Reports that serve to enlighten the reader.
Reports that serve to enlighten the reader.
Talking on a cell phone in the car is more dangerous than you might think. On October 28, 2017, RTL asked explosively: "What does driving do to us?". The results are alarming, but not new. The high radiation exposure in the vehicle can even lead to accidents.
People who suffer from a polluted environment are increasingly marginalized. This also includes so-called electro-hypersensitive people. On a social level, mobile telephony can also lead to exclusion. In the meantime, the flood of communication is not stopping at the church either.
More and more people are recognizing the dangers of mobile phone technology. Some drop out - like Lara Thiede, for example - while others resist new antennas. Doctors and scientists warn against the introduction of the new 5G mobile phone standard.
According to the Competence Initiative for the Protection of People, Environment and Democracy e.V., more than 180 signatory scientists and doctors from 36 countries recommend a moratorium on the expansion of the fifth generation of telecommunications (5G) until potential risks to human health and the environment have been fully researched by industry-independent scientists.
At the beginning of September, violent magnetic storms were recorded on the sun. At the same time, the earth was hit by numerous natural disasters. The German researcher Dieter Broers sees very concrete connections here.
Dealing with electrosmog and mobile phone radiation is a question of responsibility. These are borne on the one hand by the planners, authorities and politicians, and on the other by each individual. It seems that many people are not aware of this.
The consequences of mobile phone radiation are by no means "only" limited to the health sector. The constant use of cell phones also harbors social dangers that endanger the development of children and young people.
Swedish researchers confirm the risk of brain tumors as a result of high-frequency radiation caused by mobile communications. Are these warnings being taken seriously? Doubts arise when you read the article by Franz Adlkofer from the Pandora Foundation on the development of limit values.
An international conference in Iceland and a current risk assessment of the mobile communications sector have raised eyebrows. No less impressive is the report by Frank Berner, board member of "Elektrosensible München", on the "difficult reality of life" for EHS sufferers.
The ratification of the Final Act, which was signed at the World Radiocommunication Conference (WRC-15) of the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), by the Federal Council attracted little media attention. But it has consequences that even the Federal Council is hardly aware of. The Swiss Doctors for the Environment (AefU) have been calling on the Federal Council for years to create a new law on noise and NIR immissions.