Rolfe
Adult human female
Oh, I didn't for a second think you were! Roger was, though.gmanontario said:I wasn't implying that vets are all rich or crooked or anything....
The Blessed Virgin Mary.
Oh, I didn't for a second think you were! Roger was, though.gmanontario said:I wasn't implying that vets are all rich or crooked or anything....
Rolfe said:Ah, it's that time again. Roger, about the dysmenorrhoea study.
What was the name of the journal that was just about to publish it, again?
The Blessed Virgin Mary.
Daniel Boorstin
The greatest obstacle to discovery is not ignorance -- it is the illusion of knowledge.
T'ai Chi said:I guess in the end I don't care either way.
Just examine his claims if he is making any, and he just provide evidence for his claims if he made any.
You know, on my browser this thread is now on page sixty-something. I have to confess to not having read every single word of it myself, actually, but it does seem to me that about 99% of it, maybe a little more, was people examining Roger's claims and shredding them. And of course Roger coming back with counterarguments which were an insult to anyone's intelligence.T'ai Chi said:Just examine his claims if he is making any, and he just provide evidence for his claims if he made any.
Rolfe said:
or just keep out of it.
T'ai Chi said:Thanks for your comments Rolfe, but I'll do wtf I want to.
I'm interested in the data, if you and/or Cogreslab have any.
How about sharing your contribution to this seminar.cogreslab said:Just back from Istanbul. ....
I only have a few days before going to Washington for the annual BEMS meeting on the 17th, and in the interim have six presentations to prepare for various conferences upcoming in the next few months, so do not expect much from me re the latest tirades until I get back.
cogreslab said:]Just back from Istanbul.
This well-organised but somewhat hasty WHO conference was largely designed and controlled by the establishment's viewpoints, but nevetheless there was sufficient freedom for alternative viewpoints, and a number of new studies were presented (in the form of posters rather than platform presentations) with the exception of Denis Henshaw's talk. On the third day a closed session prepared a set of priorities for EMF research in relation to children. For example the melatonin issue (which had been given high priority by the epi working group) was deemed only medium priority by the general working group.
Many of the themes of this thread also permeated the conference. For example the issue of whether childhood leukemia incidence is declining: it was categorically established that there is still an annual increase of a few percent (as I had maintained here) according to the UK statistics (see Stiller 2004).
Documentation forthcoming, I presume. Not that it matters for our discussion here.
Also the issue of whether ELF fields can penetrate the body: tbis is now generally also accepted,
Not electrical fields. You know, the laws of physics have not changed lately, so you are either misunderstanding, misrepresenting, or lying.
and no doubt will be further pursued at Richard Nuccitelli's Gordon Conference in July (of which we are co-sponsors). On this subject an interesting poster (Bilgin Elcin et al., from Adnan Menderes and Ankara Univs. Dept of Biophysics, Turkey) reported histological changes in adult male rat tissues from exposure to a vertical 1.5 kV 50Hz electric field.
1.5kV is not a measure of a field. Fields are measured in V/m, remember?
There were increases in sperm cells while the liver cells showed widened bile canaliculi and parenchymal degeneration in the liver cells inter alia. This exposure is well below the NRPB exposure guidelines.
NRPB quidelines are in V/m.
Another useful poster was one of the first to address the issue of childrens' chronic exposure to cellphones. Acute exposure does not appear to cause any affects and two separate studies (e,g Preece) report no differences. Kolodynsky et al.'s new 3 year study of some 700 children aged 7-12 years however reported more mistakes in responses, shorter attention span, and lower IQ among the children cellphone users compared with the control group.
Of course, this gives us no clue to causation.
Most of the usual suspects were present, but there were a few new faces too. Dr Scholes from UCL presented evidence of how powerful are the endogenous fields are from the brain,
So how powerful is it? My guess is ~10mv/m.
and confirmed that myelination in the human infant is not completed before 2 years, and Dr Tracy Lightfoot from York Univ. a geneticist confirmed that no human leukaemia virus has ever been found. She suggested that chromosomal translocations in utero might be associated with childhood leukaemia as a result of faulty repair.
Since DNA repair is carried out by enzymes it was interesting to learn of several studies where the effect of non-thermal EMF has been to inhibit enzyme activity.
Camelia Gabriel (whose tissue dielectric studies are used by most of the cellphone industry) also confirmed that my concepts of half wave resonance as posted here were correct.
I don't think she did. If she did, it only means she is wrong, too.
Liz Ainsbury gave a useful overview of the relative importance of circular polarisation, and made the same point as I did that this implicated the electric component as a bioeffector, since linear polarisation has a much lower current density.
Total technobabble.
John Swanson gave a review from the NGT viewpoint, and beautifully illustrated my comment on this thread that the NGT avoids electric field research, by dismissing it completely in his opening sentence, saying that we should be led by the epidemiology (and hence he looked only at magnetic fields). Since the utilities fund 80 percent of the epidemiology anyway, this effectively means that we are to be led by the way the utilities want to go!
Meaning what?
As usual Mike Repacholi did a masterful job in ensuring that the main presentataions conformed to the establishment view on the one hand but left some latitude for the alternative protagonists to get on record and have their say on the other. He has a difficult job.
Leeka Kheifetz his former buddy at WHO (now at UCLA) is preparing a summary of the main workshop conculsions, and has asked me to put in a few remarks re the electric field issue.
It was nice to be made so welcome and given such respect by the bioelectromagnetics community by comparison with the rough treatment I get here! But then these poeple know their business and their science, and don't play about with pedantry and pejorative games.
Har, har.
I only have a few days before going to Washington for the annual BEMS meeting on the 17th, and in the interim have six presentations to prepare for various conferences upcoming in the next few months, so do not expect much from me re the latest tirades until I get back.
cogreslab said:Just back from Istanbul.
....and Dr Tracy Lightfoot from York Univ. a geneticist confirmed that no human leukaemia virus has ever been found. She suggested that chromosomal translocations in utero might be associated with childhood leukaemia as a result of faulty repair.
cogreslab said:Camelia Gabriel (whose tissue dielectric studies are used by most of the cellphone industry) also confirmed that my concepts of half wave resonance as posted here were correct.
cogreslab said:Liz Ainsbury gave a useful overview of the relative importance of circular polarisation, and made the same point as I did that this implicated the electric component as a bioeffector, since linear polarisation has a much lower current density.
cogreslab said:Leeka Kheifetz his former buddy at WHO (now at UCLA) is preparing a summary of the main workshop conculsions, and has asked me to put in a few remarks re the electric field issue.
cogreslab said:It was nice to be made so welcome and given such respect by the bioelectromagnetics community by comparison with the rough treatment I get here! But then these poeple know their business and their science, and don't play about with pedantry and pejorative games.
cogreslab said:"A significant association was found between childhood leukaemia and the use of some electric appliances during the conception of the child and the use by the child. However, apparent dose-response relationship was not found."
