or decay products. Unlike the gaseous radon itself, radon daughters are solids and stick to surfaces, such as dust particles in the air. If such contaminated dust is inhaled, these particles can stick to the airways of the lung and increase the risk of developing lung cancer.[3]
Unlike all the other intermediate elements in the aforementioned decay chains, radon is gaseous and so easily inhaled. Thus, even in this age of nuclear reactors, naturally-occurring radon is responsible for the majority of the public exposure to ionizing radiation. It is often the single largest contributor to an individual's background radiation dose, and is the most variable from location to location. Despite its short lifetime, some radon gas from natural sources can accumulate to far higher than normal concentrations in buildings, especially in confined areas such as attics and basements. It can also be found in some spring waters and hot springs.[4]
Epidemiological studies have shown a clear link between breathing high concentrations of radon and incidence of lung cancer. Thus, radon is considered a significant contaminant that affects indoor air quality worldwide. According to the United States Environmental Protection Agency, radon is the second most frequent cause of lung cancer, after cigarette smoking, causing 21,000 lung cancer deaths per year in the United States. About 2,900 of these deaths occur among people who have never smoked. While radon is the second most frequent cause of lung cancer, it is the number one cause among non-smokers, according to EPA estimates.[5]