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	Comments on: EMR/RF/5G; Fatal Attraction: Data Scientists and Radar	</title>
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	<description>Uniting to Protect Earth, Skies and Seas</description>
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		<title>
		By: Taffy Williams		</title>
		<link>https://safetechinternational.org/emr-rf-5g-fatal-attraction-data-scientists-and-radar/#comment-338</link>

		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Taffy Williams]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 23 Sep 2022 16:38:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://safetechinternational.org/?p=13107#comment-338</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Meanwhile, the insect life in my yard has disappeared, as have all the robins that once called this place their home. The other birds are almost gone too, except for a few doves, sustained by the seed I leave out for them. Raising robins (I&#039;m a wildlife rehabilitator), I have easily &quot;dug up&quot; the earthworms to feed the young birds and teach them how to hunt, year after year. This year, I had to dig down several inches, far beyond where a robin would be able to reach, to find a worm. All summer, I&#039;ve dug up about 10 worms total. It&#039;s a crisis and tragedy. Of course I&#039;ve supplemented with meal worms, and released hundreds of crickets in my yard (bought from the local pet store) just to hear them singing again. This is not normal. It&#039;s too warm for birds to start migrating, and robins have pretty much stopped migrating anyway. For at least five years I&#039;ve seen them travel in flocks around the area through the winter, going from site to site (crabapple tree to elderberry...) searching for food. They used to wake me up at 4 am singing in the darkness well into October, but now it&#039;s silent around here.
All around the neighborhood, the robins have vanished. I have driven around just to search for the usually abundant turf-bound birds, but they have disappeared - wherever I go! Is this a matter of the drought? The earth is dried out, despite how often I water to try to mitigate this problem. Just 30 minutes after watering it&#039;s dried out and dusty again. What can survive here in this desertified earth, I ask myself. I reasoned in the past that robins were still so abundant because their main prey item, worms, live below just the dirt, up to an inch or so, and have been mostly somehow able to escape the wifi radiation we - and other insect life - are being bombarded with. Now that the earthworms have vanished, probably burrowing down to 6&quot; or more to escape the dry soil, leaving the robins unable to feed, things look pretty bleak.
Wi-fi radiation, chemicals from geo-engineering (dessicants to soil and trees), leaf blowers (which destroy all the insect life in/on the ground and under the leaves/detritus), chemicals from lawn care and &quot;West Nile Virus&quot; or other government sponsored spraying... these have been the death of a million cuts to insect life, and thus birds and the other critter-life that depend on them for survival. We are witnessing today a crisis of heartbreaking scope and breadth.
Just think of life without birds outside, without insects... it&#039;s happening now! The wifi is a huge problem, as are the other assaults that must be addressed. Everything on my property is wired, I allow no chemicals and no leaf blowing, but I can&#039;t stop the geoengineering chemicals raining down on all of us, or the wifi hitting us from the small cells just across the street. It&#039;s a fact that scientists overall are failing (wilfully or out of ignorance) to evaluate the impacts of RF EMF, geoengineering chemicals, leaf blowers and lawn care practices and their relationship to the environmental catastrophies we are witnessing. God help us.
I didn&#039;t mean to write so much.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Meanwhile, the insect life in my yard has disappeared, as have all the robins that once called this place their home. The other birds are almost gone too, except for a few doves, sustained by the seed I leave out for them. Raising robins (I&#8217;m a wildlife rehabilitator), I have easily &#8220;dug up&#8221; the earthworms to feed the young birds and teach them how to hunt, year after year. This year, I had to dig down several inches, far beyond where a robin would be able to reach, to find a worm. All summer, I&#8217;ve dug up about 10 worms total. It&#8217;s a crisis and tragedy. Of course I&#8217;ve supplemented with meal worms, and released hundreds of crickets in my yard (bought from the local pet store) just to hear them singing again. This is not normal. It&#8217;s too warm for birds to start migrating, and robins have pretty much stopped migrating anyway. For at least five years I&#8217;ve seen them travel in flocks around the area through the winter, going from site to site (crabapple tree to elderberry&#8230;) searching for food. They used to wake me up at 4 am singing in the darkness well into October, but now it&#8217;s silent around here.<br />
All around the neighborhood, the robins have vanished. I have driven around just to search for the usually abundant turf-bound birds, but they have disappeared &#8211; wherever I go! Is this a matter of the drought? The earth is dried out, despite how often I water to try to mitigate this problem. Just 30 minutes after watering it&#8217;s dried out and dusty again. What can survive here in this desertified earth, I ask myself. I reasoned in the past that robins were still so abundant because their main prey item, worms, live below just the dirt, up to an inch or so, and have been mostly somehow able to escape the wifi radiation we &#8211; and other insect life &#8211; are being bombarded with. Now that the earthworms have vanished, probably burrowing down to 6&#8243; or more to escape the dry soil, leaving the robins unable to feed, things look pretty bleak.<br />
Wi-fi radiation, chemicals from geo-engineering (dessicants to soil and trees), leaf blowers (which destroy all the insect life in/on the ground and under the leaves/detritus), chemicals from lawn care and &#8220;West Nile Virus&#8221; or other government sponsored spraying&#8230; these have been the death of a million cuts to insect life, and thus birds and the other critter-life that depend on them for survival. We are witnessing today a crisis of heartbreaking scope and breadth.<br />
Just think of life without birds outside, without insects&#8230; it&#8217;s happening now! The wifi is a huge problem, as are the other assaults that must be addressed. Everything on my property is wired, I allow no chemicals and no leaf blowing, but I can&#8217;t stop the geoengineering chemicals raining down on all of us, or the wifi hitting us from the small cells just across the street. It&#8217;s a fact that scientists overall are failing (wilfully or out of ignorance) to evaluate the impacts of RF EMF, geoengineering chemicals, leaf blowers and lawn care practices and their relationship to the environmental catastrophies we are witnessing. God help us.<br />
I didn&#8217;t mean to write so much.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
		
			</item>
		<item>
		<title>
		By: Taffy Williams		</title>
		<link>https://safetechinternational.org/emr-rf-5g-fatal-attraction-data-scientists-and-radar/#comment-337</link>

		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Taffy Williams]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 22 Sep 2022 15:48:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://safetechinternational.org/?p=13107#comment-337</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Meanwhile, the insect life in my yard has disappeared, as have all the robins that once called this place their home. The other birds are almost gone too, except for a few doves, sustained by the seed I leave out for them. Raising robins (I&#039;m a wildlife rehabilitator), I have easily &quot;dug up&quot; the earthworms to feed the young birds and teach them how to hunt, year after year. This year, I had to dig down several inches, far beyond what a robin would be able to reach, to find a worm. All summer, I&#039;ve dug up about 10 worms total. It&#039;s a crisis and tragedy. Of course I&#039;ve supplemented with meal worms, and released hundreds of crickets in my yard (bought from the local pet store) just to hear them singing again. This is not normal. It&#039;s too warm for birds to start migrating, and robins have pretty much stopped migrating anyway. For at least five years I&#039;ve seen them travel in flocks around the area through the winter, going from site to site (crabapple tree to elderberry...) searching for food. They used to wake me up at 4 am singing in the darkness well into October, but now it&#039;s silent around here.
All around the neighborhood, the robins have vanished. I have driven around just to search for the usually abundant turf-bound birds, but they have disappeared - wherever I go! Is this a matter of the drought? The earth is dried out, despite how often I water to try to mitigate this problem. Just 30 minutes after watering it&#039;s dried out and dusty again. What can survive here in this desertified earth, I ask myself. I reasoned in the past that robins were still so abundant because their main prey item, worms, live below just the dirt, up to an inch, and have been mostly somehow able to escape the wifi radiation we - and other insect life - are being bombarded with. Now that the earthworms have vanished, probably burrowing down to 6&quot; or more to escape the dry soil, leaving the robins unable to feed, things look pretty bleak.
Wi-fi radiation, chemicals from geo-engineering (dessicants to soil and trees), leaf blowers (which destroy all the insect life in/on the ground and under the leaves/detritus), chemicals from lawn care and &quot;West Nile Virus&quot; or other government sponsored spraying... these have been the death of a million cuts to insect life, and thus birds and the other critter-life that depend on them for survival. We are witnessing today a crisis of heartbreaking scope and breadth.
Just think of life without birds outside, without insects... it&#039;s happening now! The wifi is a huge problem, as are the other assaults that must be addressed. Everything on my property is wired, I allow no chemicals and no leaf blowing, but I can&#039;t stop the geoengineering chemicals raining down on all of us, or the wifi hitting us from the small cells just across the street. It&#039;s a fact that scientists overall are failing (wilfully or out of ignorance) to evaluate the impacts of RF EMF, geoengineering chemicals, leaf blowers and lawn care practices and their relationship to the environmental catastrophies we are witnessing. God help us.
I didn&#039;t mean to write so much.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Meanwhile, the insect life in my yard has disappeared, as have all the robins that once called this place their home. The other birds are almost gone too, except for a few doves, sustained by the seed I leave out for them. Raising robins (I&#8217;m a wildlife rehabilitator), I have easily &#8220;dug up&#8221; the earthworms to feed the young birds and teach them how to hunt, year after year. This year, I had to dig down several inches, far beyond what a robin would be able to reach, to find a worm. All summer, I&#8217;ve dug up about 10 worms total. It&#8217;s a crisis and tragedy. Of course I&#8217;ve supplemented with meal worms, and released hundreds of crickets in my yard (bought from the local pet store) just to hear them singing again. This is not normal. It&#8217;s too warm for birds to start migrating, and robins have pretty much stopped migrating anyway. For at least five years I&#8217;ve seen them travel in flocks around the area through the winter, going from site to site (crabapple tree to elderberry&#8230;) searching for food. They used to wake me up at 4 am singing in the darkness well into October, but now it&#8217;s silent around here.<br />
All around the neighborhood, the robins have vanished. I have driven around just to search for the usually abundant turf-bound birds, but they have disappeared &#8211; wherever I go! Is this a matter of the drought? The earth is dried out, despite how often I water to try to mitigate this problem. Just 30 minutes after watering it&#8217;s dried out and dusty again. What can survive here in this desertified earth, I ask myself. I reasoned in the past that robins were still so abundant because their main prey item, worms, live below just the dirt, up to an inch, and have been mostly somehow able to escape the wifi radiation we &#8211; and other insect life &#8211; are being bombarded with. Now that the earthworms have vanished, probably burrowing down to 6&#8243; or more to escape the dry soil, leaving the robins unable to feed, things look pretty bleak.<br />
Wi-fi radiation, chemicals from geo-engineering (dessicants to soil and trees), leaf blowers (which destroy all the insect life in/on the ground and under the leaves/detritus), chemicals from lawn care and &#8220;West Nile Virus&#8221; or other government sponsored spraying&#8230; these have been the death of a million cuts to insect life, and thus birds and the other critter-life that depend on them for survival. We are witnessing today a crisis of heartbreaking scope and breadth.<br />
Just think of life without birds outside, without insects&#8230; it&#8217;s happening now! The wifi is a huge problem, as are the other assaults that must be addressed. Everything on my property is wired, I allow no chemicals and no leaf blowing, but I can&#8217;t stop the geoengineering chemicals raining down on all of us, or the wifi hitting us from the small cells just across the street. It&#8217;s a fact that scientists overall are failing (wilfully or out of ignorance) to evaluate the impacts of RF EMF, geoengineering chemicals, leaf blowers and lawn care practices and their relationship to the environmental catastrophies we are witnessing. God help us.<br />
I didn&#8217;t mean to write so much.</p>
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