DNA Damage
SAR No Good!
What\'s Suggested
Product Comparison
Safe Phones
RF Safe Headsets
Belt Shields
Pocket Shields
Shopping Cart
Your cart is empty.

[ Browse ]
Product Categories
· Air Tube Headsets/Standard Headsets
· Ferrite Bead/ Wire Guard
· Headset Adapters
· Personal Shielding Protection
· Public Exposure Videos
· RF Safe Packages
· RFS Clothing
· RFS External Antennas
· RFS Meters
· STORE RETURN POLICY
Old Articles
BLoG Archives

Thursday, August 14
· Double Standard for Radiation Protection in the Wireless Workplace
Friday, August 01
· headset adapters
Sunday, July 20
· Are mobile towers safe?
Wednesday, July 16
· Cell tower complaints are loud and clear
Monday, July 14
· This Is Your Brain on Cell Phones
· Toronto Public Health advises kids and teens to limit cell phone usage, as healt
Friday, July 04
· COLUMN: The antennas are coming
Wednesday, July 02
· Handsfree cellphone law in effect
Friday, June 27
· Speak up to stop the cell tower
· Parent asks church to reconsider cell tower proposal
· Mobile phones and kids: helpful or harmful?
Monday, June 23
·
Wednesday, June 18
· Possible health hazards from mobile phone radiation
Wednesday, June 11
· Teen insomnia linked to cellphone use
Monday, June 09
· Cell towers a health risk at Lodi schools?
Thursday, June 05
· Mobile Phones: Are They More Dangerous Than Smoking?
· Is Ted Kennedy’s Cancer Linked to Cell Phone Use?
Wednesday, June 04
· Are wireless phones dangerous?
Saturday, May 24
· Listen! Cell Phones May Cause Brain Cancer
· Are mobile towers safe?
· Mobile Phone Use While Pregnant May Seriously Damage Unborn
Sunday, May 04
· Beware of Technology During Allergy Season
· Cell phone tower proposal moved, neighbors resist
Friday, April 25
· Scientists Agree That EMFs Pose a Threat to Your Health
· Cell phone tower plan dropped
· Cell Phone Tower Going Up On Man's Roof
Thursday, April 10
· Will Your Cell Phone Kill You?
Saturday, April 05
· Cellphones more harmful than smoking
Friday, April 04
· Reducing Electromagnetic Frequency Exposure May Improve Your Health
Saturday, March 29
· Invisible Hazards in the Wireless Age
Thursday, March 27
· Static over cell phone tower
Thursday, March 13
· The truth about using hands-free devices behind the wheel
Wednesday, January 16
· Where cancer-causing agents lurk
· Cell Phones Dangerous for Children
Thursday, January 10
· Cancer and mobile phones: the warnings are getting stronger
· Trumbull council OKs cell antenna
Sunday, January 06
· HEALTH: FRENCH MINISTRY SAYS NOT TO CELL PHONES FOR KIDS
Thursday, January 03
· Trumbull considers cell tower deal
Sunday, December 30
· Telcos get mixed signals about better reception
Wednesday, December 12
· Mobile phones increase the risk of tumours
Monday, December 10
· Bloomfield debates cell tower safety
Saturday, December 08
· New cell tower approved despite health concerns
Monday, December 03
· This stupid gadget doesn’t work and you shouldn’t buy it and it sucks
· Balloon test tabled
Saturday, December 01
· Cell Phones and Kids: Not a Safe Combination
Friday, November 30
· Cell tower still could happen
Wednesday, November 28
· Berkeley council takes no vote on cell-phone towers
· Group calls for limitations on cellular antennas
· Israeli Druse riot over installation of cell phone tower
· Beware cell phone users

Older Articles

www.bestdealon.com

BDO BLoG Archives

Keywords

Story Title For whom the cell tolls ... NOT!
Keyword: cell phone tolls
· cell phone tolls
· cell phone tolls usage


Keywords powered by
BestDealOn.com
Previous Article Stop talking and driving  ---  Next Article Cell Phone Dangers Revealed
For whom the cell tolls ... NOT!
Cell Phone Towers News

By JOHN DARLING  September 3, 2006

for the Mail Tribune

They are the few. The proud. The out of touch.

They don't own cell phones. And mostly, they're pretty happy about it.

Sure, there are times when it would be awfully convenient to have one, like on a long trip or when a family member is ill, but mostly, the non-celled balk at the expense, the claims of health questions and the ever-increasing intrusion of chip-driven devices into their private lives.

"You're walking in lovely Lithia Park, enjoying nature, and along comes a guy talking on his cell phone and you're right back in the busy world. It kind of ticks me off," says Ashland City Councilman David Chapman.

"I don't even like my home phone. When people ask me why I don't have a cell phone, I say, 'Why would I want one?' I prefer being unconnected, with no one able to get in touch with me."

For Jack Thompson, director at Southern Oregon Tennis Club, the home and work phones are plenty, and he says he returns voicemails quickly.

"Never had a cell phone. My life goes on as normal. If I had one, I wouldn't use it much. My life is less cluttered this way. My wife has one for trips," says Thompson.

What really drove it home for Thompson was, during visits to tennis clubs in California, he was shocked to see tennis pros answering cell phones during lessons, keeping their students cooling their sneakers at $55 per hour.

"Very rude. Not professional," says Robinson. "We have the rule here. Cell phones are turned off."

Ashland filmmaker Will Wilkinson used to have a cell, but, pleading health concerns and a lifestyle of "voluntary simplicity," he tossed it.

"It's the whole environment thing. Voluntary simplicity means you don't have things you don't absolutely need," he says. "We have one car and no cell phone. It's less money I need to make, so it's less burden on the environment making that money."

As for safety issues, chiefly the common dread of car breakdowns far from home, Wilkinson says he'd prefer to count on the kindness of strangers, as happened with a breakdown in Mexico.

"We got help right away from lots of people and none of them had cell phones," he says. "A cell phone might have been a convenient, time-saving device but it makes you unconscious, kind of hypnotized. You're not aware of the possibilities for you to interact in the real world. Being without one stimulates the brain to think."

Murray Huggins, a Medford bagpipe maker and father of two, asks, "Why do we need to be in touch 24/7? It's slightly neurotic and dependent. There used to be pay phones all over and if you needed one, you might spend a dollar a month on them. But they're taking them all out and now we're spending 50 times that."

After many years cell-free, Huggins finally relented, getting his first cell phone this week as part of a package deal with Internet service.

"He came home and said, 'Don't be mad at me, but I got one,' " says his wife, Yoko. "I don't know about cell phones. I hate to sign for two years and pay 50 bucks a month. We're not using it that much."

Another busy Ashland City Council member, Cate Hartzell, eschews the cellular life, saying "it's really important to live a life where sometimes you're simply not accessible."

But, like many cell-free folk, Hartzell's main concerns are economic — "the two-year contracts are not beneficial to medium and low-income people" — and health-related.

"I'm not convinced that the towers and cell phone technology are healthy," she says, "and I don't want to contribute to that."

When she got her son a cell, Hartzell did considerable research to find the phone that "would do the least damage to his brain and most reduce the amount of electromagnetic radiation."

Electromagnetic radiation is emitted by any electrical device, and the phones' signals are simple radio waves, although some cell towers use microwaves to relay phone signals over long distances. But because the relatively weak EMF-producing phones are held next to the brain, some are concerned.

Chapman agrees: "I would beware if I used them ... . The science isn't out yet on this."

Jennifer Walsh of Sprint headquarters in Kansas said in an interview that Sprint is "committed to the safety of our customers" and that all phones meet radio emission guidelines of the FCC (Federal Communications Commission), EPA (Environmental Protection Agency), FDA (Food and Drug Administration) and OSHA (Occupational Health and Safety Administration) and "we are comfortable with that."

Most cell-free people confess to borrowing phones from friends for important, unanticipated calls, but deny feeling like dinosaurs — tied to obsolete landlines.

"Dinosaur? Call me a troglodyte is you will. It doesn't bother me," says Chapman. "I still wear corduroy pants."

Notes Hartzell, "If they figure out in 10 years that they do cause cancer, just like it took them so long to figure out about cigarettes, who's going to be the dinosaur?"

While countless Web sites sound klaxons over the radio and electromagnetic frequency hazards of cell phones, the FDA has so far found no cause for alarm. According to its Web site, the agency has found no solid evidence of a health risk but "in the near future" plans to "identify knowledge gaps that may warrant additional research."

But it's not just perceived biological threats that avert cell-phone avoiders. Citing a recent local crash between a bicyclist and a cell phone-using motorist, Hartzell said driving while cell-chatting "splits the attention and causes more accidents."

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration agrees, noting that its study placing video cameras inside cars found users of cell phones and other devices caused "far more crashes" and near-misses than non-users.

Retired architect John Fisher-Smith of Ashland says he shuns cell phones because they lead to a false sense that anything can be planned at the last minute.

"You only wonder why you can't live without a cell phone because you are dependent and have set up your life that way," he says. "People in business now are expected to pick up their phone anywhere, any time, or be considered unreliable."

Being cell-free can be a lot like being a non-smoker in a smoky bar, with cell-free folk expressing much disgust for their cellularized fellows.

"Generally, people using cell phones are loud and obnoxious — and they're not saying that much to each other," says Huggins. "It's a kind of thumb-sucking. Captain Kirk, who had the first cell phone on 'Star Trek,' at least spoke softly and didn't talk long — just to say 'beam me up.' "

Observes Chapman, "I had to sit waiting for a flight with this guy next to me and he called everyone on his list, one after one, just to kill time. And he was killing their time, too."

Fisher-Smith echoes the sentiment, "The great majority of calls I hear are empty of any real content — they continue through the airport as if the person on the other end has nothing else to do. Then there are the phone calls from family members or friends, confined to their car for an hour while commuting, who want to be entertained while they drive."

Hartzell adds, "It's an interesting phenomenon, people talking more to people on their cell phone than to their own children sitting next to them. Even though we're more in touch, we're having less contact."

Phone users stand by their hand-helds:

Cell phone users love their cell phones, consider the expense well worth it for the convenience and portability they provide and seem well aware — and not entirely comforted — about the potential health issues.

As for the privacy and personal space lauded by cell-free people, the users of cell phones, like Matt Howard of Ashland, say, "Just hit the button and turn it off if you don't want to be reached. I do, all the time. The calls go to my voicemail. I turn it back on and check them. And I turn it on vibrate instead of ring."

Greg Jaquette of Ashland says the cell easily pays for itself every month by increasing efficiency and availability to opportunities to connect with associates.

"I turn it off, though, when I hike — and also about 9 at night, because I don't want to be talking late. I flip it on before bed to check messages. The space issue has easy solutions."

So remote in the Applegate is Betty Shale that, without power and phone lines, she resorts to a cell phone as her only communication — and has to come into urban areas to be within range.

All had heard about RF (radio frequency) radiation fears, with Shale mentioning she was suspicious about a sore on her ear after long cell phone talk.

"I have to wonder why my ear gets to hot (when talking). It's weird to have waves going through your head."

Cell phone batteries use the same lithium-ion technology as computer laptop power supplies and can generate a lot of heat.

Jaquette uses "hands free" earplugs for long chats and hangs up for driving. "It's a possibility but I'm not too concerned about it."


Posted on Sunday, September 03 @ 12:37:01 UTC by admin
What do you think about this site?

Ummmm, not bad
Cool
Terrific
The best one!
I'm glad someone made it!



Results
Polls

Votes: 11777
Comments: 5
"For whom the cell tolls ... NOT!" | Login/Create an Account | 0 comments
The comments are owned by the poster. We aren't responsible for their content.

No Comments Allowed for Anonymous, please register
AD
 
Options
Article Rating
Average Score: 3.66
Votes: 3

 Printer Friendly  Print as Text
 Send to a Friend  Send to a Friend


RELATED SEARCHES

Related News (Keyword Search)

  • Vaughan councillors call for cell tower plan
  • Cell-phone firms to be asked to shift towers
  • Hollow victory for phone mast campaigners
  • Phone radiation could be bad for sperm
  • Victory for people power
  • A mast too far for planners
  • Council gets £400,000 from flats masts
  • People power topples plans for mobile mast
  • Bright ideas in bulbs
  • Cell phone use linked to brain tumors?
  • Cellphone poses lightning risk
  • Important Study Facts Often Missing In Media Reports About Medical Research
  • Cell Phones Rising
  • Request for Prayer
  • Philips cell phone SAR Levels
  • Please pray
  • Kids and Cell Phones a bad connection
  • Flash Space Shuttle Columbia Tribute
  • 500 Stories Posted For RFS Members In 30 Days

    Related News (Title Search)
  • Dialing Danger?
  • Are cellphones bad for you? Research sends mixed signals on cellphone dangers
  • Mobile Phone Radiation to Unleash Epidemic of Brain Tumors
  • Cell-phone cancer claims are revived
  • Editorial: Cell phones and cancer
  • Double Standard for Radiation Protection in the Wireless Workplace
  • headset adapters
  • Are mobile towers safe?
  • Cell tower complaints are loud and clear
  • This Is Your Brain on Cell Phones
  • Toronto Public Health advises kids and teens to limit cell phone usage, as healt
  • COLUMN: The antennas are coming
  • Handsfree cellphone law in effect
  • Speak up to stop the cell tower
  • Parent asks church to reconsider cell tower proposal
  • Mobile phones and kids: helpful or harmful?

  • Possible health hazards from mobile phone radiation
  • Teen insomnia linked to cellphone use
  • Cell towers a health risk at Lodi schools?
  • Related Links
    · More about Cell Phone Towers News


    Most read story about Cell Phone Towers News:
    Cell Phones & Driving "Just The Facts!"

    No TrackBacks Yet

    Theme design by Ethaidesign.com


    LU 911 and Military Tributes || LU Video News and Forum || Best Deal On Advertising Online || Cell Phone Radiation || Increase Credit Score