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under power lines feeding until they swell up and burst. So what it boils down to is,
it's like when insecticides came out - we don't know what they do."
HAARP is going ahead, however, despite the warning of possible
biological effects. Callahan adds, "Nobody's studying it; they just sit there and say
'there's no harm in it'. Out of sight, out of mind."
FORBID THE CENTIMETER-WAVES!
Dr. Wolfgang Volkrodt of West Germany takes an extreme position on this
challenge facing the people of Earth.353 "Centimeter-wave technology must
disappear from our environment! We need a UNO (United Nations Organization)
charter which would prohibit the entire field of electromagnetic wave technology
which causes disastrous resonance in biological systems," Volkrodt insists, He
calls
for monitoring centers that can detect use of the prohibited wavelengths anywhere,
even those harmful wavelengths beamed from satellites.
While the authors see a total ban on microwave relay and radio frequency
technology as being unrealistic, we agree with Volkrodt that there is widespread
denial of the hazards. Dr. Volkrodt says "the path seems long and arduous until our
politicians realize what is happening in the research institutes of the super powers,
and what explosive findings will confront the inhabitants of this endangered world
before the end of this century. Let us hope that those in positions of responsibility
will awake before it is too late."
The authors interviewed other experts whose warnings were more low-key.
For example, James Beale of Louisiana, whose career has been in a variety of
electromagnetic research venues, regrets to see that there are not many experts on
bioelectromagnetics, and fewer still who are independent of military contracts.
Furthermore, said Beale, those experts prefer to talk among themselves instead of
with the public. "This is where you need bridge science', which is what is going to
come about by talking on the Internet."
Bridging between specialties, and between scientists and the public, is one
of the most pressing needs uncovered by our research. It isn't hard to do. Today's
engineers can walk into a library or across campus to the biological sciences
departments and find stacks of information about the inter-relatedness of Earth's
electrical, magnetic and biological systems. But to what extent do they bother to
look outside their own specialty?
The life sciences such as biology look at the web of connections between
living organisms and Earth's natural systems. Sciences which deal with what is dead
or mechanical are over- represented in the board rooms where military projects are
conceived, bought and sold. For example, one engineer commented on the
educational background of Col. John A. Alexander, chief spokesman for the U.S.
military's "non-lethal" weapons campaign. "He's the only person I've met who brags
about having a degree in thanatology, the study of death."
353 Raum & Zeit, Vol. 1, Nov. 2, 1989, pg. 57.