Town Built Around No WiFi/Radio Waves Rules Is Right Next To NSA Snoop Center
from the i,-uh,-wait,-what? dept
In the realm of conspiracy theories, I suppose the baseless claims that WiFi signals can make people ill doesn't really rank up there with chem-trails, Kennedy assassinations, and that one time former President Bush personally remote controlled alien inviso-missiles into the twin towers and the Pentagon before shooting down another plane over Pennsylvania. Still, the press likes to eat this stuff up, because what harm could come from scaring the hell out of everyone without doing a little fact-checking?
The result can be equal parts sad and hilarious. Take Green Bank, West Virginia, for example. Green Bank is a town of 147 residents that's experiencing a relative population boom simply because it's in an area where WiFi, radio signals and the like are not allowed.
At least 36 people moved to live in Green Bank last year, claiming that they suffer from a condition known as "Electromagnetic Sensitivity", where symptoms include acute headaches, heart palpitations, tinnitus, eye problems and feeling the sensation of burning skin. Green Bank has only 147 residents and sits within the National Radio Quiet Zone, a large area of land measuring 34,000 square kilometres that restricts radio signal transmissions in order to protect radio telescopes, antennas and receivers belonging to the National Radio Astronomy Observatory and the Sugar Grove US Naval Radio Station.If you're sure you've heard of Sugar Grove before, it's probably not because the alien overlords are beaming those thoughts into your noggin through your wireless router. Instead, Sugar Grove is one of the prime hubs in which the NSA monitors communications of foreigners, domestics, and all those pets of ours that have somehow set up their own Facebook accounts. The delicious irony in a town growing because people don't like electronic signals as it sits directly next to a government facility gathering all those signals would be pure fun if some of the personal stories of the residents weren't so sad.
"It began with a constant ringing in my ears. I couldn't sleep in the house anymore and felt sick all the time. Any food I brought into the house would make me feel ill. I got heart palpitations. It was like I was slowly being poisoned," Deborah Cooney, a former bank vice president from San Diego told the Daily Mail.So we have a former VP at a bank, ostensibly a successful woman who was otherwise happy with her surroundings, moving to a completely different small town due to the unsubstantiated fear of the same WiFi signals that don't seem to have any effect on the general population. That's what you get when you have a press that refuses to take a critical look at these claims. Even this article gives too much credence to an organization with a clear conflict of interests.
Cooney, 50, claims that her symptoms began in 2011 after hundreds of Wi-Fi enabled smart meters were installed near her home, and that the Wi-Fi even affected her purebred Himalayan cat Mimi.
"Mimi went from being a typical house cat to one that would never stay home and eventually she ran away and never came back," she said.
Powerwatch, a not-for-profit, non-funded UK public information service has been studying the research done on how electromagnetic fields affect health for 20 years. The organisation feels that the evidence points to Electromagnetic Sensitivity likely being a real condition that is in some ways similar to Photosensitive Epilepsy, where some types of light can cause a person to have an epileptic seizure.Missing in that section of the article is the minor note that Powerwatch profits from the fear they push on people -- and has been hyping up bogus claims of WiFi sickness in the UK for years. They aren't a study group, they sell "tools" to "help" ward off the "effects" of WiFi signals, your cell phones, and ELF waves. Here's a little tip for all you web surfers out there: the moment a home page for a lobbying group boldly features an entire section tab on "industry bias," you should probably run far, far away. Besides that, that quote from Mr. Lanburn should be carved into stone so that future generations can have a wonderful example of a non-scientific statement. Claiming to have lots of peer-reviewed work to back your claim to the point of it being conclusive, while both never bothering to cite the studies and subsequently admitting you don't have any research to prove it conclusively is one of the grandest exhibitions of bullshit I've seen this side of a politician. At the same time, actual studies have shown that that WiFi doesn't make people sick. Considering that Powerwatch has been called out before for these kinds of claims, it's kind of amazing that anyone still takes its claims at face value.
"I see no reason why it's not possible. I've seen lots of peer-review published work that is good enough to say 'Yes, we've found something,' but not good enough to say 'Yes, this is conclusively real'. What we're lacking is good research to prove it conclusively and it's difficult to get funding for the research," Powerwatch technical manager Graham Lanburn told IBTimes UK.
Meanwhile, duped people with wayward felines are flocking to Green Bank, passing an NSA snoop station on their way -- which likely has way more powerful radio waves emanating from its caverns -- all because these people want to pretend to do science. That's both funny and sad, though I think the latter takes precedence.
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Filed Under: electromagnetic sensitivity, green bank, nsa, sugar grove, west virginia, wifi, wireless
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Frankly:
So there is not much of a point to the article's basic premise. One could try harping on the power lines for the snoop center (depending on where they are situated), but that's not really a thing the "electrosensitivity" hype focuses on even though there are significant differences in cancer occurence close to power lines.
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not ignorant, but stupid
If these people merely did not have the actual information, I would agree that they are ignorant. However, since they seem incapable of understanding the facts, 'stupid' would be a better descriptor.
What we now have is a voluntarily created concentration camp for idiots.
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Tinnitus
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The choice NSA made may actually be much clever than we first thought...
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Re: not ignorant, but stupid
I think you mean another one. Twain said it quite well:
"Suppose you were an idiot. And suppose you were a member of Congress. But I repeat myself."
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Re: not ignorant, but stupid
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But what I want to know: "almost everyone has to have cable and satellite TV" - satellite dishes don't pick up EM waves? And do they all have flat panel TVs, cos you know?
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Nothing I own would work!
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Re:
or it could be that the farmers AVOIDED bringing too often crop weed dusters/fertilizers or other large mechanized farming tools under the high voltage lines.
Reasons could be many:
a) drivers of such farming vehicles were afraid of the electomagnetic energy - thus avoiding the area - and thus the crops remaining un-treated and their growth stunted
b) farm vehicle drivers avoid the areas under the power lines when there are crops there, in case a power cable happened to fall on the grown and is still powered on
c) some farm vehicle drivers hurry to get out from under the power lines -> the crops in that area receive less anti-fungal care or fertilizer treatment
d) and so on...
all of these can lead to stunted growth in crops -> self-fulfilling myth/prophecy?
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http://cryptome.org/dodi/2013/opnav-5400-2215.pdf
Oh wait, the liability shift for adopting chip and pin credit cards happens on October 1st of that year. They are going to have to abandon their credit cards as well.
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If this phenomenon is real, should we be allowing these people to continue to breed?
A sensitivity such as that which they claim to have would be passed down to their offspring.
In an ever-increasing wireless world, things are only going to get worse and we can't have a bunch of signal-sensitive people stopping the flow of progress.
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self-limiting, I think
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About Greenbank
That being said...while WiFi cannot make people seriously ill, the idea radio signals screwing with our brains is not all that uncommon and does have a more scientific base in psychology than one thinks. It cannot cause damage, but one cannot forget about how humans used to find where north is pointed.
Mind you I do find it a bit ironic that a certain conspiracy group is encouraging people to move to a radio free zone that happens to be the home of an NSA listening post...I just cannot totally discount the psychological results of living and growing up in a radio free zone. This means people aren't totally focused on the demands of being on social media and get on with their lives.
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Re: Frankly:
But there aren't. Some studies have shown a slight increase in certain types of cancer in populations living or working near power lines, but nothing that could come anywhere near being called "significant". Most studies show no statistically meaningful correlation.
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Re:
But researchers do. This has been studied intensively since at least the '70s. The answer is: no, or almost no health effects.
Electromagnetic energy can certainly affect living things, including humans. Many animals (even your dog) can, for instance, tell which way is north by sensing the electromagnetic field of the Earth.
However, to get adverse effects, you have to have an insane amount of EM energy. Way more than could ever be produced by radio towers, power lines, etc. And you have to be really close to the source -- remember that EM energy decreases at a rate of the square of the distance from the source.
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Re:
Which also produce EM radiation.
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Re: About Greenbank
EM radiation, properly modulated, absolutely can induce psychological effects including full-blown hallucinations. However the power levels required are such that you won't find them outside of the lab or very physically close to certain specialized installations (some military radar, for example).
There is no actual evidence that the EM radiation levels found in everyday life -- even if you live near a TV/radio/cell tower -- has any effect. There are a handful of studies that show a minor effect, but they a a small percentage. Most studies find nothing statistically significant.
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It's time to make money!
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On the flip side i've seen many legitimate warnings to avoid electric heating pads because the EMFs they put out are bad for you, i assume that means they are a very high level, but if they are harmful then low levels may have some effect.
A few simple precautions are reasonable, but these people who claim they are being harmed should consent to be tested in controlled condition, in a double blind manner, then it can be determined if they are just placebo affected or they would be proving there can be actual effects.
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You blame them for people for not doing their own research and blindly moving somewhere. Those people deserved it. It's called common sense.
And you know... since plants die (or fail to grow) next to wifi, we're sure all the studies are BS and this is obviously a conspiracy.
And finally, we all know the scientific value of "don't seem to have any effect on the general population". That's really scientific right there.
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The reason I say this is that over a period of time I have found that I have more vivid, bizarre, and memorable dreams when I sleep with the Wi-Fi router in my house turned on. I used to turn my Wi-Fi router off at night, but would occasionally forget, and it got to the point where I would know immediately on waking up when this had happened. I now have it on a mains timer to switch off overnight.
I have also heard anecdotal evidence of other people experiencing similar effects. As an example, my elderly in-laws moved house to be nearer to us, and soon afterwards started to complain of disturbed sleep and nightmare like dreams.
I realised that in their old house their router was in their study where everything was switched off at night. In the new house the router was located in the living room behind the TV and Hi-Fi, and was not being switched off at night. I put the router on a time switch to switch it off overnight, and they stopped having the problem.
Maybe this would make a good research project for someone. I understand from reading about sleep research that dreaming episodes during sleep can be detected. If intensity and duration of dreaming can be recorded with and without Wi-Fi, it might be possible to confirm this effect.
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Pathetic
Anything is possible, I am sure there are actually people that are sensitive to it. Crazier things exist. They have done blind studies and no one has been able to tell the difference from a box with LED lights labeled wifi and an actual wifi signal.
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Timmah... are you confusing chem-trails with cloud seeding
Because we know exactly how Silver iodide released into the atmosphere will react. /s
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Re: Re:
http://media.culturemap.com/crop/5e/76/600x450/A-spray-truck-douses-a-field-with-chemical-fert ilizers-and-herbicides_133850.jpg
Sunlight differences?
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/ca/St_jean_htpl.jpg
Dont see how hydro towers will do that.
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Re: Re: Re:
Actually I did go looking for pics of this and was unable to find any, but I did find one tree fighting back by trying to eat the powerlines.
http://arbortech.biz/files/2013/09/powerlines.jpg
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Re: Timmah... are you confusing chem-trails with cloud seeding
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Re: Tinnitus
-
Its onset was long after I left that industry and please excuse the gruesome details but it happened after taking a strenuous bowel movement and walking downstairs. The hum started and never went away. Its around the 16k frequency.
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Re: Re: Re:
When you bury things like that, the soil is compacted and is less fertile as a result. Crops grown on that soil (which can't be deeply tilled for obvious reasons) will be smaller and thrive less. This is what is causing what you see. If those power lines were disabled or removed, it wouldn't affect the crops underneath one bit.
You can see supporting evidence for yourself -- not every utility corridor has stuff buried underneath the power lines, and if you look around you'll see many instance of the same kind of lines with perfectly normal crops growing underneath them.
Correlation is not proof of causation.
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Re:
Sorry, that was Jim, he's a bit of a dick.
Actually the best way to counteract this is to leave all of your computers on as well, oh yeah and change any passwords to password. You'll get the best night sleep ever.
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Look-elsewhere effect
From the Wikipedia article:
"A Swedish study in 1992 tried to determine whether or not power lines caused some kind of poor health effects. The researchers surveyed everyone living within 300 meters of high-voltage power lines over a 25-year period and looked for statistically significant increases in rates of over 800 ailments. The study found that the incidence of childhood leukemia was four times higher among those that lived closest to the power lines, and it spurred calls to action by the Swedish government. The problem with the conclusion, however, was that they failed to compensate for the look-elsewhere effect; in any collection of 800 random samples, it is likely that at least one will be at least 3 standard deviations above the expected value, by chance alone. Subsequent studies failed to show any links between power lines and childhood leukemia, neither in causation nor even in correlation."
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Re:
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Re:
No legitimate researcher will ever say that EM radiation is "completely harmless". I don't say any such thing either. What they will say is what the evidence supports -- that any effect observed so far ranges from statistically meaningless to extremely minor.
"i've seen many legitimate warnings to avoid electric heating pads because the EMFs"
Why do you say they're "legitimate warnings"? Who issued them? Based on what?
I've seen plenty of legitimate warnings about heating pads and such, but not because of EM radiation -- but rather because of the possibility of burns or electrical faults.
I've also seen people warning about EM radiation from such things, but they're the very same people who warn about all the other EM sources and based on the same, nearly nonexistent, evidence.
"these people who claim they are being harmed should consent to be tested in controlled condition, in a double blind manner, then it can be determined if they are just placebo affected or they would be proving there can be actual effects."
Well, the study as you propose here wouldn't work as the claimed harm has already occurred. What you want is to study healthy people and see if they suffer ill effects at a rate greater than healthy people who aren't exposed to EM sources.
Lots of such studies have, in fact, been done (and are continuing) both with animals and assays of human populations (looking for things like clusters of illness close to large EM sources.) So far, nothing much has been found.
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Re: It's time to make money!
The tigers tend to get really angry when you transform their signals.
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Re:
This is simply, plainly, and provably false. In my own home, I have a more-powerful-than-normal WiFi rig that is hidden by houseplants. The rig wasn't always behind the plants, and their growth didn't change, for better or worse, once it was placed next to them.
If you don't believe me, you can easily do the experiment for yourself.
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Re: Re:
Now that I think of it, can ghosts see microwaves (WiFi is in the microwave frequency range) like we see normal light? If they do, an idle WiFi access point would appear as a very weak light blinking at around 10Hz. That could be fairly annoying, depending on how that specific ghost feels about constantly blinking lights.
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Maybe it's an Amish ghost?
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Re: It's time to make money!
Could be something to that. Rocks have been around a long time contributing to the magnetic field of the whole planet - have you EVER seen a rock get sick and die?
Maybe the protective effect of being close to a Natural Magnetic Field Rock (tm) would cancel out the wifi, leading to alleviation of symptoms of suffering humans and the return of wandering cats.
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Re: Re: About Greenbank
Because then the intermediate bursts with which your cellphone contacts the next tower will use less power.
WiFi is peanuts against cellphones.
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Re:
It's all in the persons head. As in they are crazy! It's not Wifi. So I guess these people move to this place and don't on a single TV because that would put out more electrical Radiation then Wifi. Hell, they shouldn't own a phone either. Hell shouldn't have any power in the house period as that would be much worse then Wifi. So I guess they're building Log Cabins and manually pumping their own water because no electricity. No TV, No phone, no nothing. Down to basics, because anything else, it's in their head!!!
Of course they're still not getting away from Satellite Radio. No different from Wifi. GPS is another. Lots of things beamed down from the sky you can't hide from except in a lead lined cave.
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Re:
I'd bet you if anyone did a blind test and put a Wifi Router right behind the person and then tell the person when it was on/off, the person would FAIL!!! If you can FEEL it, this should be a simple test to get right. Point blank range!!!
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Re: Re: It's time to make money!
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Re: Re: Frankly:
Link to said studies.
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Re: Frankly:
Does the information they receive stay there? They don't send that information to other NSA offices for study; other governments for swappy info?
I think they both receive, and send data. Given the gigantic satellite dishes in Green Bank, something is going on there.
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Re: Re: Timmah... are you confusing chem-trails with cloud seeding
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Relevent
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I know everyone wants to call these people idiots...
* Mercury (ingested for medicinal purposes even)
* DDT
* Radioactive materials (drink that plutonium, it's good for your body)
* Tobacco (isn't addictive and doesn't hurt your lungs...at all)
* Formula instead of breast milk (sorry, it's actually missing tons of enzymes that prevent allergies and illnesses later in life)
* Soybean oil (absolutely can't cause allergic reactions...unless it's pressed...which it always is)
* Nutrasweet (I'm told that it absolutely doesn't give me migraines, it couldn't possibly)
It's no wonder that people don't believe scientists who are absolutely dogmatic about their opinions only to be found wrong a decade later.
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Re: Re: Frankly:
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Re: Re: Tinnitus
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Re: Re:
I've seen different variations of how crops are planted under low energy lines. Sometimes, the farmer decides it isn't worth going around each of the poles, and just doesn't plant those few feet. This is especially the case where the edge is relatively short. On longer fields, the farmer may decide not to let that space go to waste.
I can only think of one or two places where those low power line actually cross over a field - I know in at least one of those cases, the farmer attempts to plant every inch of his fields he possibly can, so I'm pretty sure he plants under those lines, but I can't recall if I've ever noticed any difference in plant size.
High energy line pylons take up considerably more area, and run across property in any direction. Farmers almost always opt to plant under the lines and go around the pylons.
But, maybe I just haven't paid enough attention. I'll pay closer attention this summer, and see if I can see whatever differences there are.
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Re: Re:
http://youtu.be/VoCMbJSEsJc
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Re: Re:
But the source are power lines rather that points, so electric and magnetic fields around a single line only decrease inversely proportional to the distance.
But we are not talking single lines here, but rather matched lines with net voltage/current being close to zero (at least with AC, no idea about DC transmission). And multipole fields decrease a lot faster over distance because of cancellation.
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Re: Re:
Noise pollution from shitty switching power supplies is not all that uncommon.
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Re: and this is obviously a conspiracy.
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Re: Why would you think that it might not be real?
Cancer rates only seem high because we have eliminated so many other traditional forms of death. Why do you think people are living longer?
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Re: Re: About Greenbank
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What an astonishing collection of jackasses
1. The people who have moved there didn't ask to be written about. They're not a lobby advocating sweeping changes in laws. They've experienced health problems; they self-diagnosed; they took a course of action that seemed wise; they're happy.
A journalist decided they were kooks who could be used to fuel an easy story. So WTF is up the ass of the author or any of you?
2. There's an astonishing amount of historical ignorance on display. If you read the history of pretty much anything that has been found dangerous and banned, you will discover that there were legions of studies showing that they were perfectly safe. Review the periodicals of the era, and you will find John Fendersons bellowing about the science.
You might want to google the name "John Ioaniddis" and learn a few things about the state of research as we know it.
3. The level of categorical statement here is laughable. While I don't make any brief on behalf of the people who think power lines emit dangerous levels of radiation, what qualifications do any of you have to say that there's no possibility that anyone could be affected to any degree?
You know this how?
Having had two partners who were systematically misdiagnosed-- told that they could not be having the medical complaints they were expressing-- I take a dim view of that sort of sweeping denial. My ex-wife had a problem that hit about one in 60,000 people; an ex turned out to have a 1 in 10,000 issue.
This does not mean that you put the policy recommendations of every Christine Maggliore or Jenny McCarthy into law-- or that you endorse the woo of every John Harvey Kellogg.
It does, however, mean that you remember that the history of science-- especially medicine-- is the process of discovering that what we believed we knew was wrong. And that it is most appropriate to react to a theory based on its probable negative impact on people.
Whacky as he was, Kellogg's ideas weren't fatal. Max Gerson, who claimed his diet could cure cancer, on the other hand, was.
At the point where we consider passing laws to ban all devices that emit radiation, it's appropriate for you all to get your panties into this twist. Short of that, you might want to STFU and be glad that you don't have health conditions that involve chronic pain.
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Nocebo effect
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Re: Re: Frankly:
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Re:
Wow
Just to raise your scientific prowess a touch, did you know that light is also part electromagnetic spectrum?
Can't have that now can we? (aka think of the children!)
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Re: Re:
b) How did the crop get planted?
c) Then the plants would be spaced farther apart and have less competition for nutrients, suggesting they should be healthier.
d) and so on...
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Re: Re:
Some people are allergic to nuts. I'm not.
Some people are allergic to poison ivy. I'm not.
At 14 years of age, I was not allergic to bees. After turning 30, I was/am. I now no longer go to the hospital when stung. I do not carry an epipen. The effects seem to be getting less and less every time. My understanding is it is supposed to get worse.
My point is, different strokes for different folks.
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Re: Re: Re: Timmah... are you confusing chem-trails with cloud seeding
"Are you saying we know the long lasting effects of dumping silver iodide into the sky"
I'm saying that we've been doing it for over fifty years, and in that time there have been numerous studies into its effects, both atmospheric and biological. Certainly there could be some problem with it that hasn't been detected, but half a century of use and study isn't exactly nothing.
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Su pham mam non
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EMF safe zones sprouting up around the world
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Idiots
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