FRIGHTENING FREQUENCIES: THE DANGERS OF 5G


As the old saying goes, give us an inch and inevitably we’ll want a mile. And certainly, this sentiment is true with technology.

Who doesn’t want faster, bigger (or smaller), more efficient? Take wireless mobile telecommunications. Our current broadband cellular network platform, 4G (or fourth generation), allows us to transmit data faster than 3G and everything that preceded. We can access information faster now than ever before in history. What more could we want? Oh, yes, transmission speeds powerful enough to accommodate the (rather horrifying) so-called Internet of Things. Which brings us to 5G.

Until now, mobile broadband networks have been designed to meet the needs of people. But 5G has been created with machines’ needs in mind, offering low-latency, high-efficiency data transfer. It achieves this by breaking data down into smaller packages, allowing for faster transmission times. Whereas 4G has a fifty-millisecond delay, 5G data transfer will offer a mere one-millisecond delay–we humans won’t notice the difference, but it will permit machines to achieve near-seamless communication. Which in itself  may open a whole Pandora’s box of trouble for us – and our planet.

More bandwidth – more dangers of 5G


Let’s start with some basic background on 5G technology. Faster processing speeds require more bandwidth, yet our current frequency bandwidths are quickly becoming saturated. The idea behind 5G is to use untapped bandwidth of the extremely high-frequency millimeter wave (MMW), between 30GHz and 300GHz, in addition to some lower and mid-range frequencies.

High-frequency MMWs travel a short distance. Furthermore, they don’t travel well through buildings and tend to be absorbed by rain and plants, leading to signal interference. Thus, the necessary infrastructure would require many smaller, barely noticeable cell towers situated closer together, with more input and output ports than there are on the much larger, easier to see 4G towers. This would likely result in wireless antennas every few feet, on every lamp post and utility pole in your neighbourhood.

Here are some numbers to put the dangers of 5G into perspective: as of 2015, there were 308,000 wireless antennas on cell towers and buildings. That’s double the 2002 number. Yet 5G would require exponentially more, smaller ones, placed much closer together, with each emitting bursts of radiofrequency radiation (RFR)–granted, at levels much lower than that of today’s 4G cell towers–that will be much harder to avoid because these towers will be ubiquitous. If we could see the RFR, it would look like a smog that’s everywhere, all the time.

Serious health concerns


First, it’s important to know that in 2011, the World Health Organization’s International Agency for Research on Cancer classified RFR as a potential 2B carcinogen and specified that the use of mobile phones could lead to specific forms of brain tumors.

Many studies have associated low-level RFR exposure with a litany of health effects, including:

DNA single and double-strand breaks (which leads to cancer)


oxidative damage (which leads to tissue deterioration and premature ageing)
disruption of cell metabolism


increased blood-brain barrier permeability

melatonin reduction (leading to insomnia and increasing cancer risks)


disruption of brain glucose metabolism


generation of stress proteins (leading to myriad diseases)


As mentioned, the new 5G technology utilizes higher-frequency MMW bands, which give off the same dose of radiation as airport scanners. The effects of this radiation on public health have yet to undergo the rigours of long-term testing. Adoption of 5G will mean more signals carrying more energy through the high-frequency spectrum, with more transmitters located closer to people’s homes and workplaces–basically a lot more (and more potent) RFR flying around us. It’s no wonder that apprehension exists over potential risks, to both human and environmental health.

Perhaps the strongest concern involves adverse effects of MMWs on human skin. This letter to the Federal Communications Commission, from Dr Yael Stein of Jerusalem’s Hebrew University, outlines the main points. Over ninety percent of microwave radiation is absorbed by the epidermis and dermis layers, so human skin basically acts as an absorbing sponge for microwave radiation. Disquieting as this may sound, it’s generally considered acceptable so long as the violating wavelengths are greater than the skin layer’s dimensions. But MMW’s violate this condition.

Furthermore, the sweat ducts in the skin’s upper layer act like helical antennas, which are specialized antennas constructed specifically to respond to electromagnetic fields. With millions of sweat ducts, and 5G’s increased RFR needs, it stands to reason that our bodies will become far more conductive to this radiation. The full ramifications of this fact are presently unclear, especially for more vulnerable members of the public (e.g., babies, pregnant women, the elderly), but this technology

What’s more, MMWs may cause our pain receptors to flare up in recognition of the waves as damaging stimuli. Consider that the US Department of Defense already uses a crowd-dispersal method called the Active Denial System, in which MMWs are directed at crowds to make their skin feel like it’s burning, and also has the ability to basically microwave populations to death from afar with this technology if they choose to do so. And the telecommunications industry wants to fill our atmosphere with MMWs?

5G harms animals, most of all


Unfortunately, innocent animals have already been the victims of testing to see MMW’s effects on living cells. Extrapolating the results from animal testing to humans isn’t straightforward, but the results nonetheless raise some serious red flags. Perhaps most significantly, a US National Toxicology Program study noted that male rats exposed to RFR for nine hours a day over two years developed rare forms of tumours in the brain and heart, and rats of both sexes developed DNA damage.

The researchers noted that the increased risk to the rats was relatively small; but if these findings translate to humans, the widespread increase in cellphone use could have a significant impact on populations. Thus the NTP study served to renew the debate about the potential harmful effects of cellphones on human health. Not only that, it caused a significant shift in the American Cancer Society’s understanding of radiation and cancer, and sparked them to state that our ignorance of RFR’s impact on human health could be compared to our previous obliviousness to the connection between smoking and lung cancer.

Other animal research worldwide illustrates how microwave radiation in general and MMW’s in particular can damage the eyes and immune system, cell growth rate, even bacterial resistance. An experiment at the Medical Research Institute of Kanazawa Medical University showed that 60GHz millimeter-wave antennas produce thermal injuries in rabbit eyes, with thermal effects reaching below the eye’s surface.

This study, meanwhile, suggests low-level MMW’s caused lens opacity–a precursor to cataracts–in rats’ eyes. A Chinese study demonstrated that eight hours’ of microwave radiation damaged rabbits’ lens epithelial cells. A Pakistani study concluded that exposure to mobile phone EMF prevented chicken embryo retinal cells from properly differentiating.

This Russian study revealed that exposing healthy mice to low-intensity, extremely high-frequency electromagnetic radiation severely compromised their immune systems. And a 2016 Armenian study concluded that low-intensity MMW’s not only depressed the growth of E. coli and other bacteria, but also changed certain properties and activity levels of the cells. The same Armenian study noted that MMW interaction with bacteria could lead to antibiotic resistance – distressing news, considering immunity to bacteria is already compromised due to the overuse of antibiotics.

Finally, one other study I’m aware of says that various animal studies show a significant effect of microwaves in the 5G frequency range on mammals, avian species, and insect pollinators such as honey bees. There also appears to be a negative impact on plant life in the vicinity of cellphone towers to the point where there are notable decreases in fruit and other crop yields.

Again, if these findings translate to humans, our rampant cellphone use would likely cause profound, adverse health effects; an increase in MMW’s as more bandwidth is introduced could further complicate the matter.

But what’s also important to note here is that the danger of 5G technology can not only have a profound impact on human health, but on the health of all living organisms it touches, including plants, as we shall see in more detail, below.

The dangers of 5G extends to the planet, too


Equally disturbing, 5G technology puts environmental health at risk in a number of ways. First, MMWs may pose a serious threat to plant health. This 2010 study showed that the leaves of aspen seedlings exposed to RFR exhibited symptoms of necrosis, while another Armenian study suggested low-intensity MMW’s cause “peroxidase isoenzyme spectrum changes”–basically a stress response that damages cells–in wheat shoots. Plant irradiation is bad news for the planet’s flora, but it’s bad news for us, too: it could contaminate our food supply.

Second, the 5G infrastructure would pose a threat to our planet’s atmosphere. Network implementation will require the deployment of many, short-lifespan satellites via suborbital rockets propelled by hydrocarbon rocket engines. According to this 2010 California study, launching too many of these babies will vomit enough black carbon into the atmosphere to pollute global atmospheric conditions, affecting distribution of ozone and temperature. Worse, solid-state rocket exhaust contains chlorine, an ozone-destroying chemical. How can any government seriously concerned about climate change allow for this?

Third, 5G will potentially threaten natural ecosystems. According to several reports over the last two decades–some of which are summarized here–low-level, non-ionizing microwave radiation affects bird and bee health. It drives birds from their nests and causes plume deterioration, locomotion problems, reduced survivorship and death. And bee populations suffer from reduced egg-laying abilities of queen bees and smaller colony sizes. More evidence of ecosystem disruption comes from this 2012 meta-study, which indicates that 593 of 919 research studies suggest that RFR adversely affects plants, animals and humans.

It bears repeating: 5G is bad news for all living creatures and the planet we share.

Beware the propaganda deluge


Despite being fully aware of all these unsettling results, threats and concerns, the US corporatocracy continues to maintain a gung-ho attitude about 5G. The Mobile Now Act was passed in 2016, and many US states have since gone ahead with 5G plans. The telecom industry’s biggest players have basically co-opted government powers to enforce their 5G agenda, with companies like AT&T and Qualcomm having begun live testing. And despite research showing serious threats to humans and the planet, the FCC Chairman announced intentions to open low-, mid- and high-frequency spectrums, without even mentioning a single word about the dangers.

They’re going to sell this to us as ‘faster browsing speeds’ – but the truth is, you’ll barely even notice the difference. They’re going to call anyone who protests against 5G a ‘Luddite’ or ‘technophobe’. But why such a willingness to embrace another new technology   – even though it carries serious risks and brings spurious benefits? Why not heed the lessons learned from killer products like asbestos, tobacco and leaded gasoline?

Because a tiny percentage of people will gain an awful lot of money, is one reason. And because companies and governments will be given unprecedented amounts of power over civilians is the other.

All isn’t doom and gloom, though. At least one US politician is maintaining some level-headedness: in October, California Governor Jerry Brown stopped legislation that would have allowed the telecom industry to inundate the state with mini-towers. Brown’s bold actions have permitted localities a say in where and how many cell towers are placed.

The state of Hawaii has stopped 5G and smart meters by collectively threatening to charge every person who installed such meters with liability for any health problems residents may suffer. Moreover, 180 scientists have started a petition to warn of the dangers of 5G, especially its potential health effects. Maybe these actions will afford more time for additional studies and data collection. Just as importantly, maybe they’ll cause other politicians and figureheads to reflect on what they’ve been pushing for.

Take action


In the meantime, we as individuals must do everything we can to protect ourselves against the dangers of 5G. Here’s what you can do:

Understand EMFs and their behaviours. Unfortunately, most commercial radiation detectors can only check for 4G and 3G, though.


Plant trees. Tons of trees. Trees block 5G signals.


Protect yourself with an EMF Shield to mark and protect you from hotspots. Try a patented product that neutralizes the harmful effects of mobile phones and other EMF emitting devices on humans.


Whenever possible, limit your exposure: use an anti-radiation headset or speaker mode while talking on a cellphone.


Learn more. This network has tons of great information and ideas on how to protect yourself.
Just refuse to use 5G phones and devices. Full stop. And discourage those you know from doing so.


Refuse to buy anything ‘smart’ – ‘smart’ appliances, ‘smart’ heaters, etc.


Some believe that carrying shungite crystals can offer some protection from radiation – not too sure about this one, though it can’t hurt, I suppose.


No matter what, do NOT get a smart meter – these put high levels of 5G radiation right in your home


Join the growing numbers of dissenters against the dangers of 5G. Get active with them here.
Do as the Hawaiians have done and threaten smart meter and 5G tech installers with liability and class action lawsuits. You can learn how to do that here.


Spread the word! Please share this article with everyone you know, Print out these posters, below and slip them into people’s mailboxes. Post them on street lights.


The Wuhan Coronavirus Death Toll Surpasses SARS


A new strain of coronavirus has the World Health Organization (WHO) and medical officials worried. It's known as Covid-19, or more commonly as the Wuhan coronavirus, named after Wuhan City, China—the virus's epicenter. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director General of the WHO, convened the International Health Regulations Emergency Committee on January 30 and announced that the coronavirus is officially a global health emergency.

Ghebreyesus cited the reasoning for the declaration not only being what's “happening in China, but because of what is happening in other countries.” He added that the declaration was most certainly “not a vote of no confidence in China.”

According to new research, the virus can spread via saliva, urine, and stool. The Washington Post reports that Covid-19 usually takes around “three days from the time of infection for symptoms to manifest.”

On January 31, Delta and American Airlines both announced that they would be stopping service to China. American is ceasing all flights to mainland China immediately through March 27 and Delta will halt flights from February 6 through April 30.

On January 30, the first U.S. case of human-to-human transmission in Chicago. Health officials reporting that the most recent patient is the spouse of a woman who had recently flown back from Wuhan.

Li Wenliang, a Chinese doctor who had reportedly tried to warn colleagues and friends about the health risks associated with the coronavirus, died after contracting the disease on February 6. According to The Washington Post, Wenliang was detained by Chinese police for “rumor-mongering” on January 1, subsequently fell ill, and passed at Wuhan Central Hospital.

Additionally, several passengers have been quarantined aboard cruise ships as the coronavirus continues spreading. More than 60 people aboard the Diamond Princess cruiser—which remains docked in Japan—have tested positive for the virus.

Popular Mechanics reached out to Vineet Menachery, assistant professor of microbiology and immunology at the University of Texas Medical Branch—Galveston, to talk about the Wuhan virus: what it is, why it's spreading, and what you can do to stay safe.

What Is a Coronavirus?

The Covid-19 virus actually belongs to a family of coronaviruses (CoV), which include Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS-CoV) and Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS-CoV). According to the World Health Organization, CoVs can afflict you with something as mild as the common cold or something as deadly as SARS. The virus affecting people now is what’s called a novel coronavirus (nCoV) because it's the first time this particular strain is being seen in humans.

“Before 2002, [the coronavirus] was associated with the common cold in humans,” Menachery tells Popular Mechanics. "In animals, it was associated with severe and often deadly enteric disease mostly in pigs, cats, and other mammals.”

“In 2002, the emergence of SARS-CoV changed that opinion as it caused a severe respiratory disease that spread across the world. SARS-CoV was traced backed to civet cats and raccoon dogs sold in live markets in China. The culling of these market and strict quarantine ended the outbreak,” he adds.

How Does a Coronavirus Spread?

CoV’s are zoonotic viruses, meaning that they can be transmitted between animals and humans. In fact, MERS-CoV and SARS-CoV both reached humans by way of dromedary camels and civets, respectively.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the person-to-person contagion event could be due to “respiratory droplets” exchanged between people in close proximity, but this remains “unclear.”

"Sneezing, coughing, and other close contact likely drives infection,” Menachery says, especially if particles aerosolize during the removal of medical equipment, i.e.: intubation, extubation, during treatment. He notes that this was likely one of the contributing factors that helped the spread of the SARS virus.

Menachery also says that the spread of Covid-19 is possible, but does not appear to be an issue as of yet “based on the exported cases to date.” That is unless Covid-19 infects super spreaders.

“Super spreaders are individuals who amplify transmission...this means these people spread it to double digit people on average,” Menachery says. “We do not know why super spreading occurs, but we know the virus is not specifically different from super spreaders.”

On January 29, Finland became the latest country to confirm its first case of Covid-19. A 32-year-old woman flew in from Wuhan on January 23 and presented with symptoms three days later. An ER visit confirmed she was carrying the virus. She will remain under quarantine and be monitored for two weeks by health officials.

How Did Covid-19 Get to the U.S.?



On New Year’s Eve, the WHO was alerted about several people from Wuhan who were presenting with pneumonia but with no known cause.

Then, between December 31, 2019, and January 3, 2020, 44 cases of people with pneumonia—again, with unknown origin or cause—were reported to the WHO. By January 11, China’s National Health Commission had shared additional details with the WHO that pinned the origin of the Covid-19 outbreak to a seafood market in Wuhan. Additional events include:

January 12: China makes the genetic sequence of Covid-19 available for countries to create their own diagnostic kits.

January 13: Thailand reports its first lab-confirmed case of Covid-19, imported from Wuhan.

January 15: Japan reports their first lab-confirmed case of Covid-19, imported from Wuhan.

January 20: Korea reports their first case of Covid-19, imported from Wuhan.

According to a Situation Report from the WHO, there have been 282 confirmed cases of Covid-19 across four countries (China, Thailand, Japan, Korea) with 51 cases of severely ill people who are presenting with at least one of the following: dyspnea, a respiratory rate of 30+ bpm, hypoxemia, or chest x-rays showing multi-lobar or pulmonary infiltrates that are progressing rapidly (“more than 50 percent within 24-48 hours”).

The first case of Covid-19 in the U.S. was announced on January 21, 2020, in Washington state. A man who had recently traveled through Wuhan came back to the U.S. and presented with symptoms of the new coronavirus. A specimen was taken from the patient and overnighted to the CDC where it was confirmed that the man had Covid-19 using a Real time Reverse Transcription-Polymerase Chain Reaction (rRT-PCR) test.

NPR reports that the man is currently quarantined at Providence Regional Medical Center and is otherwise in good health. Additionally, 12 people are in critical condition worldwide, presenting with either respiratory failure, septic shock, and/or some form of organ failure requiring ICU admission.

On January 24, the first possible case of Covid-19 was announced at Texas A&M University, where a student was being monitored after presenting with symptoms of the virus. In a news release, the university said that the “immediate health risk to the campus community” was “low.”

As January 27, there were five confirmed cases of coronavirus in the U.S. with California and Arizona being the latest states to confirm as much. In the U.S., an additional 73 individuals are being tested for Covid-19. Their results are pending.

On January 29, a plane evacuating American citizens who had been living in or near Wuhan, landed at March Air Reserve Base in California. Everyone on board underwent multiple health screenings—in China, before boarding and again in Alaska, where the plane stopped for fuel—and passed.

The group will be held in isolation to be monitored for Covid-19 for a period of time before being able to go home.

What Safety Measures are Governments Taking?
The CDC reports that it has created a test to diagnose Covid-19 and is working with international health organizations and governments to administer the test in hopes of catching symptoms early on.

“The main goal of the government will be to limit spread of the virus and find its source. In China, front line workers in the healthcare system are wearing proper protective equipment to prevent their infection," Menachery says. "Patients are being held in isolation wards to prevent spread.”

The city of Wuhan has also been placed under isolation and various forms of public transportation have been brought to a halt. In an effort to stop Covid-19 in its tracks, China has also extended the quarantine to the cities of Huanggang and Ezhou. This unprecedented move cuts an estimated 19 million people off from the rest of the world.

Airports across the U.S. began conducting additional health screenings on people flying in from China and the CDC stationed several employees at these airports.

Is There a Cure?

Currently, there is no cure or vaccine for Covid-19. However, now that the virus has been sequenced, chances of effective treatments—including the possibility of a vaccine—are more likely.

“There are no approved vaccines or therapeutics for any of the respiratory coronaviruses,” Menachery says, but adds that some studies preparing to enter the human trials phase “would likely be effective against this novel virus.”

Treatment for Covid-19 could see doctors prescribing remdesivir—an antiviral drug—which has shown “efficacy against CoVs early after the start of infection and has had success against Ebola,” Menachery says.

Scientists are working at “breakneck” speed to create a vaccine that'll stop the virus which has already killed 106 people in China. The Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI) announced that they would split $12.5 million between three companies—Moderna, Inovia, and the University of Queensland, Australia—to fund Covid-19 vaccine research. Scientists are hoping to be ready for human tests “16 weeks from now.”

How Can I Protect Myself?

“The public in the United States should be aware, but not yet worried,” Menachery says. He adds that most of the people at risk of developing severe Covid-19 complications are those who are elderly, live with chronic conditions such as diabetes, Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) and heart disease.

Also according to the WHO, there are some simple preventive measures you can take to protect yourself from this strain:

Regularly washing your hands and using alcohol-based sanitizers

Covering your nose and mouth when you cough and sneeze

Utilizing face masks when in crowded areas

Avoid consuming raw or undercooked animal products such as milk, meat, and eggs

Avoid close contact with people exhibiting symptoms such as fevers, coughs, sneezing, and difficulty breathing

If you present with any of these symptoms, visit your medical provider immediately and share your recent travel history with them

Avoiding contact with live animals in areas where there have been cases of Covid-19

The CDC, WHO, and several other governments and organizations are working around the clock to pinpoint what caused the outbreak of Covid-19 in the first place, contain, and eradicate it. If you present with any of the symptoms visit your healthcare provider immediately.