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What Cell Phone and Tobacco Research Have in Common

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A man lights up a cigarette in Jakarta on Sept. 29, 2010
(Adek Berry/AFP/Getty Images)
What Cell Phone and Tobacco Research Have in Common
by Holly Kellum, Epoch Times, 12 May 2015

For scientists concerned about radiation from gadgets like cell phones, microwaves, and Wi-Fi, the doubt cast on studies showing their harm to humans is similar to studies done on tobacco in the early 20th century.

The science showing a positive link between cancer and tobacco was deemed inconclusive and not causal enough to be taken seriously throughout the ’20s, ’30s and ’40s.

But as the number of studies increased and the media started to pick up on its hazard to public health in the 1950s, the correlation gradually became accepted, even by the tobacco industry.

The industry adapted, however, introducing “cleaner” cigarettes with low-tar formulas, and released a propaganda campaign to cast doubt on the negative effects of secondhand smoke.

Possibly a similar battle is being fought right now by an international group of 190 scientists who submitted an appeal to the U.N. on Monday to have electromagnetic fields (EMF) upgraded from the classification of a “possible carcinogen” to a “probable carcinogen.”
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