As a multitude of hazardous wireless technologies are
deployed in homes, schools and workplaces, government
officials and industry representatives continue to insist on
their safety despite growing evidence to the contrary. A
major health crisis looms that is only hastened through the
extensive deployment of “smart grid” technology.
In October 2009 at Florida Power and Light’s (FPL) solar
energy station President Barack Obama announced that $3.4
billion of the American Reinvestment and Recovery Act would
be devoted to the country’s “smart
energy grid” transition. Matching funds from the energy
industry brought the total national Smart Grid investment to
$8 billion. FPL was given $200 million of federal money to
install 2.5 million “smart meters” on homes and businesses
throughout the state.
By now many residents in the United States and Canada have
the smart meters installed on their dwellings. Each of these
meters is equipped with an electronic cellular transmitter
that uses powerful bursts of electromagnetic radiofrequency
(RF) radiation to communicate with nearby meters that
together form an interlocking network transferring detailed
information on residents’ electrical usage back to the
utility every few minutes or less. Such information can
easily be used to determine individual patterns of behavior
based on power consumption.
The smart grid technology is being sold to the public as a
way to “empower” individual energy consumers by allowing
them to access information on their energy usage so that
they may eventually save money by programming “smart” (i.e,
wireless enabled) home appliances and equipment that will
coordinate their operability with the smart meter to run
when electrical rates are lowest. In other words, a broader
plan behind smart grid technology involves a tiered rate
system for electricity consumption that will be set by the
utility to which customers will have no choice but to
conform.
Because of power companies’ stealth rollout of smart meters
a large majority of the public still remains unaware of the
dangers they pose to human health. This remains the case
even though states such as Maine have adopted an "opt out"
provision for their citizens. The devices have not been
safety-tested by Underwriters Laboratory and thus lack the
UL approval customary for most electronics. Further, power
customers are typically told by their utilities that the
smart meter only communicates with the power company “a few
times per day” to transmit information on individual
household energy usage. However, when individuals obtained
the necessary equipment to do their own testing they found
the meters were emitting bursts of RF radiation throughout
the home far more intense than a cell phone call every
minute or less.
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