Glenn BeauvaisCanada
Jul 15, 2015
Eileen O'Connor had lived within 100 meters of a cell Tower in small town in England for 7 years when she developed breast cancer. Going through treatment, she started seeing a surprising number of neighbors from her street in the hospital, all diagnosed with breast cancer in a 6-month period. Curious about this trend, she started surveying her neighbors. She found that, out of the 18 houses within 500m of the tower, 77 per cent had major illnesses. A number of major studies support this phenomenon of cancer clusters spreading around cell phone towers. For instance, a German team published an article in the journal Umwelt·Medizin·Gesellschaft (Environmental Medicine Society) that concluded: "The result of the study shows that the proportion of newly developing cancer cases was significantly higher among those patients who had lived during the past ten years at a distance of up to 400 metres from the cellular transmitter site, which has been in operation since 1993, compared to those patients living further away, and that the patients fell ill on average 8 years earlier." We must stop the reckless invasion of these dangerous towers and stem the "Cancer 'tidal wave' on horizon," as the WHO warns (http://www.bbc.com/news/health-26014693). Eileen O'Connor tells her story in this excellent documentary, "Resonance: Beings of Frequency."
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