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AM Radio Waves May Be Harmful?

Klar writes "Wired News reports that: 'Korean scientists have found that regions near AM radio-broadcasting towers had 70 percent more leukemia deaths than those without.' The article continues: 'The study, to be published in an upcoming issue of the International Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health, also found that cancer deaths were 29 percent higher near such transmitters.' While 'their study did not prove a direct link between cancer and the transmitters', the FDA and the World Health Organization are urging more studies, especially of radio waves from cell phones."

5 of 548 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Looks like we were right... by illerd · · Score: 0, Troll

    does stillbirth count as birth control?

  2. Re:I know what it's doing. by kni52 · · Score: 0, Troll

    LOL, I'd mod this up if I had points.

    --
    My subtext is just a figment of your imagination.
  3. Re:Incomplete testing by geomon · · Score: 0, Troll

    It's a perpetual scam to get more grant money.

    Yeah, seven years ago it was salmon recovery, recently is has been global warming....

    Just stick all of these buzz words in your grant proposal and you are bound to get SOME funding.

    --
    "Rocky Rococo, at your cervix!"
  4. Re:Incomplete testing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

    How about a little balance, folks.

    There's no need for blance because this study can be summed up with two words:

    fucking retarded

    There's no control group.

    One could easily explain the diffence found by this study any number of ways.

    One such highly plausible explation would be that large radio towers are considered an eyesore, and just like wastewater treatment plants get built in the poorer sections of communities.

    Am I right or are they right? There's no way to know. This "study" is pseudo-scientific bull for just this reason.

    There "findings" are worthless. You can't take them with healthy skepticism and use them for ANYTHING because a proper level of skepticism for a study like this tells you that this study says NOTHING.

  5. Re:This is a conspiracy! by slorge · · Score: 0, Troll

    This was the first thimg I thought of....

    They tried to get him off the air saying he was a drug pusher (unsubstantiated, totally false charge. So is the doctor shopping charge...they wanted to seize his medical records so they could try to find out if he had done something wrong...a fishing trip).
    They are trying to change the way radio and tv stations can be bought and sold (Fairness doctrine is a load).
    They're trying to get him off of Armed Forces Radio (no right wing bastion itself. It's like saying all cable tv is conservatively biased because of Fox News)
    Now they're trying to eliminate his medium. (through fear. Remember red dye #5)

    Long live El Rushbo!

    --
    Some people are like slinkys. They're useless, but it puts a smile on your face to push them down the stairs.