Remembering Nearfield Awarded “Best Health Film” at Cannes Film Festival

It’s a winner. It is the film I reviewed a few months ago. Please see that link in the comment section

In just over three months, Remembering Nearfield has become an internationally acclaimed animated short film.

Its aim is to break down taboos around the subject of electromagnetic harm in our society and catalyze global conversations about electromagnetic hypersensitivity (EHS), a disability which brings an uncertain future for those highly sensitized and intolerant of the radiation from man-made electromagnetic fields.

Remembering Nearfield opens our eyes anew to a neglected and misunderstood disability in a world of virtually unavoidable EMF pollution and guides us towards practical, easy-to-achieve solutions so society can reduce EMF radiation.

People with EHS may no longer live in exclusion or isolation when society realizes that lowering environmental EMF not only leads to a better place for people with EHS to live and work but can have boundless potential for improving health for all.

Sean Alexander Carney, Director, Producer and Animator of Remembering Nearfield.

People with serious interests in learning the physics and mathematics of electromagnetic radiation and its harm should now seriously study my work here:

Is there any hope now that the IEEE Microwave Journals’ peer reviewers can finally learn about what kind of EM radiation pattern a flat antenna produces and why ICNIRP, IEEE, and other standard bodies are all measuring the radiation generated by today’s smartphones incorrectly?

I mean incorrectly by a substantial amount in nearfield? Remember Nearfield?!?

Interested people can read my fight with the IEEE Microwave Journals’ peer reviewers and editors. You can find my battle with them in my ResearchGate profile.

Meanwhile, the scientific and technical communities around physics of EM radiation should really study this:

https://principia-scientific.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/khan-paper.pdf

I am not at all sorry that my paper on flat antenna analysis got turned down several times in 2020.

It is a shame that the IEEE and physics communities can’t admit what they don’t know about free-space radiation densitydistribution and worse yet – they are unwilling to learn from someone like me.

It is time the world now looks at the sad situation.

​Header image: Twitter

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