The introduction of microwave communication into society has a much more sinister aim than to increase the rates of cancer, which is one aim. Throughout the 1960's and 1970's our intelligence agencies were experimenting with microwaves and they found that microwaves are deadly to the human. With sufficient strength they can cause cancer. But at certain frequencies they can interfere with, and even control, brain function. So along with microwave-based mobile telephone communications we are now experiencing a rush towards microwave wireless broadband communications. And to add to that in the next few years, TV and radio are going digital too!
The effect of all this on the human brain will be like a gentle, silent hammer tap, tap, tapping away at your brain as all those digital signals slowly and gently interfere with and potentially change the operating frequency of the human brain on a mass scale. You've seen pictures of the newly built span bridge in the USA which collapsed when the wind began rocking the bridge at its natural frequency, and the bridge seemed to gain energy from somewhere and began to sway violently until its supports could not take the stress? That is called resonance. The wind found the natural frequency of the bridge and amplified it until it collapsed. A similar effect will occur with the human brain and these digital microwave signals, the brain as the bridge and the mirowaves as the wind. Our thoughts will be clouded. Our behaviour will change. This was shown in a report after TETRIS was introduced into Lancashire and the policemen involved began reporting feeling disturbed and violent.
All these modern communications systems are built on the research of our intelligence agencies during the 1960's and 1970's, and are simply a way of sneakily introducing a system of mass invisible electronic control.
From http://www.newsoftheworld.co.uk/story_pages/news/news5.shtml
KILLER ON THE ROOF
By Guy Basnett
SIX neighbours from the same floor of a block of flats have all been hit by cancer after two phone masts were installed on the building now dubbed The Tower of Doom.
Two people died after the disease struck in six out of just eight homes on the top storey.
Tenant Mike Cole, 70, said: "It's like living on Death Row. You're constantly worrying who's going to be next."
And campaigners say the shock statistic, uncovered by the News of the World, flies in the face of government guidelines which maintain no link has yet been proved between mobile masts and sickness.
Our investigation has also revealed local authorities around the country are raking in cash from mobile networks by allowing them to site masts on tower blocks, and council buildings.
The cancer rate on the fifth floor of Berkeley House in Bristol is TEN TIMES that of the rest of the UK.Cancer Research say two per cent of people suffer from the disease. Yet on that floor alone it affects nearly 20 PER CENT.
All the cases have occurred since the Vodafone and Orange masts were put up 10 years ago...and two women neighbours have already fallen victim to the killer on the roof.
Barbara Wood, who lived at No 42, died two years ago, in her 70s, from breast cancer that spread to her stomach. Two years previously a Mrs Davies, of No 47, died of the same disease.
Two more residents—Bernice Mitchell, 68, and 62-year-old Hazel Frape— have both had breast cancer. An 89-year-old woman moved out after she contracted the same disease.
And 63-year-old John Llewellin, from No 48, is battling bowel cancer.
CLICK HERE TO FIND OUT WHERE YOUR LOCAL MASTS ARE
Other residents, such as Doreen Sheppard, 73, from No 45, have complained of headaches and other health problems.
Doreen told the News of the World: "I get terrible headaches, and I've started suffering Meniere's disease, where I lose my balance.
"I blame it on the masts. They're right on top of our homes."
South Gloucestershire Council has been trying to get the masts taken down after its agreement with the phone companies ended in 2004. But the firms are fighting the move and the masts still loom over residents while legal wrangles continue.
Schools
Other residents are worried about the effect on children. There are three schools within 250 yards of the flats — Christchurch Downend Infants School, Christchurch Downend Primary and Staple Hill Primary.
Last year the Government's chief advisor on mobile phone safety Sir William Stewart, the head of the National Radiological Protection Board, called for a ban on erecting masts near schools.
Sir William — who bans his own grandchildren from using mobile phones unless it's an emergency — said: "I don't think we can put our hands on our hearts and say mobiles are safe. If there are risks, and we think there may be, the people who will be most affected are children. The younger the child, the greater the danger."
The World Health Organisation says evidence "so far" shows no adverse short or long-term effects from mobile phone base stations.
But in August the International Journal of Cancer Prevention published a report claiming people's risk of contracting cancer was FOUR TIMES greater if they live near a mast.
The Bristol cancer cluster is not the only one being blamed on phone masts.
Families in three streets surrounding an Orange mast in Shooters Hill, Stoke-on-Trent, claim the radiation has led to seven deaths. Four died from brain haemorrhages within three years. Three others succumbed to cancer.
However an Orange spokeswoman said: "We're satisfied our base stations, operating within international guidelines, are safe and do not present a health risk."
NURSERY LINK TO TINY TOT VICTIMS
THREE children taught at a nursery school next to a mast developed leukaemia. And a further three living nearby also suffered the disease.
Nurse Tracy Rimmer, 36, says her daughter Penny was diagnosed with leukaemia after attending the Kinderworld Montessori nursery, in Southport, Lancs.
Penny, who attended the school for two years, was sent for treatment at Liverpool's Alder Hey Children's Hospital. "There we bumped into the parents of two other children from the nursery, both with leukaemia," said mum Tracy. "It was a staggering coincidence."
Penny, now eight, beat the disease. But campaigners claim children—with their thinner skulls and developing brains—are most at risk from phone mast radiation.
And Health Protection Agency chairman Sir William Stewart, has called for a ban on masts near schools "as a precautionary measure".
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