By Amy Worthington
Prior to 1996, the wireless age was not coming online fast enough, primarily  because communities had the authority to block the siting of cell towers. But  the Federal Communications Act of 1996 made it nearly  impossible for  communities to stop construction of cell towers "even if they pose threats to  public health and the environment. Since the decision to enter the age of  wireless convenience was politically determined for us, we have forgotten  well-documented safety and environmental concerns and, with a devil-may-care  zeal that is lethally short-sighted, we have incorporated into our lives every  wireless toy that comes on the market. We behave as if we are addicted to  radiation. Our addiction to cell phones has led to harder "drugs" like wireless  Internet. And now we are bathing in the radiation that our wireless enthusiasm  has unleashed. Those who are addicted, uninformed, corporately biased and  politically-influenced may dismiss our scientifically-sound concerns about the  apocalyptic hazards of wireless radiation. But we must not. Instead, we must  sound the alarm. 
  
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Illa Garcia wore jewelry the  first day she went back to work as a fire lookout for the state of California in  the summer of 2002. The intense radiation from dozens of RF/microwave antennas  surrounding the lookout heated the metals on her body enough to burn her skin.  "I still have those scars," she says. "I never wore jewelry to work after that."  
  
Likely Mountain Lookout, on U.S. Forest Service land with a  spectacular view of Mount Shasta, is one of thousands of RF/microwave "hot  spots" across the nation. A newly-erected cellular communications tower was only  30 feet from the lookout. "One antenna on that tower was even with our heads,"  recalls Garcia. "We could hear high-pitched buzzing. There were also three state  communications antennas mounted on the lookout, only 6 feet from where we  walked. We climbed past them every day." 
  
Motorola company manuals  for management of communications sites confirm that high frequency radiation  from these antennas is nasty stuff. Safety regulations mandate warning signs,  EMF awareness training, protective gear, even transmitter deactivation for  personnel working that close to antennas. Garcia and co-worker Mary Jasso were  never warned about the hazards. This,  they say, demonstrates extreme  malfeasance on the part of agencies and commercial companies responsible for  their exposure. 
  
By the end of fire season, Garcia and Jasso were  so ill they were forced to retire and the lookout was closed to state personnel.  Garcia, 52, is now severely disabled with fibromyalgia, auto-immune thyroiditis  and acute nerve degeneration. Medical tests confirmed broken DNA strands in her  blood and abnormal tissue death in her brain. 
  
Dr. Gunner Heuser,  a medical specialist in neurotoxicity, states that Garcia's disorders are a  result of chronic electromagnetic field exposure in the microwave range and that  "she has become totally disabled as a result." Dr. Heuser wrote, "In my  experience patients develop multisystem complaints after EMF exposure just as  they do after toxic chemical exposure." 
  
Jasso, who worked the  lookout for 11 seasons, is also disabled with brain and lung damage, partial  left side paralysis, muscle tremors, bone pain and DNA damage. Jasso discovered  that all lookouts who worked Likely Mountain since 1989 are disabled. At only 61  years of age, she has lost so much memory that she cannot remember back to when  her first three children were born. She fears that communications radiation may  be a major factor in the nation's phenomenal epidemics of dementia and  autism....
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