SMART METERS:
Good news! An overwhelming majority of the Roadrunner neighborhood residents ARE SMART PEOPLE, wisely opting out of smart meters. Only a few residents have chosen not to opt out of their smart meters mistakenly believing they have accurate information, evidently produced by the power and wireless industry vested interests. They may be are unaware of the vested interest campaign to purposely create confusion about smart meter health effects, using the same techniques the tobacco industry used to obscure the link between cancer and smoking years ago. Many people needlessly died from lung cancer because the connection was obscured for so long. Choosing to keep a smart meter may not only be deleterious to occupant's health, but may be the equivalent of exposing neighbors to "second hand smoke".
If you wish to talk to your neighbor who has a smart meter, it may be helpful to be aware of the vested interest's "contrived ignorance" campaign. Vested interests have taken advantage of both some legitimate confusion, but also have created confusion. There have been several factors. First, some "scientific studies" sponsored by vested interests, have been purposely designed to show negative results, such as using known too short exposure times, or signals that are too weak. Second, vested interests love to cite erroneous "junk science". "Junk science" studies do indeed exist, often because of communication difficulty among professionals from different disciplines. Engineers and biological/medical researchers have made erroneous assumptions about the other's disciplines resulting in flawed studies and inaccurate conclusions. Third, media can propagate misinterpreted scientific study results. Articles go viral when reporters copy articles from each other and from wire services. These articles can propagate so widely they become "erroneous truths". Fourth, vested interests have attempted to discredit good research on erroneous or political grounds.
Nonetheless there is a large body of excellent research studies that show deleterious health effects. To discover the truth about EMF dangers, it is necessary to filter the information by asking who paid for studies, and how familiar the researchers were with both engineering and medical disciplines. Most people do not have the time or interest to do such in depth investigation. Good resources exist such as the Bioinitiative report, produced by the Bioelectromagnetics Society. Another excellent, easy to read book "Overpowered", by Martin Blank, PhD is an excellent factual resource and enlightening description of the political scene. There are numerous web sites and videos meant for the general public, that explain the facts quite clearly. See resources that are listed in the INFO section.
People deserve to know about their unseen environment so they may have the opportunity to mitigate negative impacts. In that spirit, this web site discloses facts and measurements about the Sedona Area.
Good news! An overwhelming majority of the Roadrunner neighborhood residents ARE SMART PEOPLE, wisely opting out of smart meters. Only a few residents have chosen not to opt out of their smart meters mistakenly believing they have accurate information, evidently produced by the power and wireless industry vested interests. They may be are unaware of the vested interest campaign to purposely create confusion about smart meter health effects, using the same techniques the tobacco industry used to obscure the link between cancer and smoking years ago. Many people needlessly died from lung cancer because the connection was obscured for so long. Choosing to keep a smart meter may not only be deleterious to occupant's health, but may be the equivalent of exposing neighbors to "second hand smoke".
If you wish to talk to your neighbor who has a smart meter, it may be helpful to be aware of the vested interest's "contrived ignorance" campaign. Vested interests have taken advantage of both some legitimate confusion, but also have created confusion. There have been several factors. First, some "scientific studies" sponsored by vested interests, have been purposely designed to show negative results, such as using known too short exposure times, or signals that are too weak. Second, vested interests love to cite erroneous "junk science". "Junk science" studies do indeed exist, often because of communication difficulty among professionals from different disciplines. Engineers and biological/medical researchers have made erroneous assumptions about the other's disciplines resulting in flawed studies and inaccurate conclusions. Third, media can propagate misinterpreted scientific study results. Articles go viral when reporters copy articles from each other and from wire services. These articles can propagate so widely they become "erroneous truths". Fourth, vested interests have attempted to discredit good research on erroneous or political grounds.
Nonetheless there is a large body of excellent research studies that show deleterious health effects. To discover the truth about EMF dangers, it is necessary to filter the information by asking who paid for studies, and how familiar the researchers were with both engineering and medical disciplines. Most people do not have the time or interest to do such in depth investigation. Good resources exist such as the Bioinitiative report, produced by the Bioelectromagnetics Society. Another excellent, easy to read book "Overpowered", by Martin Blank, PhD is an excellent factual resource and enlightening description of the political scene. There are numerous web sites and videos meant for the general public, that explain the facts quite clearly. See resources that are listed in the INFO section.
People deserve to know about their unseen environment so they may have the opportunity to mitigate negative impacts. In that spirit, this web site discloses facts and measurements about the Sedona Area.