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On Tue, 19 May 2009 10:30:44 -0700, Roy Lewallen
wrote: Jeff Liebermann wrote: Ok. That's closer than most of the off topic rubbish the pollutes most newsgroups. I can see you logic. After reading some of the postings in this newsgroup, I too might suspect that exposure to RF and antennas might produce insanity, illogic, political conservatism, and delusions of omniscience. . . The effect seems to peak at about 75 meter wavelength, with a minor peak at about 2 meters. The cautious and same amateur will avoid exposure to those wavelengths. Roy Lewallen, W7EL Ham radio has its very own industry specific cancer called "cancer of the vocabulary". Upon over-exposure to RF, a fairly normal individual will soon develop symptoms which include ultra-long monologs, inserting "ahhhhh" between sentences, foaming at the mouth, phonetic alphabet creativity, and an apparently irresistible urge to eat microphones. An early indication of impending trouble is a tendency to identify oneself with a call sign after leaving a voicemail message. Advanced cases exhibit additional symptoms of language aberrations, political conservatism, compulsive knob twiddling, an insatiable desire to listen for intelligence in random white noise, a preference toward high wire acrobatics, and strangely coded speech. After several decades of RF exposure, the victim may show symptoms of pontification, pomposity, self-authority, and ossification of the technology. While not fatal, cancer of the vocabulary has been known to cause divorce, impoverishment, and curmudgeonificiation. Unfortunately, the symptoms are not reversible, even when the victim has withdrawn from ham radio for extended periods, such as to raise a family. Despite almost a century of historical data, little effort has been made to correlate RF exposure with cancer of the vocabulary. I suspect this may be due to the efforts of the ARRL to block such research. While it is obvious that different frequencies had different effects, it would be both interesting and useful if the connection were properly researched and documented. For example, it's apparent that exposure to low frequency (HF) waves causes a marked preference for noisy environments, the exact opposite effect is found after exposure to high frequencies (VHF), where signal clarity is preferred. This phenomenon and others should be investigated. -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
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