Electromagnetic radiation is Russian roulette with the nation’s health
by Gabriel Millar, published in Letters, SNJ Reporter (UK), 2 July 2015
JIM Watson’s letter regarding electromagnetic radiation (‘No justification for an alarmist agenda’, letters, June 17) is not very reassuring.
The idea that saturating our air waves with electromagnetic radiation will have no impact on the human body is fanciful, at best – and at worst, simply delusional.
What matters most are long-term effects, that only longitudinal research can investigate adequately; and as with tobacco smoking many years ago, we just don’t have the long-term evidence yet.
Though, according to Dr. Erica Mallery Blythe, there has been a steep incline in children’s brain cancer since wireless technology has become so pervasive – eg. wifi in schools.
Read more »
by Gabriel Millar, published in Letters, SNJ Reporter (UK), 2 July 2015
JIM Watson’s letter regarding electromagnetic radiation (‘No justification for an alarmist agenda’, letters, June 17) is not very reassuring.
The idea that saturating our air waves with electromagnetic radiation will have no impact on the human body is fanciful, at best – and at worst, simply delusional.
What matters most are long-term effects, that only longitudinal research can investigate adequately; and as with tobacco smoking many years ago, we just don’t have the long-term evidence yet.
Though, according to Dr. Erica Mallery Blythe, there has been a steep incline in children’s brain cancer since wireless technology has become so pervasive – eg. wifi in schools.
Read more »