Graham
Certified autist (might bite)
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- Feb 9, 2023
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I've been searching for a new phone, one that has an audio jack, and found that all the latest ones don't have an audio jack and all support 5G. I was looking at an older phone, that would suit my needs, but it also uses 5G.
From my limited understanding, 5G radiation is much more powerful than 4G and has a much shorter transmission range, hence the need for more towers and transmitters (and why it's mainly in cities ATM). Logically, this would increase the likelihood of 5G having adverse health effects compared to previous generations, as the radiation emitted from the signals would be much more concentrated. IIRC, 5G also makes use of many smaller short-range transmitters that are placed in cities etc, as opposed to a few large towers.
I don't believe it was used to spread covid like some places claim, although I suspect some of that might be dis-information to discredit the idea that 5G might have adverse health effects, as I seem to remember that conspiracy becoming popular after people were coming out saying there were health risks (in particular cancer) linked to 5G technology.
When it came to the covid vaccines (at least in the UK), there was a very strong narrative (including the demonetization of the vaccinated) that you should get them, even if you were in a group not at risk, in order to protect society as a whole, and that there were no negative side effects from these vaccines. However in more recent times, the mainstream narrative is shifting to one where these vaccines have been causing health problems, not as effective as advertised, and some versions banned even in the EU.
I say this because I fear there might actually be health concerns related to 5G, which are dismissed as conspiracy now, but might be later confirmed to have very harmful health impacts (by which, I'm referring to serious cancer developments etc, not just slightly harmful, which most things in life are).
The two questions I really want to know the answers to are as follows:
Is the potential negative impact on health mainly limited to the 5G towers, that are transmitting a large amount of these signals, or are the devices that are connected to a 5G band also going to damage your health, despite being much smaller transmitters / receivers (e.g. carrying a phone in your pocket)?
If I turn off connecting to 5G networks in Android settings, will this solve the problem of receiving 5G signals, or will any-built in transmitter still be giving off 5G signals (I'd assume I'd still get irradiated by 5G if I was within range of a tower / transmitter, regardless of if I even had a phone on me)?
(Pictures related to claims I've seen, where things near transmitters have died, fallen ill or acted strangely)
From my limited understanding, 5G radiation is much more powerful than 4G and has a much shorter transmission range, hence the need for more towers and transmitters (and why it's mainly in cities ATM). Logically, this would increase the likelihood of 5G having adverse health effects compared to previous generations, as the radiation emitted from the signals would be much more concentrated. IIRC, 5G also makes use of many smaller short-range transmitters that are placed in cities etc, as opposed to a few large towers.
I don't believe it was used to spread covid like some places claim, although I suspect some of that might be dis-information to discredit the idea that 5G might have adverse health effects, as I seem to remember that conspiracy becoming popular after people were coming out saying there were health risks (in particular cancer) linked to 5G technology.
When it came to the covid vaccines (at least in the UK), there was a very strong narrative (including the demonetization of the vaccinated) that you should get them, even if you were in a group not at risk, in order to protect society as a whole, and that there were no negative side effects from these vaccines. However in more recent times, the mainstream narrative is shifting to one where these vaccines have been causing health problems, not as effective as advertised, and some versions banned even in the EU.
I say this because I fear there might actually be health concerns related to 5G, which are dismissed as conspiracy now, but might be later confirmed to have very harmful health impacts (by which, I'm referring to serious cancer developments etc, not just slightly harmful, which most things in life are).
The two questions I really want to know the answers to are as follows:
Is the potential negative impact on health mainly limited to the 5G towers, that are transmitting a large amount of these signals, or are the devices that are connected to a 5G band also going to damage your health, despite being much smaller transmitters / receivers (e.g. carrying a phone in your pocket)?
If I turn off connecting to 5G networks in Android settings, will this solve the problem of receiving 5G signals, or will any-built in transmitter still be giving off 5G signals (I'd assume I'd still get irradiated by 5G if I was within range of a tower / transmitter, regardless of if I even had a phone on me)?
(Pictures related to claims I've seen, where things near transmitters have died, fallen ill or acted strangely)
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@Cali Yuga
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@alligatordude
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