Part I of an investigative piece from May, now timelier than ever. BTW, we can thank Obama/Trump, and, of course, the FCC, for pushing this---and the New York Times/Verizon, among others.
MCM >From Gary Kohls: > Note to Anti-over-vaccination colleagues: Given the fact that 1) 5G is > known to damage DNA and, given the fact that 2) vaccines are also known to > cause DNA damage, shouldn’t the vaccine corporations and their supporters > in the NIH, the CDC, the NIAID, etc be forced to acknowledge the high risk > of synergistic DNA damage and therefore be required to do extensive testing > on all categories of potential patients (7 billion, according to Bill > Gates) who are going to be at risk of exposure to both toxins > simultandously (5G and each of the new experimental vaccines)? > Basic medical ethics would require doing double-blind safety testing on all > age, racial, pregnancy, chronic illness, etc categories that will be at > risk. Discuss. GGK > > *Duty to Warn* > > *The Dangerous Race to 5G (in which the winners will likely be the actual > losers)* > > *How Big Wireless Lobbied/Bribed Democratic Party President Barak Obama > and Republican Party Donald Trump to Fast-track 5G for Citizen Data > Collection and Surveillance > <https://www.mintpressnews.com/big-wireless-lobbied-5g-data-collection-surveillance/267355/>* > > > *While selling 5G technology to the public as a means for faster > downloads, Big Wireless — comprising a web of telecom companies, corporate > lobbyists and corporate law firms– is spending millions to lobby > governments and regulatory agencies the world over to implement the next > generation of cellular technology because of its potential for data > collection and surveillance of citizens while simultaneously lying about > 5G’s multiple health dangers, including damage to brain DNA.* > > *By Derrick Broze <https://www.mintpressnews.com/author/derrick-broze/>– > May 11, 2020 (4348 words)* > > > https://www.mintpressnews.com/big-wireless-lobbied-5g-data-collection-surveillance/267355/#.XrnpXuqexI4.email13 > Comments > > While the debate continues around 5G’s potential impact on human health, > the environment and wildlife, often overlooked in the discussion about 5G > is how the technology will be used for data collection and surveillance. > Big Wireless has spent over three decades lobbying state powers to build > this technology while selling it to the public as a means for faster > downloads. > > In that time the Cellular Telecommunications & Internet Association – an > organization whose leadership has maintained a revolving door relationship > with the U.S. Federal Communication Commission – has collaborated on or > guided regulatory policy related to not only 5G, but the roll out of cell > phones and other digital technology. The CTIA annually lobbies for the > industry to the tune of millions of dollars, making them one of the most > powerful telecom lobby groups. > > The COVID19 pandemic has caused governments around the world to lockdown > their nations, cancel public school sessions, and cost millions of people > their jobs. Fears of spreading the virus and overloading the healthcare > system are triggering an authoritarian response from many of these > governments — including the United States. For many Americans, these > aggressive measures have halted typical daily activities. Taking a trip to > the gym, work, school, or out with friends – are no longer an option. > > However, while most non-essential activities have stopped, the > controversial expansion of the 5th generation of cellular infrastructure > has continued. With the support and lobbying of the CTIA, Big Wireless’ 5G > agenda is quickly expanding. Records from ProPublica > <https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=https%3A%2F%2Fprojects.propublica.org%2Frepresent%2Flobbying%2F300985950%3Ffbclid%3DIwAR3-lkLGxjyBqgNgdqOncRyCNDjCM4WDqpc4nSupC5kWULwvV4yYoNlz20w&h=AT3NLtXzdu0Iah9wfZAr1fF5H3BycBEhSvjj-yhqZCyYLKXDI9sm6Md6HkdkyE1XHFwm62uFiU8aelMuyF3amO7ZISG_9WaS9jEuy2lh8cg3EAdT_QJ9zWidkPnSdv2L5mAcd_c14Z5iec-9TxL02A> > show > the CTIA lobbied for 2 recent bills related to 5G infrastructure. > > On March 23, the 5G rollout took one step forward in the U.S. when > President Donald Trump signed a bill aimed at “securing America’s 5G > infrastructure.” The Secure 5G and Beyond Act > <https://www.congress.gov/bill/116th-congress/senate-bill/893/text> calls > for Congress to present a comprehensive plan for accelerating the nation’s > 5G network “not later than 180 days.” The building of the next generation > network has rapidly advanced due to the passing of the Secure 5G and Beyond > Act and the Broadband Deployment Accuracy and Technological Availability > (DATA) Act > <https://www.congress.gov/bill/116th-congress/house-bill/4229/text/pcs>, > which passed the House in December 2019. > > In April 2019, President Donald Trump held a press conference where he > stated his intention to expand the U.S. wireless infrastructure as part of > the effort to defeat China in the so-called “Race to 5G”. During the press > conference Trump stood next to the head of the Federal Communications > Commission and telecommunication employees as he declared, *“The race to > 5G is on and we must win.” *While Trump is certain that America must win > this apparent race – even during the middle of a pandemic – determining > exactly who is the driving force behind the push towards the 5th generation > of cellular technology requires digging through decades of lawsuits, > industry corruption, and captured agencies. > > *In part I of this investigation, this report will take a deep dive into > the web of Big Wireless, who those companies are, its lobbyists, law firms > and industry as a whole that are spending millions of dollars pushing for > 5G around the world. This report will expose the murky history of Big > Wireless working within telecom companies that work with the US government > to collect data on citizens, while also looking at how Big Wireless has > worked to bully and silence critics who have expressed concern over its > health impacts and civil liberties.* > > *Part II of this series will look at how 5G will be used as a surveillance > tool by governments to collect data on citizens and will work to fulfil the > overall goal of creating a techno-tyranny state that should concern any > American citizen that upholds their civil liberties.* > > *What is 5G?* > > Over the last couple years telecom companies and governments have spent > billions of dollars promoting, marketing, and building the next generation > of telecom technology, known as 5G, or 5th Generation. The telecom > companies involved in various aspects of the 5G rollout include Crowd > Castle, American Tower, and Towerstream on the infrastructure side, and > Comcast, Verizon, T-Mobile, Sprint, and AT&T on the internet/mobile service > provider side. > > Beginning with the introduction of 1G in 1979, a new generation of > cellular standards has appeared approximately every ten years. Each > generation is characterized by new frequency bands, higher data rates and > non–backward compatible transmission technology. As we move into the > 2020’s, the shift to the 5th generation has begun. Beginning in late 2018, > cities like Houston, Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Denver, San Diego, New York > City, and Washington D.C. started deploying 5g for residential and > commercial use. > > *Beware the Internet of Things (IoT)* > > While 5g is often touted as the solution to 4k movie downloads and virtual > reality games, the new generation is also expected to herald the beginning > of Smart Cities, where driverless cars, traffic lights, pollution sensors, > smart phones and countless other smart devices interact in what is known as > “The Internet of Things.” The IoT has raised alarm bells for some privacy > advocates because it will involve surrounding the public with hundreds of > thousands of interconnected devices and sensors which are gathering mass > amounts of data that will be used for public advertising and monitoring of > habits. 5G infrastructure will be the backbone to the IoT. > > The switch from 4g to 5g is a change unlike those of previous generations. > One notable difference is that 5G technology uses much higher frequencies, > ranging from 10-300 GHZ. > > Currently, 4G wireless systems operate on 700 to 2700 MHz. 5g is using > millimeter waves which do not travel far and are easily blocked by trees, > buildings, and walls. Due to the nature of mm waves the FCC has stated that > for 5G to operate successfully it will require the installation of hundreds > of thousands of new cell sites, towers, and additions to existing > infrastructure. > > Due largely to the concerns about this exponential increase in towers (and > the subsequent exposure to radiofrequency > <https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S037842742030028X> > radiation > <https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S037842742030028X>) > the 5G roll out has been opposed by thousands of doctors, scientists, > health professionals, and even the U.S. military and branches of the U.S. > government. The movement against the 5G roll out also sparked a global day > of protest in January and April 2020. Meanwhile, nations like Sweden > <https://telecoms.com/500957/sweden-decides-to-delay-5g-spectrum-allocation/> > , Slovenia > <https://srbin.info/drustvo/slovenija-zaustavila-uvodjenje-5g-tehnologije-ne-znamo-da-li-je-opasna-po-ljude/>, > and cities like Brussels, Belgium > <https://www.brusselstimes.com/brussels/55052/radiation-concerns-halt-brussels-5g-for-now/> > have > decided to ban or temporarily halt the roll out of the new infrastructure > until further health studies are conducted. > > *Who’s Behind the Race to 5G?* > > For the last year, Americans have been peppered with messages from > telecommunications companies and the tech industry at large, stressing the > importance of being first in the *Race to 5G.* We are told if we want > driverless vehicles, robot assistants, cleaner and safer cities, and more > convenient lives we must support and pay for the upgrades to 5G. > Apparently, the public should also ignore the fact that this upgrade has > sparked lawsuits over health, privacy, and local power concerns. But beyond > being a lackluster marketing campaign to convince the public to adopt the > next generation of cell phones and devices, what exactly is this race about > > > Geopolitically speaking, the *Race to 5g* describes the ongoing rift > between the U.S. and China, the new digital Cold War where these two > superpowers race to implement the next generation of cellular technology > because of its potential for massive profit and massive data collection. > > The American mainstream media and President Trump have stated that Chinese > company Huawei could use their 5g infrastructure to spy on Americans. > Additionally, > Trump has called on federal officials and American companies to abandon > Huawei equipment. In January *Foreign Policy wrote, > <https://foreignpolicy.com/2020/01/10/5g-china-backdoor-security-problems-united-states-surveillance/>* > “Because > the (Chinese) companies that make the equipment are subservient to the > Chinese government, they could be forced to include backdoors in the > hardware or software to give Beijing remote access. Eavesdropping is also a > risk, although efforts to listen in would almost certainly be detectable.” > a > This fear of Chinese spying using 5G equipment completely ignores the > reality that the U.S. government has the same exact opportunity to pressure > American companies to spy on the private data of Americans. Foreign Policy > noted, “These insecurities are a result of market forces that prioritize > costs over security and of governments, including the United States, that > want to preserve the option of surveillance in 5G networks. If the United > States is serious about tackling the national security threats related to > an insecure 5G network, it needs to rethink the extent to which it values > corporate profits and government espionage over security.” > > Whether the public is actually demanding faster downloads is up for > debate, but what is not debatable is that the telecoms, global governments, > and the tech industry are pushing the shift towards 5g. While it is true > that 5g has the potential to spur on innovation in the fields of medicine, > manufacturing, entertainment, and other industries – it seems much of the > hype around the 5G rollout is coming from the telecommunication industry > itself, specifically the Cellular Telecommunications & Internet > Association, or CTIA. <https://www.ctia.org/> > > Established in 1984, the CTIA claims to represent the U.S. wireless > communications industry, from carriers and equipment manufacturers. The > CTIA “advocates for legislative and regulatory policies at federal, state, > and local levels that foster the continued innovation, investment and > increasing economic impact of America’s wireless industry. CTIA is active > on a wide range of issues including spectrum policy, wireless > infrastructure, and the Internet of Things, among others.” They also host > events on topics ranging from cybersecurity to 5G. > > The CTIA’s Board of Directors > <https://www.ctia.org/about-ctia/board-of-directors> includes the > presidents, CEOs and other senior officials of Verizon, Sprint, T Mobile, > Nokia, Erricson, Intel, General Motors, Tracfone, EZ Texting and others. Brad > Gillen, the current Executive Vice President > <https://www.ctia.org/about-ctia/the-ctia-team/brad-gillen> of the CTIA, > was formerly a Legal Advisor to a former FCC Commissioner and served in > other senior policy roles at the FCC and with DISH Network. Mr. Gillen was > also a partner at Wilkinson Barker Knauer, LLP, a law firm stacked with > former employees of the FCC, the National Telecommunications and > Information Administration (NTIA), the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and > other state government positions. > > The CTIA’s current President and CEO is Meredith Attwell Baker > <https://www.ctia.org/about-ctia/the-ctia-team/meredith-attwell-baker>. > Baker has spent the last two decades > <https://www.opensecrets.org/revolving/rev_summary.php?id=76644> bouncing > between lobbying for the telecoms and working for the government. From 1998 > to 2000, Baker worked as Director of Congressional Affairs at the CTIA. > From 2004 to 2007 she served under the Bush administration as Acting > Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Communications and Information and > Acting Administrator of the National Telecommunications and Information > Administration (NTIA). The NTIA is the President’s principal advisor on > telecommunications and information policy. Afterwards, she worked for the > U.S. government as an FCC Commissioner between July 2009 to June 2011. > During her tenure at the FCC she was vocal about her opposition to > net-neutrality regulations. In January 2011, she voted in favor of Comcast > purchasing NBCUniversal. Only four months later she would leave the FCC to > take her position as senior vice president of government affairs at > Comcast-NBCUniversal > <https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2011/05/after-approving-comcastnbc-deal-fcc-commish-becomes-comcast-lobbyist/>. > Finally, in 2014 – after spending a decade bouncing between lobbying for > industry and working for the government – Baker went back to the CTIA, > where she is now President and CEO, responsible for promoting the Race to > 5G. > > One of the ways the CTIA has spread enthusiasm for the Race to 5g is by > working with city officials. The CTIA has honored City Mayors who have > worked to erode local authority regarding the 5g roll out. The 5G Wireless > Champion Awards “honor the state and local officials” who “bring > next-generation 5G networks” into communities and “remove barriers to the > deployment of next-generation wireless infrastructure”. In 2018, the CTIA > gave out 3 “5g Wireless Champion Awards” > <http://ctia.org/news/meet-ctia-2018-5g-wireless-champions> to mayors > across the United States, including Houston’s Mayor Sylvester Turner. > > The 5G Wireless Champion Awards are but one example of how the CTIA > lobbies on behalf of the telecommunications industry, sometimes derisively > known as Big Wireless. The industry has achieved the nickname due a > revolving door between the government agencies designed to regulate the > cellular industry – namely, the Federal Communications Commission – and the > industry itself. This arrangement has allowed the telecoms to grow while > facing little legal challenges or roadblocks. In the process, this > incestuous relationship has overtaken the voices and concerns of the > American people. > > A 2015 expose published by investigative journalist Norm Alster > <https://ethics.harvard.edu/people/norm-alster> for the Harvard Edmund J. > Safra Center for Ethics details the financial ties between the FCC and > telecom companies and how the industry has direct access and power over the > agency meant to regulate it. The report, “Captured Agency: How the > Federal Communications Commission is Dominated by the Industries it > Presumably Regulates” > <http://ethics.harvard.edu/files/center-for-ethics/files/capturedagency_alster.pdf>, > details how the FCC, an independent government agency created in 1934 to > regulate interstate communications by radio, television, wire, satellite > and cable, has become a captured agency with Big Wireless leaders filling > the government seats in a revolving door fashion similar to other federal > agencies. > > Regarding the passing of the 1996 Telecom Act – the act meant to regulate > the developing mobile phone and internet infrastructure – Alster writes, > > *Late lobbying won the wireless industry enormous concessions from > lawmakers, many of them major recipients of industry hard and soft dollar > contributions. Congressional staffers who helped lobbyists write the new > law did not go unrewarded. Thirteen of fifteen staffers later became > lobbyists themselves.”* > > Alster states that direct lobbying by industry is “just one of many worms > in a rotting apple”. His report says the FCC is involved in a network of > powerful moneyed interests with limitless access and a variety of ways to > shape policy. Alster believes the worst part is that the wireless industry > has been allowed to grow unchecked and virtually unregulated, with > fundamental questions on public health routinely ignored. The Captured > Agency report makes it clear that this type of corruption takes place > because of “the free flow of executive leadership between the FCC and the > industries it presumably oversees”. > > For example, at the time of the report’s release, the Chairman of the FCC > was Tom Wheeler, a man with deep ties to the wireless industry. In 2013, > Wheeler was nominated as FCC chairman by former President Barack Obama > after raising more than $700,000 for his presidential campaigns. Wheeler > led the two most powerful industry lobbying groups: The National Cable & > Telecommunications Association (NCTA) and the CTIA. In 20, Wheeler was also > the head of the FCC during the debate around Net Neutrality. > > Ajit Pai, current chairman of the FCC, is another example of this > revolving door relationship. Pai is an attorney who served as Associate > General Counsel at Verizon Communications Inc. between 2001 and 2003, where > he handled competition and regulatory matters. Pai was appointed to the FCC > by Barack Obama in 2012 and then made FCC Chairman by Donald Trump in > January 2017. In an odd skit > > In February, Pai admitted that the FCC failed to protect Americans’ > privacy after it was revealed > <https://www.theregister.co.uk/2020/02/28/fcc_us_telco_location_data/> that > at least two companies were gaining access to Americans’ private data and > selling it to law enforcement. Pai called for a fine of over $200 million > on AT&T, Verizon, T-Mobile, and Sprint. “This FCC will not tolerate phone > companies putting Americans’ privacy at risk,” Pai stated > <https://docs.fcc.gov/public/attachments/DOC-362754A1.pdf>when announcing > the fine. > > FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr is yet another example of a government > official working closely with industry and maintaining relationships which > clearly present conflicts of interest. Carr is credited with accelerating > the 5G build out. Prior to joining the FCC, Carr worked as an attorney at > Wiley Rein where his clients were Verizon, AT&T, Centurylink, and CTIA. > > The Wiley Rein law firm is a hotbed of activity for former government > officials and industry regulars. One of the founders of the law firm is > Richard Wiley, himself a Former FCC Chairman. According to Open Secrets > <https://www.opensecrets.org/federal-lobbying/firms/summary?id=D000022320>, > in the first four months of 2020 the Wiley Rein law firm has been retained > by several telecoms, including AT&T for $80,000, the CTIA for $50,000, and > Verizon for $30,000. For the last 15 years the law firm has spent at least > $2 million dollars lobbying for their clients. Open Secrets also shows the > CTIA has spent $3 million on their own lobbying efforts. > > On September 30, 2019, Commissioner Carr and other FCC officials were in > Houston to discuss the future of 5G. I interviewed Commissioner Carr about > the concerns regarding his connections with the wireless industry, as well > as the implications of the Captured Agency report released by Harvard’s > School of Ethics. Unfortunately, Mr Carr had no interest in addressing > these questions and refused to answer my questions and only stated, “We’re > excited about the 5G build out and working with local leaders.” > > The silence from FCC officials on the charges of corrupted regulators and > ignored studies is simply another facet of the relationship between > industry and government. Again, the strongest influence over the U.S. > regulatory agencies can be traced to the Cellular Telecommunications & > Internet Association. > > *A History of Big Wireless Bullying and Corruption* > > In 2018, Senator Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut exposed that Big > Wireless and the FCC have failed to adequately fund independent studies > into the health effects of emerging 5G technology. At a Senate Commerce > committee hearing, Blumenthal questioned > <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hsil3VQE5K4>Brad Gillen, Executive > Director of the CTIA, about the absence of this research. > > *“How much money has the industry committed to supporting additional > independent research—I stress independent—research? And we’re talking about > research on the biological effects of this new technology,” Blumenthal > asked. To which Gillen responded, “There are no industry backed studies to > my knowledge right now.”* > > At the end of the exchange, Blumenthal concluded, *“So there really is no > research ongoing. We’re kind of flying blind here, as far as health and > safety is concerned.”* > > One of the reasons Americans are “flying blind”, as Blumenthal stated, is > because of a history of pressure and defunding of researchers who reached > conclusions which were at odds with the official line of the wireless > industry: *cell phones and wireless devices do not cause harm to humans > or animal life.* > > During the 1990’s, biochemist Jerry Phillips was hired by cell phone giant > Motorola to study the effects of the radiofrequency radiation emitted by > cell phones. Phillips previously worked with the U.S. Department of > Veterans Affairs’ Pettis VA Medical Center in Loma Linda, California and is > currently the director of the Excel Science Center at the University of > Colorado at Colorado Springs. His team looked at the effects of different > RF signals on rats and on cells in a dish. In the documentary Public > Exposure <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IJbCa-MZwXM&feature=emb_logo>, > Phillips says the relationship between him and his employer was initially > cordial but soured once he submitted research data to Motorola which found > that exposure to radio-frequency radiation produced by cell phones caused > damage to the DNA structure. The negative results were not to Motorola’s > liking and they began putting pressure on him. > > *“These folks were very, very upset, and began to talk about how they are > going to handle this, what sort of spin can we put on this, what can we > expect from this. From that point on the relationship changed,” Phillips > states in the documentary. “What we saw was that Motorola began to exert > more and more control over the work. Telling us what to do, telling us how > to write abstracts, what to say in the abstracts, what to say in the > papers, how to do the work. No, don’t do this. Yes, do it this way. This > was unacceptable.”* > > Phillips describes how Motorola was unwilling to accept his study and > urged him not to publish it. Despite the pleas, Phillips published his study > in the Journal of Bioelectrochemistry and Bioenergetics in 1998 > <https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0302459898000749> and > ceased his work with Motorola. Phillips cautioned that independent research > on cell phones is sparse because *“there is no money available for > research other than what’s coming from industry.”* > > In another example of industry attempting to influence research, Dr. Henry > Lai, the University of Washington, and fellow researcher Narendra Singh > were looking at the effects of nonionizing radiation – the same type of > radiation emitted by cell phones and 5G – on the DNA of rats. The > researchers found that the DNA in the brain cells of the rats was broken by > exposure to radiation. Dr. Lai’s experiments showed negative health > consequences at levels considered safe by the FCC. > > After publishing the research in 1995, Dr. Lai would later learn of a > “full-scale > effort > <https://www.seattlemag.com/article/uw-scientist-henry-lai-makes-waves-cell-phone-industry>” > to discredit the experiments. At some point Motorola became aware of Lai’s > unpublished results showing harm from cell phone radiation. In a leaked > internal Motorola memo > <https://www.rfsafe.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/cell-phone-radiation-war-gaming-memo.pdf> > executives > claimed to have succeeded in “War-Gaming ” and undermining the Lai-Singh > experiments. Lai and Singh caused further controversy when they publicly > complained that their funders, the Wireless Technology Research (WTR) > program, had placed restrictions on their work.. In response to the > complaints, George Carlo, the head of the WTR, sent a memo asking Richard > McCormick, president of University of Washington at the time, to fire Lai > and Singh. McCormick refused, but a clear message had been sent to the > researchers. > > *“This shocked me. The letter trying to discredit me, the ‘war games’ > memo,” Lai told Seattle Mag. > <https://www.seattlemag.com/article/uw-scientist-henry-lai-makes-waves-cell-phone-industry> > “As > a scientist doing research, I was not expecting to be involved in a > political situation. It opened my eyes on how games are played in the world > of business. You don’t bite the hand that feeds you. The pressure is very > impressive.”* > > Once again, the fingerprints of the CTIA are found in this attempt at > suppressing unfavorable studies. Carlo had recently been appointed head of > the WTR after the FCC and the CTIA promised to fund research into the > dangers of cell phones. The move came in 1993 after David Reynard sued > the NEC America company > <https://www.upi.com/Archives/1993/01/03/Lawsuit-claims-cellular-phones-cause-cancer/3575726037200/> > because > he blamed his wife’s lethal tumor on their phone. Reynard’s story became a > national sensation, leading to a congressional investigation. Wheeler > claimed the new studies would “re-validate the findings of the existing > studies.” Soon after, Carlo would ask the University of Washington to > defund Lai for alleged violations of research protocols and Lai would > accuse the WTR of interfering with his experiments. > > Eventually, Carlo himself would have a falling out with the FCC and > rebrand himself as a whistleblower. > <https://www.thenation.com/article/archive/how-big-wireless-made-us-think-that-cell-phones-are-safe-a-special-investigation/> > He > also accused the FCC and the CTIA of covering up evidence of cell phone > harms. > > > > *5G Conspiracy Theorists (or the Truthful Expose of Real-life Conspiracies > to do the Unlawful and the Evil)* > > Despite the diverse credentials of the mass movement against 5G, the > opposition has largely been derided as conspiracy theorists or quacks who > don’t understand the electromagnetic spectrum. In March 2019, William Broad > of the New York Times wrote a piece promoting > <https://www.nytimes.com/2019/05/12/science/5g-phone-safety-health-russia.html> > the > idea that those who are concerned about the health effects of 5G are simply > falling prey to Russian propaganda designed to make America lose the Race > to 5G. His article, “Your 5G Phone Won’t Hurt You. But Russia Wants You to > Think Otherwise.”, sought to place the blame for concern around 5G on the > shoulders of America’s favorite boogeyman – The Russians. > > This practice seems to be a new trend for corporate media as the > Washington Post announced a similar deal with ATT > <https://www.washingtonpost.com/pr/2019/11/20/washington-post-att-use-g-explore-future-news/> > in > November 2019. Questions regarding potential conflicts of interest have not > been addressed between news outlets attacking those critical of 5G’s safety > and telecom companies who fund them. > > Interestingly, only a month after Broad’s article, in April 2019 the Times > announced a partnership with Verizon > <https://open.nytimes.com/exploring-the-future-of-5g-and-journalism-a53f4c4b8644> > to > showcase a “5G journalism lab”. Broad wrote a second piece titled “The 5G > Health Hazard That Isn’t” > <https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/16/science/5g-cellphones-wireless-cancer.html>, > attacking the critics of the rush to 5G and attempting to paint the > opposition as being based on one single study which he says was found to be > false. > > Dr. Devra Davis, PhD, President of the Environmental Health Trust, responded > to Broad’s claim > <https://medium.com/swlh/5g-the-unreported-global-threat-717c98c9c37d> by > noting that “by relegating concerns about 5G to a Russian ploy, he misses > altogether the fact that the purportedly independent international > authorities <https://doi.org/10.3892/ijo.2017.4046> on which he relies > that declare 5G to be safe are an exclusive club > <https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28656257> of industry-loyal > scientists. > <https://www.investigate-europe.eu/publications/how-much-is-safe/?portfolioCats=55%2C54> > China, <https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/7739164> Russia > <https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/bem.21742>, Poland > <https://www.telecompaper.com/news/itu-says-strict-electromagnetic-radiation-exposure-limits-may-negatively-impact-5g-roll-out--1250861> > , Italy > <https://www.researchgate.net/figure/Comparison-of-the-ICNIRP-and-the-Italian-EMF-limits-on-a-logarithmic-scale-and-versus_fig1_327285005>and > several other European countries allow up to hundreds of times less > <https://www.rivm.nl/sites/default/files/2018-11/Comparison%20of%20international%20policies%20on%20electromagnetic%20fields%202018.pdf>wireless > radiation into the environment from microwave antennas than does the U.S..” > > Davis went even further, comparing the treatment of those who raise > awareness about the public impact of radio frequency microwave radiation to > that of those scientists in the 1950’s and 60’s who attempted to ring alarm > bells about the dangers of tobacco. Davis wrote, > > *“Scientists who showed the harmful impacts of tobacco found themselves > struggling for serious attention and financial support. For health impacts > from wireless radiation, a similar pattern is emerging. Each time a U.S. > government agency produced positive findings, research on health impacts > was defunded > <https://www.sun-sentinel.com/health/sfl-rxcell02oct02-story.html>. The > Office of Naval Research, the National Institute of Occupational Safety and > Health, the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, and the > Environmental Protection Agency all once had vibrant research programs > documenting dangers of wireless radiation. All found their programs > scrapped, reflecting pressure from those who sought to suppress this work.”* > > These forces which “sought to suppress this work” have indeed been > operating and influencing public policy on cellular technology for decades. > > > This cursory look at the history of the FCC, the CTIA, and the cell phone > industry show clear conflicts of interests and suppression of research. > Now, these same forces are calling on the public to embrace the *Race to > 5G.* While most of the public is unaware of this history, understanding > the corporate and lobbyist influence on the scientific research and light > regulatory touch, is absolutely imperative as the world prepares to be > surrounded by the devices and infrastructure of the emerging 5G industry. > > > > > > *Derrick Broze** is an investigative journalist, documentary filmmaker, > activist, and author from Houston, Texas. He is the founder of The > Conscious Resistance Network. His most recent documentary, The 5G Trojan > Horse, was released in February 2020. Broze is also the author of 5 books, > most recently “How To Opt-Out of the Technocratic State”. His journalism > can be found on TheConsciousResistance.com, The Mind Unleashed, MintPress > News, and The Last American Vagabond.* > > > > > > > > If any recipient of this message prefers to not receive future emailings > from this address, please reply to this email with “unsubscribe” and your > name in the subject line. > > > -- If you appreciate News From Underground, please consider making a donation — either a one-time gift or a monthly subscription: http://markcrispinmiller.com/support/ Thank you for your support. 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