| By Alasdair Philips As winter arrives with a vengeance,
the last of this year’s glorious autumn leaves are falling in our
parks and woodlands.
But this week came worrying evidence that Mother Nature is not the
only force denuding our trees of their foliage.
Research in the Netherlands suggested that outbreaks of bleeding
bark and dying leaves which have blighted the country’s urban trees
may be caused by radiation from the Wi-Fi networks now so integral
to life in offices, schools and homes.
As a qualified electronics engineer, I am not surprised by such
findings. I have long been concerned about the harmful effects of
the electro-magnetic radiation emitted not only by Wi-Fi devices but
many other common modern gadgets, including mobile and cordless
phones, wireless games consoles and microwave ovens.
Much though I love trees, and worrying though I find this research,
what really unnerves me is the effect these electro-magnetic fields
(or EMFs) are having on humans, surrounding us as they do with a
constant cloud of ‘electrosmog’.
I am no Luddite. When I started work in the 1960s, I was involved in
building walkie-talkies. I thought they were just brilliant and that
electronic technology would save the world. But over the decades
since, my scientific background has made it impossible for me to
ignore the overwhelming evidence about the damage wreaked by this
electrosmog.
It is not the existence of these radio waves that is the problem so
much as the use we make of them. Rather than being emitted at a
constant rate, technology demands they are ‘pulsed’ in short and
frequent bursts which appear to be far more biologically harmful.
Not the least is their impact on our ability to reproduce. It is
well documented that average male sperm counts are falling by two
per cent a year. Many causes have been suggested, from stressful
lifestyles to poor diet and hormones in our water supplies.
But studies in infertility clinics show problems with sperm dying
off or not moving properly are most common in men who use mobiles
extensively. This has also been demonstrated in the laboratory.
Mobiles are not the only problem. Many laptops are now equipped with
Wi-Fi which sends out pulses every second as it maintains contact
with the nearest access point. Young men with these devices on their
laps are submitting their testicles to strong EMFs at close range,
oblivious to the damage they may be doing to their chances of future
fatherhood.
EMFS have also been shown to affect the brain, suppressing
production of melatonin, the hormone controlling whether we feel
happy or sad. In 2004, researchers at the University of Malaga found
that significant exposure to EMFs increases the chances of
developing depression 40-fold.
They also linked electrosmog to headaches, irritability, unusual
tiredness and sleeping disorders.
This has been confirmed in research by the respected Karolinska
Institute in Sweden. Sponsored by the leading mobile phone
companies, it showed that using handsets just before going to bed
caused people to take longer to reach deeper stages of sleep. They
also spent less time in each of these stages, so interfering with
the body’s ability to repair damage suffered during the day.
This is particularly alarming given the tendency for teenagers and
children to sleep with their mobile phones under the pillows so that
they can answer late-night texts from friends.
Parents who allow their children to do so may be taking a
significant gamble with their health.
This year saw the publication of the Interphone study carried out in
13 countries including the UK, and examining the links between
mobile phone use and brain tumours. It suggested that those who had
made heavy use of mobiles for a decade or more faced twice the risk
of glioma, the most common type of brain tumour.
And this was a study based on the period between 1994 and 2004 when
‘heavy’ usage was defined as two to three hours per month. A
conservative estimate of average mobile phone use now is
approximately half an hour a day, seven days a week.
Since brain tumours often develop very slowly it may be many years
before the full impact of our reliance on mobiles becomes clear. But
they are already implicated in another area of concern to health
professionals, the onset of dementia in those under 65.
Experts are at a loss to explain the increase in this condition
which has seen a surge in demand for pre-senile dementia units
across the country. But can we really be surprised when a study at
the Institute of Environmental Medicine in Sweden confirmed this
month that exposure to EMFs significantly accelerates brain
degeneration?
The risks posed by EMFs are recognised not only by scientists, but
hard-headed commercial organisations. In 1997, the insurance company
Swiss-Re identified EMFs as likely to cause the biggest increase in
claims in years to come. Swiss-Re and other insurers have therefore
refused to indemnify the mobile phone operators against health
claims from their customers.
Even so, we should not hold out much hope of our politicians
protecting us from EMFs. The mobile phone industry in the UK
contributes around £20 billion in tax every year, so it’s hardly
likely the Government will take action to reduce the number of
calls.
Indeed, it seems to be going in almost the opposite direction,
encouraging the installation of Wi-Fi networks in our schools with
tactics which sometimes verge on coercion. I’ve been told about a
school which was threatened that it would receive no further
government funding for computer technology if it did not install
Wi-Fi.
In the absence of official intervention, it’s down to all of us to
protect ourselves. My aim as a campaigner is not to scare people but
inform them about the risks, so they can choose to take precautions.
Not everyone will want to follow my example. Because of our concerns
about electrosmog, my wife and I have moved to a cottage in Scotland
out of range of any mobile phone network.
But there are small steps which we can all take. We should all try
to use hands-free sets. And women should stop carrying mobiles in
their bras (breast tissue being particularly susceptible to mobile
phone microwaves), a trend which is becoming alarmingly fashionable.
We should also avoid cordless phones. Their base stations transmit
100 pulses a second, 24/7, even if you’re not using the phone, and
at power levels equivalent to having a small mobile phone mast in
your home.
You might also consider whether you really need wireless internet
access in your home. One option is to buy dLAN adaptors which
transmit the internet signal around the house by way of your
ordinary electrical wiring.
Such changes will require small adjustments to our modern
lifestyles. But until the evidence against EMFs is proven or
disproven, these are surely sacrifices well worth making.

But then there's global warming
and the resurgence of bedbugs and muslims and North Koreans and
Persians and dental X-rays and TSA X-rays and fluoridated water and
obamacare and toxic CFL bulbs and genetically modified food and the
bankruptcy of the Medicare and Social Security Funds and all these
extremist, right-wing, domestic terrorists running around trying to
thwart "The Won's" efforts to fundamentally change the USA.
We're all doomed. We'll never
make it out of this world alive.
Just be happy that you have a
strong signal while it lasts.
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