Bone marrow cancer rates correspond to poverty rates? I was not aware of that. Can you provide a reference?

Many diseases, including most significantly heart disease, hit the poor and uneducated harder (and hit U.S. citizens harder than citizens of most other countries -- draw your own conclusions). Diseases which are correlated with poor, crowded conditions, such as TB, also tend to hit the poor harder. And many diseases show a tendency to hit particular races harder than other races, independent of educational or economic background, which provides another bit of confusion in societies which are more or less segregated.

But I was not aware that bone marrow cancer showed such a correlation.

leaking pen wrote:
Correspondence is NOT causality. the numbers also match up with
poverty figures, and guess where most high power lines run?  through
the poorer areas. there are too many factors at play.  until i see a
study with lab animals kept near replicas of high power lines, i pass
it off.

On 8/24/07, Horace Heffner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Here's report not yet suppressed and not yet discredited:


http://tinyurl.com/27uyfv

http://www.sciencedaily.com/upi/index.php?
feed=Science&article=UPI-1-20070824-00462200-bc-australia-powerlines.xml


Horace Heffner
http://www.mtaonline.net/~hheffner/







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