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JB wrote:
"Michael Coslo" wrote in message ... JB wrote: After reading 1/4 of the "Biological studies..." it is interesting. But we need to remember that experiments only become valid when repeated numerous times. As these are only summaries, they are hard to compare and we loose that without having the full experiment laid out before us. I have tended to throw away those that didn't describe the frequency and field strength in some way as less than anecdotal. I'm still not convinced that use of tobacco products are bad for you, and I've got scientific evidence from tobacco industry lawyers to back me up. ;^) No relation to this issue except there are people who stand to profit by both being harmless. There is always the question of how many studies it takes to make something "real". I always like to mention the book from the 1870's that mentions how smoking causes lung cancer; chewing causes oral cancer. But it wasn't until almost a hundred years later that it really did, because it took that long to be "proven". All we can do is make an informed guess, and stick with it. I choose to limit my cell phone use. - 73 de Mike N3LI - One way to tell is by looking around you to see how those around you are being affected. Perhaps the MEDIA causes the most brain damage on the planet by spreading madness on grand scales. I'vve always thought we get the media we deserve..... I can point to a whole lot of people who WERE harmed in so many ways by Tobacco products. I can only point to ONE who has been harmed by RF. The guy leaned up against an inverted V and grabbed on to it. Probably 5kw and it killed a line in his palm. It did completely heal though. Ouch! I was hit once with about 50 watts. One of my first antennas was a random wire, and RF was coupled to the metal ring around the tuning cap on my matchbox. Hurt something awful, put a hole in my finger, and there was even a little smoke. That guy must have really hurt. Who was it here that told about birds landing on ladder line and getting zapped. leaving only their feet wrapped around the line? Still I wouldn't consider a ban on either, as long as the user can keep it from costing or endangering me. Don't forget there is a political agenda to do away with a lot of things. The RF hazard thing is based on a minor risk blown out of proportion by those whose million dollar views were spoiled by transmitter sites. Well, that is one of the reasons. We sometimes tend to focus pretty narrowly. That some of these folk don't like much of anything is pretty spot on. But we shouldn't carry that over as blanket condemnation. Its like blaming the little old lady sitting at home drinking her sherry with binge drinking college students. If it weren't for well funded environmental lobbyists, the FCC wouldn't have been pressured into cutting exposure limits to half from what was learned by military studies in the 40's to the 60's and established in the 70's and cut to half of that in the 80's and finally made into law for hams and cut in half again for nervous people who still can't point to anything more concrete than the old military studies. There have been lots of studies since then. Those same people had oil production cut in this country so that now you have to pay $4 a gallon. The supply/demand effects of our oil production via offshore, or unused interior drilling, are not responsible for the prices we are paying now. There is a combination of massive demand by the developing countries, large demand by ourselves, and rampant speculation. There is also the issue of we really only have so much oil. And we've used most of it (unless you ascribe to the abiotic oil theory) Don't discount the possibility of sitting on reserves. In our area, there were gas and oil wells drilled between 25 years ago, and the present. Most of them sat, some to the point of needing new caps put on the wells because the old ones got rusty. But there are many hundreds, perhaps thousands of wells there. As we speak, there are new pipelines being put in to bring the stuff to market. Simply when the price became right, the supply was "uncorked". And it looks like there is a lot of it. More gas than oil, but still significant. Not a liberal or a tree hugger in the mix. Just good old supply and demand. You want to point fingers? There has been a bubble of shady speculation running through the business world. A few years back, it was the Dot.com bubble. then it was the criminally innovative accounting practices that burst Enron and World.com into the news. Then it was the real estate issue, with loans so bad that some of these people were folding back their interest payments into their principal. That is insanity. How on earth could such a thing be allowed or legal? But the people originating the loans had not reason not to. They got their commission, and the loan was immediately sold to some other institution, who would then play a game of "hot potato", whoever was holding the mortgage when it defaulted was the loser. Interesting that the gasoline prices went haywire so soon after the real estate markets collapsed. These folk (a very loose aggregation, but certainly a trend) just moved from one form of speculation to another. Speculation is and should be a good thing, allowing money to be put into risky and unproven fields. But it can be taken too far. See the above. BTW I don't even own a cell phone. I have had them but they are too much of a distraction. I'd rather not, but I have to.. 8^( - 73 de Mike N3LI - |
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