There was a lot of mail after last night's post, surprising since watching all the videos would take some time.
Over the last few decades, I have occasionally borrowed someone's measuring meter to check out my space. The first time, we were testing fluorescent lighting fixtures, especially the ballasts, that were mounted on 8 foot high ceilings. The ballasts are nasty but none of us are eight feet tall so we swapped the bulbs to a natural spectrum (48 new light bulbs for my clinic) but left the fixtures.
When I tested the house where I am now, there were some hot spots, usually where there are heavy appliances or lots of wires in the wall, like in the hallway at the height of the electrical outlets. I have been coping but here are a few tips. Before I moved in, I wrote into the contract with the builder that he would remove the microwave oven. I do not use a cell phone or cordless phone. In fact, I only use a skype phone with a microphone, nothing next to my ear because the pain in my ears from the cordless phone was so severe that I realized I could not use it.
With the dishwasher, there is a very significant difference in the EMF readings when the cycle comes to an end and the clean light is illuminated. If I manually reset the dishwasher, the reading goes down immediately. With the stove, the clock sets off the meter but only if it is held close, not when standing in front of the stove at a distance of two plus feet.
For the computer, the hot spots are where there are fans (and vents) but they are enough of a distance from where I am sitting that they are not setting off the meter when I hold it near my fingers or on my lap. I have no wifi devices or router and the surge protector is the maximum distance possible from my desk. Some teenagers are coming over tomorrow and I might ask them to do some testing and take pictures. It would make a nice project for their school. They might also think twice before using their cell phones.
Lots of people have been ordering Deep Sleep. It works magnificently but one person said it didn't help her. I am going to ask her about an alarm clock near her bed. Sometimes moving it will do the trick. Of course, there are lots of reasons for restless sleep, but if moving a clock or covering it with something like a film bag will lessen the electrosmog, go for it.
The big question people are asking is, Why? Why are corporations creating all the risks and why are they indifferent to feedback? That is hard to say but I think there is a significant conflict of interest between what corporations owe to their investors and what they owe to their customers. To the extent that they are servants of the investors, they can betray not just present customers but future generations. When such injustices are perpetrated in the name of profit, the people have to find ways to opt out.
As some pundits have noted, the issues with tobacco took countless years to get a fair hearing but eventually there were warning labels and then smoke-free zones and ultimately larger and larger smoke-free areas. Of course, there are still lots of retards, but it is now possible for a person such as myself to eat dinner in a restaurant or take a flight without being exposed to second hand smoke. The battle to get from where we were to where we are took a long time.
The mercury amalgam issue is another case in point. In this instance, many European countries were faster than the U.S. so while finding a clean air space in a restaurant might be harder in Germany than here, the amalgams are gone. Industry being what it is, there will always be denial of the problem. Then, something will be leaked, someone will be fired, and one day the truth will be out where everyone can see it.
You do make a difference every time you purchase something. Every choice you make for organic, every choice you make that is environmentally ethical, and every choice you make that shifts your eco footprint counts.
Meanwhile, I urge everyone to be observant. Years ago, I told a story about stopping my car in Nevada just to commune with the mountains and trees, not many trees actually but I became fascinated by the variations in just how gnarly the vegetation is. Everything I was seeing survived nuclear testing or came back after the tests were finally abandoned. The sand looked bleached, almost sterilized by radiation, but this, as we know, challenges the Kingdom of Fungi to decompose the death and regenerate the soil. I disagree strongly with Dr. Klinghardt on the subject of mushrooms. I understand why it seems to doctors and scientists that what they observe holds promise, but I do not think they are seeing the bigger picture, just changes in measurements of what they are used to observing.
Since I started this post a few hours ago, my inbox has been overflowing . . . lots more links and a chance for some meaningful action.
You have until February 6th to weigh in with the FCC, but read the instructions and background material so that your comments actually ring some bells in the ears of bureaucrats:
Now, I want you help you to keep perspectives clear. I am taking measurements all over my property, indoors and outdoors. I will repeat this because the transmissions and hot times may be variable. I hate to say it, but some nasty things are going on in my memory cells. Let me therefore be very personal. Some of you remember that I lost a dog named Tundra some years back, after the Smart Meter was transmitting (according to Puget Sound Energy). Tundra chewed through a 4 x 4 in the fence, something she had never done before. It was a full moon and she was found again on the next full moon. She told the animal communicator she had a headache, very bad headache and went down the road to get away. It goes without saying that she had never done anything like that before. I am going to have to do a bit of work to match dates.
Savika used to nap very near the Smart Meter and spent a lot of time there before she died. She told the animal communicator she had terrible pain in her head and that it was affecting her vision. In fact, her eyes looked quite terrible during the couple days of her life.
I was unable to walk without excruciating pain for six months. I was tentatively blaming it on radiation from Fukushima because it started with a gushing nosebleed, fifth one since the Fukushima accident. It was very hard to stop the bleeding so I lost a lot of blood. The erythrocytes are perforated which is why I thought it has to be radiation, but it could be microwave radiation rather than nuclear radiation. I will experiment and see what I find. For the record, the bleeding was stopped by putting Dragon's Blood into Goji Tonic and drinking quite a lot. We tested this recently in India and realized that Dragon's Blood works by causing erythrocyte aggregation. The platelets were already toast so this herb is clever but too much aggregation is not desirable. I think this is called the rock and the hard place.
Okay, the purpose here is not to whine but to explain. If one is going to be the canary in the mine, one should at least take good notes and share the findings.
When the girls are here tomorrow, I can ask them to take pictures of the meter and plants and meter and various devices. One thing I can tell you with 100% certainty is that the plants that are thriving closest to the Smart Meter are berries and bloodroot. As we know, berries can be significant antioxidants and these are Swedish lingon berries, Himalayan blueberries, and another kind of blueberry. Then, very close to this, the bloodroot is proliferating. It is growing so fast that we had to dig it up yesterday and divide it to give it more space. I am thinking it is capable of DNA repair and this must explain its success as a cancer treatment. It is also highly effective as an antiviral.
Going around just a bit more, the ginkgo looks good and the sea buckthorn looks superb. Remember, I planted these after Fukushima because of their radioprotective properties. However, there is no yarrow in this area. It's all in the front yard so I think it is going to be moved a bit to support the health of the antioxidant plants. It's very important to observe every detail because what Nature is willing to teach us, we can apply to our own survival.
There is a lot more to share, lots and lots, but people are tuning in fast to the Smart Meter problem so I wanted you to know about the FCC and the opportunity to comment.
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