Electromagnetic Fields

Interventions acting at lower levels of biological organization are presented as potentially more efficient or powerful than downstream interventions. Consuming oils with double bonds strengthens and enhances the body's electromagnetic fie…

11 sources - 40 claims

Interventions acting at lower levels of biological organization are presented as potentially more efficient or powerful than downstream interventions. Consuming oils with double bonds strengthens and enhances the body's electromagnetic field. The electromagnetic spectrum described in the article includes radio waves, television waves, microwaves, visible light, ultraviolet radiation, X-rays, gamma rays, and radiation from radioactive elements. The official position that EMFs cause no harm conflicts with a substantial body of peer-reviewed literature. A 2012 analysis of 2,000 studies linked low-level non-ionizing EMF exposure to a wide range of adverse health effects. There was no pre-market safety testing for long-term, low-level, continuous EMF exposure from multiple simultaneous sources. Industry scientific consensus currently labels EMF exposure as safe, but historical patterns of delayed harm recognition with other substances call this into question. Financial interests in the telecommunications industry may delay public acknowledgment of EMF health risks. If brain proton spins are influenced by magnetic fields, electromagnetic fields may have deeper biological effects than co…