 1 edit | How does cellphone radiation spread from place to place ? The theory is that radiation from mobile phones interferes with bees' navigation systems, preventing the famously homeloving species from finding their way back to their hives. Improbable as it may seem, there is now evidence to back this up.
Late last week, some bee-keepers claimed that the phenomenon - which started in the US, then spread to continental Europe - was beginning to hit Britain as well. Someone will have to explain to me how the problem is spreading. Cell phones were in all 3 places simultaneously. Cellphone radiation isn't something that can spread like a virus.
Sounds more like a Luddite wacko researcher is spewing nonsense again. -- -- My BLOG My Web Page |
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 | More cell phones...cell phone use is spreading and cell phones are being used more to make "regular" calls.
Old days, few had cell phones, and those that had them barely used them. Now a days most people have 2 or 3 in a family and use them like they would regular land lines. |
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 amungusPremium join:2004-11-26 America Reviews:
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| reply to fAcEtIOUs "(Cellphone) radiation isn't something that can spread like a virus."
Actually radiation can spread, but you're right in that (cell phone) radiation doesn't really spread across oceans...
What it can do, however, is interfere with the ionosphere, along with the massive amounts of other forms of electronic communication... notably, pulsed digitized signals which have become MUCH more prevalent than in years past.
Regardless of the cause, and your obviously biased stance against this theory which has been presented, you seem to have missed the most important part of the article:::
"Most of the world's crops depend on pollination by bees."
Would you also totally discount the following statement from the article as "wacko nonsense"??? "German research has long shown that bees' behaviour changes near power lines."
Perhaps other concerned Americans will find this next link interesting: »www.niburu.nl/index.php?showarti···ID=15948
There is a nifty picture showing affected states, and some further statistics on this issue. "February 2007 map showing states so far affected by the honey bee collapse disorder in which beekeepers have reported 60% to 100% honey bee disappearances without explanation to date. Map courtesy MAAREC."
...It might open your eyes as to how far and wide this issue is really spread. Think whatever you will about "theories" as to the cause, but it seems rather indisputable that SOMETHING is actually happening here and now... |
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 Count ZeroMD2BePremium join:2007-01-18 Warner Robins, GA | reply to AnonProxy The towers are still transmitting at full power though and they put out a lot more than cell phones do I'm betting. -- »web.mac.com/jwsmiths/ |
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 | There are alos more towers, more service and now more ditial signal v. analog.... |
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 Count ZeroMD2BePremium join:2007-01-18 Warner Robins, GA | Isn't digital signal lower power than analog? I thought that was part of how we get such better life out of the batteries in our bee-killing cell phones when they're in Digital versus Analog modes. Seems like the rise in tower number should be partially offset by the lower required transmission power. Listen if bees DID die off I am 100% sure we could figure out a way to manually pollinate our crops and lots of other green stuff is pollinated by other animals and by the wind so it isn't as if all vegetation on earth would die off. Sure is something we need to be investigating though. -- »web.mac.com/jwsmiths/ |
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 algPassionately apatheticPremium join:2001-04-10 Houston, TX kudos:3 | But most importantly there would be no honey.  |
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