FAQ
- What Is Electromagnetic Radiation (EMR)?
We are in the
midst of potentially the most pervasive and important environmental
struggle of the new millennium, the struggle to understand the
effects of exposure to electromagnetic radiation.
Wireless devices
and broadcast antennas threaten the natural and human environments
in ways that affect every one of us at home, school, places of
worship, and at work.
If you didn't
take physics in high school, or if you haven't had occasion to
put the knowledge you learned there into practical application
lately, here's your chance. Electromagnetic radiation, naturally
occurring and man-made, is all around you in your everyday life.
Here are some links to put all of that into perspective.
Here's an explanation
of what Electromagnetic
Radiation is.
Here's a schematic
explanation of the different "divisions"
of the electromagnetic spectrum.
This table lists
the
frequency
wavelengths for radio frequency radiation - the part of the
electromagnetic spectrum that is used for personal wireless
communications such as cellular and PCS phones is indicated as
"Personal Communications".
Now try to put all of this
information together as you read through this page from
NASA's
educational site. The graphics are very helpful and quite
complete. As is to be expected though, graphics take awhile to
come up on your screen, so be patient.
From the California
EMF Program - Fact Sheets on electromagnetic radiation exposures
in the home, school, and workplace as well as information on EMR
research findings.
Are
there adverse health effects from human exposure to
electromagnetic radiation (EMR)and specifically, radio
frequency radiation (RFR) coming from cellular phone
transmitter?
What kind of research has been done?
What is the history of legislation and regulation regarding
(RFR) in the United States?
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The EMR Network
concentrates its efforts on public education about radio frequency
radiation (RFR). With the global buildout of wireless telecommunications
systems, this is the area of the EMR spectrum that is making its
way into every community. Humans are irrevocably altering the
electromagnetic signature of the world. And we are doing this
with no clear understanding of the implications to humans or other
species. "A
Clear Call: American Unplugged - A Guide to the Wireless Issue,"
by B. Blake Levitt, award winning medical and science write, is
a primer on the many facets of the RFR health issue in America.
This presentation was first given at the Berkshire-Litchfield
Environmental Council: Environmental Tower Siting Conference,
held in Connecticut on May 10, 1997. (This is a PDF document.)
Telecom
Towers Tsunami - an update from B. Blake Levitt.
There are medical and political ramifications to cell tower siting
in our country. At its core, this is a medical and an environmental
issue. In emphasizing aesthetics, such as hiding antennas in church
steeples, our premier planners are missing a critical opportunity
to exercise prudent avoidance and precautionary principles - wise
courses of action now recommended by doctors and public health
officials all over the world.
The most crucial
question about electromagnetic radiation is whether the general
public is exposed to hazardous levels of emissions in everyday
life. The scientific controversy centers around the argument that
EMR can only produce harm at power levels high enough to heat
human tissue. This explanation of the problems with that argument
refers specifically to radio frequency/microwave radiation used
for wireless telecommunications, but it applies to other areas
of the electromagnetic spectrum. "Serious
Flaws with the FCC RF/MW Safety Standards," by B. Blake Levitt,
award-winning science author. (This is a PDF document.)
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How
does electromagnetic radiation (EMR) affect living organisms?
Can
EMR exposure cause harm?
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You'll find answers in this interview with
Dr. Robert Becker, M.D., one of the first medical pioneers
to study natural electrical currents in the human body and to
caution about electropollution. Dr. Becker was twice nominated
for the Nobel Prize in Medicine. This interview with Linda Moulton
Howe of Earthfiles took place in May, 2000.

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