Professor James C. Lin Calls for Rethinking “Flawed” Wireless Radiation Safety Standards

Professor James C. Lin's recent review article critiques current wireless radiation safety standards as flawed and outdated, emphasizing insufficient protection against long-term, low-level exposure effects. He urges a shift in public health policies and highlights military research indicating potential biological responses, calling for evidence-based reevaluation of RF exposure guidelines.

ElektrosmogReport – Issue July 2025

A Newsletter Independent of Industry and Government. One of the longest-running newsletters on the health and environmental impact of electromagnetic fields and radiation - the ElektrosmogReport - is now available in English. Diagnose:Funk, the publisher, is translating the German-language original and making it available.. Both versions come out quarterly. D:F is a consumer and environmental … Continue reading ElektrosmogReport – Issue July 2025

The Growing Risk of Space Debris: How Satellite Proliferation Is Polluting Low-Earth Orbit

CircleID - Doug Dawson 11june2025. Low-orbit space is growing increasingly crowded. Starlink has over 7,100 satellites in orbit and has plans to grow to 30,000. Project Kuiper has plans for a constellation of 3,232 satellites. One Web’s first-generation constellation has 648 satellites, with plans to grow to over 6,300 satellites. The Thousand Sails (Qianfan) constellation … Continue reading The Growing Risk of Space Debris: How Satellite Proliferation Is Polluting Low-Earth Orbit

Are we killing the bees? – revisiting a lecture from 2014

Einar Flydal - 08may2025. (Post Translation from Norwegian) The other day I found out that someone had uploaded a lecture I gave to my colleagues at NTNU (Telematics Norwegian University of Science and Technology) in 2014, on the website Research Gate. It was a kind of "farewell lecture" I gave when I had finally decided … Continue reading Are we killing the bees? – revisiting a lecture from 2014