You are hereMobilfunk: Wiener Schüler werden bewusst desinformiert
Mobilfunk: Wiener Schüler werden bewusst desinformiert
Ärztekammer sieht Arbeiterkammer und Stadtschulrat als Handlanger der Industrie - Warnung vor noch nicht abschätzbaren Langzeitfolgen durch Mobilfunkstrahlen
Für große Empörung bei vielen Ärztinnen und Ärzten sorgt derzeit eine Broschüre der Arbeiterkammer, in der unter anderem die potenzielle gesundheitliche Gefährdung durch Mobilfunkstrahlen pauschal in Abrede gestellt und in einem Kontext mit Esoterik genannt beziehungsweise mit Mythen wie "Mondkälbern" verglichen wird.
Damit noch nicht genug: Der Stadtschulrat für Wien hat die Broschüre bereits an alle allgemein bildenden Pflichtschulen in Wien geschickt, mit dem "Ersuchen an die Damen und Herren Schulleiter/Schulleiterinnen, den Inhalt dieser Studie im Rahmen einer Konferenz zu thematisieren".
Quelle: Pressemitteilung Ärztekammer für Wien, 28.10.2010
via http://www.diagnose-funk.org/gesundheit/aerzteschaft-a/mobil...
Bitte Handy einwerfen! Warum man sein Handy auch mal abschalten sollte
Wer sicher sein will, dass sein Mobiltelefon nicht erreichbar ist, nicht ortbar ist, nicht läutet, nicht zu viel Strom verbraucht, nicht abhörbar ist, keine gefährliche Strahlung abgeben kann, der sollte das folgende Accessoire fix in seinen Besprechungstich einbauen und alle Mobiltelefone (am besten ohne Akku) bei Besprechungsbeginn einwerfen:
http://www.arborsci.com/detail.aspx?ID=941
Hinweis gemäß SPG Österreich
Gemäß Staatspolizeigesetz / Sicherheitspolizeigesetz (Entwurf vom 06.12.2007, Beschluss vom 06.12.2007, Inkrafttreten am 01.01.2008) distanziere ich mich von den oben angeführten Anwendungsfällen. Der einzig wahre Grund für den Vorschlag die Verbindung von Mobiltelefon und Vorratsdatenspeicherungsmobilfunknetz zu trennen, ist der geringere Stromverbrauch, wenn das Mobiltelefon nicht mit dem Mobilfunktnetz ständig kommuniziert. Dadurch wird der CO2 Ausstoß reduziert. Nachweisbar. Sagt "eine Studie".
Die "Echten" brauchen kein Handy
Die "Echten" brauchen kein Handy,
aber wenn, dann speichern Sie Telefonnummern so:
VIDEO
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kZ2C67GocGg
"The only way around is through" (unknown)
Beyond a critical point within a finite space, freedom diminishes as numbers increase... The human question is not how many can possibly survive within the system, but what kind of existence is possible for those who do survive.
http://www.facebook.com/agnes.rouanet
=] I am free of all prejudices. I hate everyone equally.
http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1395743608
"Don't let someone become a priority in your life... When you are just an option in theirs."
http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=802349240
Thankful for another day of LIFE!!!
http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1434649691
"Pain is inevitable. Suffering is optional."
http://www.facebook.com/suze.walsh?v=info
"get over it"
http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1710806400
"Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and I'm not sure about the the universe." Albert Einstein
"The secret of many a person's success in the world resides in his insight into the moods of men and his tact in dealing with them." J. G. Holland
"Be curious always! For knowledge will not acquire you: you must acquire it." Sudie Back
We are like tea bags - we don't know our own strength until we're in hot water.
http://www.facebook.com/sandy.clare
"The art of being happy lies in the power of extracting happiness from common things."
http://www.facebook.com/susan.e.wiggins
"Due to a total lack of interest Monday was cancelled!" (via status shuffle)
"That which does not kill us , gives us much better stories to tell..."
http://www.facebook.com/lorij
"Never Live Life Unnoticed"
http://www.facebook.com/DallasStar6
"Einsam ist, wer für niemanden die Nummer Eins ist." (Helene Deutsch)
"Lonesome is the one who is for nobody number one."
"Be the change you want to see in the world!"
http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=741076162
"In the 60's, people took acid to make the world weird. Now the world is weird and people take Prozac to make it normal."
http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100000148706798
~Happiness comes from spiritual wealth, not material wealth... Happiness comes from giving, not getting. If we try hard to bring happiness to others, we cannot stop it from coming to us also. To get joy, we must give it, and to keep joy, we must scatter it. ~
http://www.facebook.com/cindy.casto
“When we are unable to find tranquility within ourselves, it is useless to seek it elsewhere” François de la Rochefoucauld
"Don't let someone become a priority in your life... When you are just an option in theirs."
Das Handy als Eierkocher - Ein Hoax?
Update (siehe Kommentare unten)
Machen Sie den Eiertest für Handystrahlung
von Dr. Scheingraber
In Russland wurde ein recht einfacher, aber beeindruckender Versuch mit Eiern gemacht. Zwei Leute nahmen je ein Handy, steckten es in eine Zigarettenschachtel, damit man es aufstellen konnte und stellten (ohne Abstand) ein Ei dazwischen! Und was ist passiert?
Nach 5 Minuten, nichts! Nach 10 Minuten nichts, aber nach 65 Minuten Bestrahlung war das Eiweiß hart, der Eidotter (noch) nicht!
Was sagt uns das? Ich glaube man braucht nicht viel Vorstellungskraft um sich auszumalen was im eigenen Gehirn passiert...
Originalnachricht von Iris Atzmon/Israel:
Quelle: http://www.kp.ru/daily/23694.4/52233/
Kleiner Nachtrag:
Eiweiß ist ein wichtiger Faktor für unsere Gesundheit, auch für die Gehirnfunktion. Der stark schädigende Einfluss der Handystrahlung auf unser Gehirn ist massenhaft nachgewiesen, wird jedoch von der Industrie und dem Staat hartnäckig geleugnet.
Wenn Sie den Test durchführen, muss eine Sprechverbindung bestehen, exakt wie beim Telefonieren.
Sonst erfolgt nur eine leichte Gerinnung. Stellen Sie sich aber auch ein ständig am Körper getragenes Handy vor. Urteilen Sie selbst!
Das Handy läutet! - Na und?
Paul Levinson, Professor für Kommunikations- und Medienwissenschaften an der Fordham Institut ruft in einem Kommentar des Houston Chronicle die Besitzer mobiler Telefone dazu auf, Anrufe nicht immer anzunehmen. Levinson meint, dass viele Besitzer solcher Geräte noch mit der Erfahrung aufgewachsen sind, dass ein Anruf etwas Wichtiges ist. Aber heute ist das nicht mehr so. Heute sind Telefone omnipräsent und gleichzeitig ist ein Anruf nur noch so wichtig wie eine beiläufige Bemerkung. Es lohnt sich oft einfach nicht, eine andere Handlung nur zu unterbrechen, oder andere Menschen zu stören, weil das Handy brummt. Man muss auch keine Entschuldigungen erfinden, wenn man einen Anruf nicht angenommen hat. Warum darf man nicht mit der gleichen Selbstverständlichkeit, mit der man ein "Bitte nicht stören" Schild am Hotelzimmer anbringt, das eigene Telefon ausschalten? Quelle:intern.de
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Aug. 13, 2005, 9:02PM
Must we respond to every ring?
By PAUL LEVINSON
There is a famous story about Samuel Taylor Coleridge, author of The Rime of the Ancient Mariner. He was writing a different poem, which began, "In Xanadu did Kubla Khan a stately pleasure-dome decree." He was interrupted by a knock at the door. This was an age before telephones. Someone was delivering a message. When Coleridge got back to his poem, he had lost his inspiration. His poetic mood had been utterly shattered by the knock on his door. "In Xanadu" would never be more than a glittering, tantalizing fragment.
This story also has it that Coleridge was under the influence of opium when writing Kubla Khan, but that is beside the point. What is crucial about this story is how an unexpected communication can blast to oblivion a private, important thought — indeed, any plan, idea or dream that we may be entertaining inside of our heads. Which brings us to the cell phone.
The most common complaint about cell phones is that people talk on them to the exclusion or intrusion of other people around them. The loud voice wafting over from another table at a restaurant intrudes on our conversation. Worse, if I'm having an in-person conversation with you, and you receive a call and smile me off while you talk on the phone, what am I, chopped liver?
And worse than that, if I'm having an in-person conversation with you, and I receive a call on my cell phone, and it distracts me from our conversation, I may lose even more — the crucial point I was just about to convey to you.
In all of these situations, the cell phone bullies us out of other communications. Actually, long before cell phones, the telephone regularly trumped all other activities in the home. Not only would television shows and conversations with family members almost always yield to the ring of the phone, so would lovemaking (media theorists called this "telephonus interruptus"). The appeal of the ringing phone, especially in an age before caller ID, was that the call could always be from the personal or business relationship we most wanted to hear from, even though it was usually from an in-law or someone seeking a contribution.
But these cases might not be the worst that the cell phone can mete out to our psyches. Far more damaging than an interrupted dinner, conversation or other act of communication may be the cell phone's disruption of our most private, inner thoughts. When the cell phone rings and we are alone, it can barge into and pre-empt the essential time we each need to spend in the company of our own minds. What can we do to defend against these kinds of jangling intrusions, as well as the more superficial paper cuts of cell-phonic culture?
We have already entered a golden age of the little white lie, courtesy of our cell phone, and this is by and large a healthy, protective development. "I didn't hear it ring," "I must've been in a pocket without service," "I didn't realize my phone had shut off" are among the more common fibs all of us tell from time to time, all in the noble service of carving out some time and space in our lives.
The notion of being unreachable is not alien to human life, after all — we have "Do Not Disturb" signs on the doors of hotel rooms, and most people would never dream of calling most other people in the middle of the night. So why must we work so hard to carve out some unbreachable time for ourselves when it comes to cell phones? Why must we apologize if we have indeed decided to shut off our cell phone for a while?
The problem is that we come from a millenniums-old, deeply embedded tradition of long-distance communication scarcity. For as long as there have been human beings on this planet, and right up until the recent mass deployment of cell phones, it has been easy to communicate with someone right next to us, or a few feet away, and difficult to do the same with someone across the town, country or globe. This meant that we have been socially bred to welcome any communication from afar.
Whether codices delivered by breathless couriers in Roman times, telegrams delivered by bright kids in uniforms in Victorian times or just a phone call throughout much of the 20th century, such missives from far away were seen as gifts or miracles, if not always welcome, certainly events to make time for. Like Pavlov's dogs, we jumped at the ring, and still do.
But the cell phone, bringing its own kind of miracle, has made long-distance communication common, and time by ourselves an endangered species. Now time alone, or a conversation with someone right next to us which cannot be interrupted by a cell phone, is something to be cherished. The state of being removed from or beyond all possible communication has come under siege. Even avid devotees of the cell phone — myself usually included — are tempted at times to throw it away, or curse the day it was ever invented.
But we don't, and we won't, and there really is no need to. All that is required to reclaim our private time is a general social recognition that we are entitled to it. I've noticed, among people in their teens and 20s who use cell phones, that this is already coming to be. While not completely comfortable ignoring a ringing cell phone, kids seem much less concerned about offending an unwanted caller by not answering than do older adults. This is likely because, for someone born into the cell phone age, calls are as commonplace as talk and thoughts.
In other words, we have to develop a healthy contempt, or at least skepticism, for the ring of our own cell phone. Given the ease of making and receiving calls, if we don't talk to the caller right now, we surely will shortly later. The unrequited caller is usually traceable, and likely to leave a message, if the call is important.
In an age of omniaccessibility, the cell phone call deserves no greater priority than a random word to the person next to us, or a stray, intriguing thought. Though the call on my cell phone may be the one-in-a-million from Steven Spielberg — who has finally read one of my science fiction novels and wants to make it into his next movie — it is likely not, and I'm better off thinking about that idea I just had for a new story, or the slice of pizza I'll eat for lunch.
---
Levinson is professor and chair of communication and media studies at Fordham University and author of "Cellphone: The Story of the World's Mobile Medium and How It Has Transformed Everything!" This article originally appeared in Newsday.
Quelle: http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/editorial/outlook/3...
Anmerkung der Redaktion: Aber erzählt das bitte ja nicht der Marketing Abteilung bei eurem Handy-Provider!
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