5G Safety Claims “As Evil As Big Tobacco’s Lie on ‘Safe’ Smoking”

Renowned international expert warns that long term 5G smart phone use may pose as serious a cancer threat as heavy smoking.  Electromagnetics specialist, Dr Nisa Khan, who issued the ominous warning, holds 10 U.S. industry patents and is a pioneer in optoelectronic and integrated photonic devices.

Dr Khan, who lives in New Jersey, USA,  spoke eloquently and knowledgably on tntradio.live giving a passionate warning of the dangers of corporate greed and ill-informed group think which is touting the ‘benefits’ of 5G but ignoring the harms.

Not until her current PSI paper Novel Derivations and Validation of Near-field Electromagnetic Spatial Power Density Distribution and Propagation Functions for Flat Antennas has anyone been able to accurately quantify and assess actual risks of millimeter wave technology on human tissue.

Would you put your head in a microwave oven? Well, long term smart phone use may be as just as reckless, because no standardized industry safety tests have ever accurately measured the risks.

Khan is no lightweight on such matters.  Her ground-breaking work is archived by the Wall Street Journal and New York Times. Now it seems, when Nisa Khan speaks the tech world listens.

In this broadcast she pulled no punches likening Big Tech’s rush to install (untested) 5G towers on every street corner, relentlessly bombarding our bodies  with invisible millimeter wave electromagnetic radiation, as not only immoral, but as costly a mistake as Big Tobacco’s promotion of smoking. For much of the 20th century even medical doctors claimed tobacco smoking was ‘safe’ until hundreds of thousands died of cancers.

Listen to the podcast at tntradio.live/shows/sky-dragon-slaying

About Dr M. Nisa Khan

M. Nisa Khan is the author of, “Understanding LED Illumination” (CRC Press, 2013) – a widely used university textbook around the world in the field of laser and LED engineering and solid-state lighting. She received the B.A. in physics and mathematics from Macalester College in 1986 and the M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in electrical engineering from the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, in 1988 and 1992 respectively. During her studies, she worked as a research associate for 9 years at Honeywell Solid State Research Center in Bloomington, Minnesota. After completing her doctorate, she became a member of the technical staff at AT&T Bell Laboratories (now Nokia Bell Labs) in Holmdel, New Jersey, and spent most of her 6 years at the Photonics Research Laboratory at Bell Labs-Crawford Hill conducting pioneering work on 40-Gb/s optoelectronic and integrated photonic devices. Dr. Khan then worked on optical communication subsystems at several other companies, including her own venture-backed companies in New Jersey. In 2006, she started an independent research and engineering company, IEM LED Lighting Technologies, and has since been involved in innovation and technology development for making solid-state lighting more suitable for general lighting. She has written over 40 peer-reviewed research articles in IEEE, OSA, and AIP journals, presented numerous invited and contributed papers at OSA, IEEE, and APS conferences, notable international conferences in Europe and China, and has 10 U.S. granted patents as either first or sole author. Dr. Khan performed many feasibility field studies for LED display and signage industries and wrote over 50 LED column articles from 2007 to 2016 in Signs of the Times magazine, which has been serving the electric sign illumination industry since 1906. Dr. Khan’s original scientific contributions can be found in ResearchGate.net that highlight her discovery of why semiconductor lasers, LEDs, and RF antennas produce directional beams and she is the first to derive the closed-form, analytic equation for near-field electromagnetic radiation distribution from finite, flat radiation sources. This derivation along with the theory of Fourier Optics prove that LEDs, lasers, and flat RF antennas and their arrays are NOT point radiation sources no matter how far the observer is from a flat radiation source. This discovery is very notable and she explains with her new theory why high- power and high-brightness LED-based lamps – used for example as car headlamps – have tremendous glare that propagate directly into viewers’ eyes when their field of view substantially overlaps with the center optical axes of the headlight beams. Her discoveries have been validated by experiments and finite simulations many times over and stand as the only work that can help the auto headlamp industry upgrade their photometric standards for non-point sources that produce non-uniform luminance and radiance – and adopt appropriate measurement techniques that would disqualify all current LED headlamps for having too great a luminous intensity along the optical axes of both high and low beams. Similarly, her work suggests that current 4G and 5G wireless signals generate dangerous levels of electromagnetic radiation for cell phone users and for residents who live nearby antenna base stations.   Source: bionicair.com

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    MattH

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    Thank you for the article, John.
    I refuse to use the term misinformation so lies, propaganda, and half truths are easily propagated around electromagnetic effect on biological processes.

    Most people are aware that their governments blatantly lie to them and yet do not audit what they are told against current scientific hypothesis. Critical thinking I believe it is called.

    When I was a child we were told people who sleep with their head close to an electrical switchboard had a higher incidence of leukemia.

    ‘The second risk is far more insidious. It is from the magnetic and electric fields from the passage of current through the conductor. It is known as Extremely Low Frequency (ELF) radiation. The effects include vertigo, nausea, dizziness and headaches, fatigue and listlessness, insomnia. Long term exposures can lead to cancer. Long term effects of exposures during pregnancy terms can lead to miscarriage, cognitive impairment, shorter pregnancy term (pre-term births) and autism. Another related risk is that of electric shocks or burns from contact currents when a person touches a conductive object in an electromagnetic field and one of them is grounded whilst the other is not
    From this article.
    .’https://www.brightsandz.co/safe-distance-homes-high-tension-electrical-lines/

    I have accessed innumerable dairy cow farms over the years and noticed the grass does not grow under electric fences when one of the hot wires is close to the ground. Moss grows under the wire, then yellow grass, then pasture.

    We were recently informed that standing barefoot on the ground to gain equilibrium with the earth’s negative charge. (positive charged earth around thunder storms) The electrical crackling when removing synthetic clothing is a warning siren.

    And then we have the electromagnetism mentioned in this article.

    We have a consistent pattern.

    Cheers. Matt

    Reply

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