First, I'd like to state that I'm aware of the issues associated with 5G cell towers and the health risks associated with them. Cities and communities across the world have vocally opposed and even banned their construction, and I think they are right to do so.
However, I am curious as to whether the 5G problem is associated with "5G" cell phones.
I have a based friend who may end up needing a new phone for work. Problem is, every phone on the market is "5G", and he wants to take care of himself as best as he can, hence why he's been hesitant to take the plunge on a newer phone.
Fortunately, we live in a county that recently denied multiple permit requests for 5G towers, so we're not as worried about 5G towers.
But do 5G smartphones have the same health risks as the 5G towers?
I'd appreciate feedback from people in the know.
I did not demonize the sun. I said that you absorb more thermal energy from sunlight, and that this sunlight (which is partially UV) is far more likely to give you cancer or other damage than cellular networks. These are objectively true facts.
I'd like to see any instance of someone getting sunburn-like symptoms from using their phone. I'm around phones and computers 24/7 and have never experienced any negative effects; nor has anyone else I've ever known, most of whom consistently use phones as well.
I compare cellular networks to the sun to give people a proportional sense of scale. If sunlight is generally not harmful (with the exception of sunburns), then 5G is going to be even more harmless, especially since it imparts orders of magnitude less energy.
Oh, so when studies show that UV cause sunburns and are linked to skin cancer, it's demonizing, but when other studies show a weak correlation between 5G and cancer, it's totally legit. How convenient.
Again, not only do you have to show a correlation between radio waves and (insert malady here), but you also have to 1) propose a physical mechanism for why radio waves cause it, 2) prove by experiment that the proposed mechanism works, and 3) conclusively eliminate all other possible causes (genetics, exposure to other types of radiation, exposure to other carcinogenic substances, exposure to diseases, vaccination status, lifestyle choices, etc.)
At best only a weak correlation has been established between radio waves and (insert your disease of choice here). None of the other work has been done. I've said before and I'll keep saying it until people get it: correlation is not causation. That is a shortcut for lazy people who don't want to go through the work of proving their claims.
-"3) conclusively eliminate all other possible causes..."
What an utterly preposterous standard.
What’s preposterous is to not consider all the evidence and hold to theory and conjecture over data. Preposterous and lazy.
Why do scientists hold to evolution and Big Bang cosmology despite their failures? Why do we have flat earthers, terrain theorists, and ancient alien theorists?
They all have one thing in common: they are so wedded to their pet theories that they stubbornly refuse to consider all the relevant data and refuse to consider more reasonable explanations for the data that they do consider. All they do is shoot themselves in the foot, show themselves to be intellectually dishonest, and impede scientific progress.
I'm not talking about that. I'm talking about your requirement that someone 'conclusively eliminate' all other possible causes. That is a ridiculous standard worthy of scorn.
The problem is we still live in a world when most scientists even considering this matter think that for radiation to cause a biologic effect it has to ionize DNA or RNA because they think change occurs from inside out in a cell, period, end of story.
The reality of epigenetic science shows exactly the opposite; it has been observed how incident non ionizing EMF affects hyperglycemia, permeation of the BBB, calcium efflux via alterting VGCCs, ubiquitination, and so on. So for example, part of the Warburg hypothesis is linked to hyperglycemia. Hyperglycemia is exactly what Nora Volkow found in 2011 and what Allen Frey found in the 1960’s and 70’s when the brain was exposed to nnEMF. AMPk pathways are raised. They described this process in their papers.
These observations are made because Outside -> In is the key mitochondrial effect which can result in turning on genes more than we would like. This is why ubiquitin marking and a relative pseudohypoxia are both elevated in most chronic disease states. Cancer is a chronically “turned on” version of growth that is uncontrolled; which follows from circadian light cycles (a form of non ionizing incident EMF mismanagement) being decoupled from ubiquitin cycling.
David Sinclair’s results published n his landmark 2013 paper shows that in diseases of aging low NAD+ and pseudohypoxia in the mitochondria of cells linked to a redox shift was the key change to aging and mitochondrial heteroplasmy. If you don't know what heteroplasmy means you can go find Doug Wallace's papers and lectures on mitochondrial DNA and bioenergetics. He's the one who discovered mito DNA are inherited from the maternal line only.
If researchers continue to look in the nuclear genome for answers to diseases of aging including cancer, while the mitochondria are essentially ignored even though they control all the energetics of cells and ultimately orchestrate DNA expression, how many well funded, smoking gun mechanism studies would one expect to find regarding NIR and (insert chronic malady)? We are only able to go to the papers and studies already conducted that have definitively observed effects like cited above with proposed mechanisms, and connect the dots as you educate yourself on biophysics and the mitochondria. Your criteria, incidentally the same criteria used by the telcom industry who's lawyers and leaders often end up part of the 'industry regulatory' FCC, obviously excludes that sort of work to be done, and hence you reject the precautionary principle as silly, and you use your n=1 self diagnosed experience as proof (?). Of course scientists who demonstrate something akin to potentially inconvenient truths relative to the industry paradigm are marginalized, quackified, defunded, on and on. You can pick up "Going Somewhere" by Andrew Marino for an interesting case study of that.