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The Machinery of Fascism Revisited
Madkind-v-Mankind -- A Race Against Time
Ex-CNN Host Chris Cuomo Reveals COVID Vaccine Injury: "I'm Sick Myself"
'Evidence Tampering' Threatens Trump Political Show Trial
The first reverse microwave in the U.S.: you can have it at home to save energy while cooking
BREAKTHROUGH : Lightsolver Makes Ultrafast Laser Based Computers
$300,000 robotic micro-factories pump out custom-designed homes
$300,000 robotic micro-factories pump out custom-designed homes
Skynet Has Arrived: Google Follows Apple, Activates Worldwide Bluetooth LE Mesh Network
The Car Fueled Entirely by the Sun Takes Huge Step Towards Production
A new wave of wearable devices will collect a mountain on information on us...
Star Trek's Holodeck becomes reality thanks to ChatGPT and video game technology
Blazing bits transmitted 4.5 million times faster than broadband
Decades of research have already determined that exposure to cell phone radiation and other sources of electromagnetic fields (EMF) – including Bluetooth, Wi-Fi and 5G – is biologically harmful. The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is supposed to protect Americans from the telecom industry and their products but has failed to do so (also for decades). As such, it was labelled a "captured agency" (see 1, 2) several years ago and some may consider this recent revelation to be "same sh*t, different day". From Environmental Health Trust:
TR Daily: EHT Blasts FCC Timing in Disclosing Cellphone RF Exposure Test Results
EHT Blasts FCC Timing in Disclosing Cellphone RF Exposure Test Results
by Paul Kirby, TR Daily, Apr 23, 2024
The Environmental Health Trust (EHT) has blasted the fact that the FCC did not make public until last fall that tests it conducted [in 2019] on cellphones manufactured by four companies exceeded the agency's radio frequency (RF) exposure limits. The Commission informed EHT of the test results in response to a Freedom of Information Act (FoIA) request.
The FCC tested devices manufactured by Apple, Inc., BLU Products, Inc., Motorola Mobility LLC, and Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd. in 2019 after a Chicago Tribune story said that several popular models it had tested exceeded the FCC's specific absorption rate (SAR) standard.