What 5G mobile networks cause health risks?
What 5G mobile networks cause health
risks?
The following story is from a UK BBC and it also applies to American citizens. I am so sick and tired of this government thinking that they can just use the tax-paying population as guinea pigs, it is absurd. I have worked in this industry for the better part of thirty years and it is not for the weak or afraid, at any-time you are hanging off a building or house in the dead of winter trying to finish the job without being killed. Those dishes are known as the Direcway Satellite System, and we had to be trained just to be near them and if you do not pass the yearly test then you cannot install them or even be an assistant. Now twenty years after I first started installing them with all of their stickers warning about the hazards of microwave radiation they have the brass balls to mount these things barely twenty feet up which with this type of signal, which is "line-of-site" type of signal so if you decide to go to work in your high- rise building you certainly will be going past the 20' distance the signal is at, now what they are not telling you is that the signal is just as strong at the mid-point between towers or cells as they call them. So, as you read this article just keep in mind that you will pass thru this signal many times throughout the day. This signal is the same thing as opening up your microwave and stand in front of it and turn it on. Safe "Bullshit", Read-on I promise this is the last cuss-word but I need to make sure I have your attention. Oh, and by the way, it is being installed in your neighborhood right now. And they say they have to double the number of towers.
Thomas Fry Blue Collar Politics
The 5G mobile network has been switched on in some UK cities and
has led to questions about whether the new technology poses health risks.
So, what are the concerns, and is there any evidence to back
them up?
What's different about 5G?
As with previous cellular technologies, 5G networks rely on
signals carried by radio waves - part of the electromagnetic spectrum -
transmitted between an antenna or mast and your phone. We're surrounded by electromagnetic radiation all the time -
from television and radio signals, as well as from a whole range of
technologies, including mobile phones, and from natural sources such as
sunlight. 5G uses higher frequency waves than earlier mobile networks,
allowing more devices to have access to the internet at the same time and at
faster speeds. These waves travel shorter distances through urban spaces, so 5G
networks require more transmitter masts than previous technologies, positioned
closer to ground level.
What are the concerns?
The electromagnetic radiation used by all mobile phone
technologies has led some people to worry about increased health risks,
including developing certain types of cancer. In 2014 the World Health
Organization (WHO) said that "no adverse health effects have been
established as being caused by mobile phone use". However, the WHO together with the International Agency for
Research on Cancer (IARC) has classified all radiofrequency radiation (of
which mobile signals are a part) as "possibly carcinogenic". It has been put in this category
because "there is evidence that
falls short of being conclusive that exposure may cause cancer in humans". Eating pickled vegetables and using talcum powder are classed in
the same category. Alcoholic drinks and processed meat are in a higher category
because the evidence is stronger. A toxicology report released in 2018 by the
US Department of Health, and pointed to by those expressing
safety concerns found that male rats exposed to high doses of radiofrequency
radiation developed a type of cancerous tumor in the heart. For this study, rats' whole bodies were exposed to radiation
from mobile phones for nine hours a day every day for two years, starting
before they were born. No cancer link was found
for the female rats or the
mice studied. It was also found that rats exposed to the
radiation lived longer than those in the control group. A senior scientist on the study said, "exposures used in
the studies cannot be compared directly to the exposure that humans experience
when using a cell phone", even for heavy users. Dr. Frank De Vocht, who helps advise the government on mobile
phone safety says "although some of the research suggests a statistical
possibility of increased cancer risks for heavy users, the evidence to date for
a causal relation is not sufficiently convincing to suggest the need for
precautionary action".
However, there is a group of scientists and doctors who have
written to the EU calling for the rollout of 5G to be halted.
Radio waves are non-ionising
The radio waveband - used for mobile phone networks - is
non-ionising, "which means it lacks sufficient energy to break apart DNA
and cause cellular damage," says David Robert Grimes, physicist, and cancer
researcher. Higher up the electromagnetic spectrum, well beyond those
frequencies used by mobile phones, there are clear health risks from extended
exposure. The sun's ultra-violet rays fall within this harmful category
and can lead to skin cancers. There are strict advisory limits for exposure to even higher
energy radiation levels such as medical x-rays and gamma rays, which can both
lead to damaging effects within the human body. "People are understandably concerned over whether they
might elevate their risk of cancer, but it's crucial to note that radio waves
are far less energetic than even the visible light we experience every
day," says Dr. Grimes. "There is no reputable evidence," he says "that
mobile phones or wireless networks have caused us health problems."
Should we be worried about 5G
transmitter masts?
5G technology requires a lot of new base stations - these are
the masts that transmit and receive mobile phone signals. But crucially, because there are more transmitters, each one can
run at lower power levels than previous 4G technology, which means that the
level of radiation exposure from 5G antennas will be lower. The UK government guidelines on
mobile phone base stations says radiofrequency fields at
places normally accessible to the public are many times below guideline levels.
What about heating dangers?
Part of the 5G spectrum permitted under international guidelines
falls within the microwave band. Microwaves generate heat in objects through which they pass. However, at the levels used for 5G (and earlier mobile
technologies) the heating effects are not harmful, says Prof Rodney Croft, an
adviser to the International Commission on Non-Ionizing Radiation Protection
(ICNIRP). "The maximum radio frequency level that someone in the community could be exposed to from 5G (or any other signals in general
community areas) is so small that no temperature rise has been observed to
date."
Limits to exposure
The UK government says, "while a small increase in overall
exposure to radio waves is possible when 5G is added to the existing network,
the overall exposure is expected to remain low". The frequency range of the 5G signals being introduced is within
the non-ionising band of the electromagnetic spectrum and well below those
considered harmful by the ICNIRP. "The exposure that 5G will produce has been considered in
great depth by ICNIRP, with the restrictions set well below the lowest level of
5G-related radio frequency that has been shown to cause harm," says Prof
Croft. The WHO says electromagnetic frequency exposures below the
limits recommended in the ICNIRP guidelines do not appear to have any known
consequence on health.
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