UK Petition: Save Our Telephone Landlines!

British Telecom companies are planning to pull the plug on essential landlines in favour of less-regulated, less reliable, less secure and more expensive wireless phones or Voice-Over-Internet-Protocol (VOIP).

They lack a sensible plan to keep people safely and reliably connected. British Telecom (BT), for example, have already been moving customers from landlines to internet connections, although they have temporarily postponed the roll-out after escalating complaints from concerned customers.

PLEASE SIGN THE PETITION AT: www.ipetitions.com

BT to end landline phones sparking fears for millions of vulnerable and elderly people: “Around six percent of households – roughly 1.5million homes – do not have access to the Internet, according to watchdog Ofcom.” https://www.mirror.co.uk/money/bt-end-landline-phones-sparking-25544885

Dismantling landlines will cost us safety, health as well as jobs and cut off critical emergency communications access to millions of people. We must defend our landlines from unscrupulous telecom companies and governments. If you want to keep your choice to have a reliable landline in your home or business, you need to act now. Please sign this Call to Action, contact your MP and spread the word across the UK.

Re-investing in our copper telephone landline network will be beneficial for Public Health, Security and Ecology. Copper landlines serve as a necessary, reliable and safe alternative to power-grid dependent, energy-hungry communications systems like VOIP. Landlines are also far more benign than mobile phone services as wireless connections are less secure and harmful to our health.

There is no longer any question whether wireless Radio Frequency (RF) radiation – used in mobile phone communications and wireless devices – is harmful to humans and wildlife. Commonly identified health consequences of short and longer term exposures include insomnia, headaches and fatigue, as well as other serious and life changing ailments.

Tens of thousands of scientific papers (linked herein) have cited connections to the role of EMFs in a multitude of adverse health effects, including depression, infertility, cancer, damage to DNA/gene expression, oxidative stress, pregnancy complications, Melatonin production, neurological disorders, immune dysfunction, Alzheimers/dementia, leukaemia, and many, many more.

Over 1,600 scientific papers can be found here: https://www.powerwatch.org.uk/science/studies.asp

Another 4000+ studies can be found here: http://www.bioinitiative.org

And another 23,840 studies are linked here: www.EMF-portal.org

Finally, here is a recent compilation of the vast number of known biological effects from wireless radiation: https://www.5gfrequencyfreefairbanks.org

SOURCE: www.ipetitions.com

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Comments (7)

  • Avatar

    Greg Spinolae

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    April 1st was over a month ago.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Mark Tapley

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    Even though it looks like England will lose its land lines It appears that Boris is providing the consolation of more fluoridation for the for the livestock. Can’t find the video on British efforts to fight this hazardous waste but here is on on the hazards of fluoride.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Howdy

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    Even where VOIP is in use, particularly in industry, copper lines are used as a fallback not only for voice, but also as a provision for some fail-safe internet connection. I see no valid reason to stop using it at all.

    Because I was experimenting in trying to cut ISP costs in the past, I have two Cisco IP phones as well as a device to use normal subscriber phones on the IP network, cheap from the usual selling site. Put an ‘asterisk’ server together, and they work great. I initially didn’t include the cost of electricity though, so It wasn’t really a benefit once running costs of a 24/7 online server is factored in.
    Home routers now feature IP phone sockets, so perhaps It will work out, as long as the ISP doesn’t insist on proprietary equipment to connect to them. It still requires hard cables for phone though, as a backup.

    I guess this is the price of mobile networks, though copper lines have decent battery backup at source. I can’t comment on resiliency of mobile networks under a blackout.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Mark Tapley

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    Hello Howdy:
    I suspect China is managing the urban oriental herd and tracking them with the total surveillance total control system without any buried cable. Boris will be following the Chinese model.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Howdy

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    Hi Mark,
    I think you are correct about the China surveillance, but bozo has a little more difficulty due to E.U. rules and such. He is a clown, but I guess we’ll see.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Frances

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    In Australia when the National Broadband Network came into effect, the traditional landline was shut down and now goes through the internet. When the Internet is down due to poor service, or when the power is off due to storms, etc. no telephone service. With no mobile/cell phone service being in a black spot, we are without communication in an emergency. Complaints are made to the federal govt., to the state govt., but no one will take responsibility.

    Reply

    • Avatar

      Janet Mundell

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      If you are a pensioner and do not have a business, then there should be no need for a wireless telephone. I live in South Africa and we phone our cousin’s on the landline as our preferred choice and we do not have a wireless telephone.

      Reply

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