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Quote from: CliveG on 30/10/2019 01:00:59 I had one young girl who went so deep she was capable of doing psychic stuff. Reading minds even at a distance, remote viewing and telling the near future. I stopped because it got too spooky for us all.And again, thanks for pointing out how suggestible you are.
I had one young girl who went so deep she was capable of doing psychic stuff. Reading minds even at a distance, remote viewing and telling the near future. I stopped because it got too spooky for us all.
I am not hypnotisable
Quote from: CliveG on 30/10/2019 19:10:46I am not hypnotisable I didn't say you were...
No.Your claim to be not hyponitisable wasn't a nice side step.It wasn't even a very good try.So, as I said, thanks for showing how suggestible you are.
I meant YOU were doing the sidestep!!!
How about a comment on the calcium channel connection to Alzheimer's and gut communication to the brain?
And the level of sensitivity of cellular mechanism and communications that are so incredibly small and fragile (to EMFs)?
Going back to the original question, why would anyone make a downward-directed transmitter? All the people immediately underneath the transmitter can talk directly to each other with no need for a phone, and the power required to relay incoming signals downwards is negligible. The only possible hazard is from the handsets below the transmitter.
Quote from: CliveG on 01/11/2019 09:27:47I meant YOU were doing the sidestep!!!I recognise that you meant that.However, the fact is that you were sidestepping my point.Your acceptance that you believe stuff that's not real shows that you are suggestible.(snip)
(snip)Quote from: CliveG on 01/11/2019 04:56:35How about a comment on the calcium channel connection to Alzheimer's and gut communication to the brain?Yes, there are certainly connections there.Quote from: CliveG on 01/11/2019 04:56:35And the level of sensitivity of cellular mechanism and communications that are so incredibly small and fragile (to EMFs)?You made that bit up.Not least, you ignore the fact that people are big bags of salty water. That's an uncommonly good way to screen a connection.It's also important to recogniser how bad an impedance match there is between a nerve cell and any passing RF.We know that the cells are not, in fact, very sensitive.Because people are walking around in the fields produced by phones with no actual evidence of harm.(just before you try to dispute that, remember the bit about suggestibility)
the inverse square law applies.
Mechanical or electrical or digital - whether covered and aimed away from me. The precision amazes me.
The bottom line is that we are not a bag of salt.
Once more, the Emfs may aggravate the conditions she has.
Dr Martin Pall has explained how sensitive the calcium cell channel is.
The voltage differentials are hardly measurable. If I am wrong, tell me
cell equilibrium potential which is in the order of about 60-70 millivolts.
Quote from: CliveG on 02/11/2019 04:35:13the inverse square law applies.Which is why your handset will fry your brain long before the mast does.
Quote from: CliveG on 02/11/2019 10:42:09Mechanical or electrical or digital - whether covered and aimed away from me. The precision amazes me.Me too. Even across a couple of time zones. It seems to be wired into the mammalian brain - my dog always demanded a treat (usually a fish head) at 7 pm, regardless of where we were or what we were doing.
Re: Does mobile phone tower radiation pose health problems?« Reply #514 on: Today at 12:19:37 »Quote from: CliveG on Today at 05:36:26 The bottom line is that we are not a bag of salt.How fortunate, then, that nobody said we were.The real bottom line is that all out internal workings- nerves etc are inside a bag of salt water. which tends to "short out" any external influence.Which is why there's no evidence of harm from phone masts.
Quote from: CliveG on Today at 05:36:26 Dr Martin Pall has explained how sensitive the calcium cell channel is.Dr Pall has reportedly done work on electrosensitivity.However, as we have discussed, the condition doesn't actually exist- every lab test for it failed to find it.So, I think it's fair to say he's a quack.
Quote from: CliveG on Today at 05:36:26 The voltage differentials are hardly measurable. If I am wrong, tell meYou are wrong.As you say the voltages are of the order of tens of mV