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  4. Can a radiotransmitter affect a person with metal bone implants?
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Can a radiotransmitter affect a person with metal bone implants?

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Offline Pumblechook

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Can a radiotransmitter affect a person with metal bone implants?
« Reply #20 on: 27/10/2008 15:20:04 »
I do think it is a bit like my wife who suffers for panic attacks and doesn't like travelling by any means of transport let alone a plane.  She fears she will feel ill and  surprise surprise if you pander too and put off going anywhere when she eventually does go anywhere she does feel ill.  My technique is to be cruel to be kind..  Tell her she is going to XYZ and she will be fine.  10 minutes down the road she is fine!
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Offline blaze

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Can a radiotransmitter affect a person with metal bone implants?
« Reply #21 on: 27/10/2008 22:22:50 »
Sophia, 2 years ago I was told I was in menopause. This was around the same time my 10 ongoing symptoms turned into 1000, and my doctors were fine calling menopause at 41 'normal' - even though no 50 yo woman I noticed was psyching out, sweating, shaking, shivering, losing weight as rapidly as I was - and I was looking around at that to be sure.

If I had not questioned scientific fact back then - which, according to my doctors at the time, assured me that menopause at 41 was normal and that what I was experiencing was indeed 'normal' menopause, I would still be harboring high levels of Lyme, babesiosis, bartonella, Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever, and even typhus - and apparently the last two can be especially deadly after the age of 40. So I now have a habit of questioning pretty much everything, except maybe such things like gravity, the earth's being round, etc..., and I've never once regretted it, even when I'm proven wrong - since it did save my life once already. And since I believe EMF/RF to be the cause of these ongoing infections, that is why I persist.

BenV, I know what psychosomatic illness is - the symptoms are real to the patient, but no physical/biological evidence supports their symptoms, so in that sense it is psychological 100% - but thanks. I probably should have been more clear with that.

Pumblechook, what exactly are these Airwave signals that the police use? Are these radar guns or something else? I live in the U.S. and am not familiar with these.

And I'd like to emphasize that, females are more sensitive to these frequencies than males are. How many female officers were included in these studies? If it was less than 100% of the participants, and the studies show 'no effects', it truthfully hasn't even proven 'no effect' on males, let alone females.

Also, what about the Bioinitiative Report below? I haven't counted the references, but I believe it is a compilation of something like 2000 studies which do indeed show biological effects, some within seconds of exposure.

http://www.bioinitiative.org/report/index.htm

And one other key point to remember here is that the longer the issue remains unresolved as to whether or not these frequencies have biological effects, the more difficult it will be to recognize differences between the "exposed" and the "controls" because both groups will have received heavy doses of radiation over their lifetime and will have already begun the studies with damage to their cells.

That is what really scares me.
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Offline blaze

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Can a radiotransmitter affect a person with metal bone implants?
« Reply #22 on: 04/11/2008 00:55:19 »
A list of studies which showed bioeffects, for those who are skeptical...

http://www.marinproject.org/studies.html
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