Friday, January 03, 2014

Dogs do their business on a north-south axis: study

Dogs do their business on a north-south axis: study

Sapa | 03 January, 2014 16:07

German and Czech researchers studying squatting dogs doing their business have found the pooches have an "inner compass" that may help explain how they find their way home over great distances.

When the four-legged friends stop during a walk to defecate or urinate, they tend to do so along a north-south axis, provided the earth's magnetic field is stable at the time, the scientists said Friday.
There was no notable difference in magneto-sensitivity among breeds, which ranged from a tiny Yorkshire terrier to a large St Bernard, said team member Dr Sabine Begall of Germany's Duisburg-Essen University.
"We found that the dogs are wonderfully aligned north-to-south --somewhat more so when they defecate than when they urinate -- but only when the magnetic field is stable," Begall told AFP.
For the study, published in the journal Frontiers in Zoology, the 10-member Czech and German research team asked 37 dog owners equipped with compasses over two years to record which way their total of 70 furry friends faced when they relieve themselves.
Initially, the scientists crunched the data from over 7,000 such events but found no clear trend. However, when they looked only at times of low magnetoelectric fluctuation, "there was a wonderful correlation", said Begall.
The findings are another clue that animals can sense electromagnetic waves not noticed by humans, and that dogs, aside from their sharp senses of hearing and smell, also have a "magnetic sense".
In 2008 the team studied Google Earth images and found that cattle tend to graze and lie down along a north-south axis, pointing to a sensitivity also suspected in migratory birds and other species.
"There are anecdotal reports that dogs find their way home over hundreds of kilometers (miles), and an explanation may be that they use the Earth's magnetic field for their orientation," Begall said.
What exactly is going on inside a dog's head when it poops is however "pure speculation" for now, said Begall.
It may be that dogs take stock of where they are, the same way a hiker will orient a map northward, and that they can't do this when high electromagnetic activity makes their "compass needle vibrate".
On the other hand, she said, it is possible that, when dogs feeling the urge to relieve themselves and sense a stable and comforting north-south polarity, "they are especially relaxed".

Dogs do their business on a north-south axis: study

Dogs do their business on a north-south axis: study

Sapa | 03 January, 2014 16:07

German and Czech researchers studying squatting dogs doing their business have found the pooches have an "inner compass" that may help explain how they find their way home over great distances.

When the four-legged friends stop during a walk to defecate or urinate, they tend to do so along a north-south axis, provided the earth's magnetic field is stable at the time, the scientists said Friday.
There was no notable difference in magneto-sensitivity among breeds, which ranged from a tiny Yorkshire terrier to a large St Bernard, said team member Dr Sabine Begall of Germany's Duisburg-Essen University.
"We found that the dogs are wonderfully aligned north-to-south --somewhat more so when they defecate than when they urinate -- but only when the magnetic field is stable," Begall told AFP.
For the study, published in the journal Frontiers in Zoology, the 10-member Czech and German research team asked 37 dog owners equipped with compasses over two years to record which way their total of 70 furry friends faced when they relieve themselves.
Initially, the scientists crunched the data from over 7,000 such events but found no clear trend. However, when they looked only at times of low magnetoelectric fluctuation, "there was a wonderful correlation", said Begall.
The findings are another clue that animals can sense electromagnetic waves not noticed by humans, and that dogs, aside from their sharp senses of hearing and smell, also have a "magnetic sense".
In 2008 the team studied Google Earth images and found that cattle tend to graze and lie down along a north-south axis, pointing to a sensitivity also suspected in migratory birds and other species.
"There are anecdotal reports that dogs find their way home over hundreds of kilometers (miles), and an explanation may be that they use the Earth's magnetic field for their orientation," Begall said.
What exactly is going on inside a dog's head when it poops is however "pure speculation" for now, said Begall.
It may be that dogs take stock of where they are, the same way a hiker will orient a map northward, and that they can't do this when high electromagnetic activity makes their "compass needle vibrate".
On the other hand, she said, it is possible that, when dogs feeling the urge to relieve themselves and sense a stable and comforting north-south polarity, "they are especially relaxed".

Parents may want to limit electronic media at mealtime

Parents may want to limit electronic media at mealtime

NEW YORK Fri Jan 3, 2014 6:22am EST

Josh Rubinstein, 15, utilizes augmented reality technology with AppGear's ''Alien Jailbreak'' on his iPad as he plays the new generation of toy at Grand Central Station during the American International Toy Fair in New York, February 13, 2012. REUTERS/Ray Stubblebine/WowWee/Insider Images/Handout
Josh Rubinstein, 15, utilizes augmented reality technology with AppGear's ''Alien Jailbreak'' on his iPad as he plays the new generation of toy at Grand Central Station during the American International Toy Fair in New York, February 13, 2012.
CREDIT: REUTERS/RAY STUBBLEBINE/WOWWEE/INSIDER IMAGES/HANDOUT
(Reuters Health) - Parents who let their teens use electronic devices or watch TV during family meals tend to serve less nutritious food and have poorer family communication, a new study suggests.
Experts have suggested turning the TV off at mealtime for years. But with the advent of cell phones and other handheld devices, kids can bring all kinds of media with them to the table.
"The findings of this most recent paper showed that mealtime media use is common among families with adolescents but that setting rules around media use at meals may reduce media use among teens and have other positive benefits as well," lead author Jayne A. Fulkerson told Reuters Health in an email.
Fulkerson is the director of the Center for Child and Family Health Promotion Research at the University of Minnesota School of Nursing in Minneapolis.
"Parents who are having family meals with media could choose to make some rules excluding media at mealtimes to spend more quality time with their children," she said.
Fulkerson and her colleagues asked more than 1,800 parents how often their adolescent children watched TV, talked on the phone, texted, played games or listened to music with headphones during family meals.
They also asked parents if they set rules on media use at mealtime and whether they felt family meals were important. Children answered questions about how well their families communicated, including how often they talked about problems with their parents.
Two thirds of parents reported that their teens watched TV or movies during family meals at least some of the time. One quarter said the TV was on frequently.
Texting, talking on the phone, listening to music with headphones and using handheldgames were less common. Between 18 and 28 percent of parents reported those activities happened at mealtime, according to findings published in the Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics.
Close to three quarters of parents said they set limits on mealtime media use.
Girls were more likely to use electronic media than boys and media use at mealtime increased with age. It was also more common among families with parents who were less educated or were black or Asian.
Mealtime media use was less common when parents set rules, but more common among families that didn't communicate much.
Parents who reported frequent media use also said their families had fewer servings of green salad, fruit, vegetables, 100-percent juice and milk at meals, and more sugar-sweetened beverages.
The researchers didn't ask if parents also used electronic media at mealtime.
"What parents told us is that kids (and probably parents alike) are texting and using games while eating dinner. In several surveys I have done with parents and youth, they have indicated that there is a lot of multitasking going on," Fulkerson said.
She said research has shown frequent family meals are tied to higher self-esteem and a better diet among kids.
Given the opportunity, most children will talk about themselves and their lives at mealtime, leading to better family communication, Fulkerson said.
"Perhaps they will have greater feelings of connectedness as well. Mealtimes are a great venue for this. Of course, it is not true for every family, but fits for many," she said.
"There is no magic number of how many (family meals) to have, not all food at meals has to be 100% healthy and having electronic media at meals is not all bad (e.g., an occasional movie night with dinner) if it facilitates family time," she noted. "But, parents can take small steps to have quality time with their children by reducing media use at mealtimes."

SOURCE: bit.ly/19E1OkS Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, online December 23, 2013.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/01/03/us-parents-limit-electronic-media-idUSBREA010UM20140103

4G: des associations s'alarment du nombre d'antennes à Paris (4G : associations alarmed the number of antennas in Paris)

4G: des associations s'alarment du nombre d'antennes à Paris

Plus de 1.300 demandes d'implantations ou de conversions d'antennes ont été enregistrées en 2013 à Paris. Se pose la question des seuils d'exposition auxquels sont soumis les parisiens.

Photo d'illustration : un utilisateur de smartphone devant une antenne relais 4G. (SALOM-GOMIS SEBASTIEN/SIPA)
Photo d'illustration : un utilisateur de smartphone devant une antenne relais 4G. (SALOM-GOMIS SEBASTIEN/SIPA)
Paris a beau limiter l'exposition de ses habitants aux ondes grâce à une charte unique en France, elle n'échappe pas à la course effrénée des opérateurs vers la 4G, au grand dam d'associations de riverains et des écologistes.
A elle seule, la capitale concentre plus de 13% du réseau 4G français, technologie mobile très haut débit en plein déploiement dans l'Hexagone. Début décembre, l'Agence nationale des fréquences (ANFR) avait autorisé l'installation de 1.866 émetteurs nouvelle génération dans Paris intra-muros, dont 1.154 déjà en service.
"C'est la course entre les opérateurs. Le développement de la 3G s'était étalé sur plusieurs années. Cette fois, il y a eu un vrai boom avec l'arrivée de la 4G et la concurrence provoquée par Free", raconte Agnès Pezzana de l'Agence d'écologie urbaine, rattachée à la mairie.
Son service a vu passer "plus de 1.300" demandes d'implantations ou de conversions d'antennes en 2013. Un casse-tête pour la Ville, qui s'est engagée à favoriser les implantations et à répondre sous quatre mois à toute demande des opérateurs.

Concertation en panne

"C'est de la démocratie participative à deux balles: on vous fait croire qu'on prend les avis en compte et on s'assoit dessus", s'offusque Etienne Cendrier, porte-parole de Robin des toits.
Cet été, plusieurs associations - Robin des toits, Priartem et Agir pour l'environnement - ont claqué la porte de la commission. Début juillet, elle devait se prononcer sur une centaine de demandes. Temps pour chaque dossier : "environ deux minutes", s'indigne encore Etienne Cendrier.
"La CCTM ne fait pas vraiment de concertation mais est plutôt devenue une chambre d'enregistrement. (...) Tout est fait dans la précipitation", confirme Jean-Jacques Anding, de l'organisation de consommateurs CLCV, dernière association à siéger.
"On est sur un rythme intensif mais pas impossible", rétorque Mao Peninou, adjoint au maire chargé des antennes relais et président de la commission. Environ 20% des dossiers examinés sont reportés, explique l'élu socialiste.

Charte réellement protectrice

Les antennes parisiennes doivent respecter un plafond d'exposition de 5 volts/mètre pour la 2G/3G et 7 V/m pour la 4G, huit fois plus bas que les normes nationales. Pour imposer cette charte présentée comme "la plus protectrice d'Europe", la Ville a utilisé comme arme de négociation l'accès aux toits municipaux, indispensable aux opérateurs pour étoffer leur couverture.
"Ce n'est pas le Nirvana (...), mais c'est la meilleure charte possible étant donné le rapport de force", se défend Mao Peninou, qui a mené la négociation. Selon lui, les opérateurs s'améliorent, après avoir longtemps joué au chat et à la souris avec la Ville.
"La charte n'est pas très contraignante pour les opérateurs. Ils n'ont pas vraiment besoin de la violer, la mairie se couche pour eux", conteste Pascal Julien (EELV), adjoint au maire du 18ème arrondissement.
Le quartier fait partie des arrondissements frondeurs et rend une grande majorité d'avis défavorables, comme le 12ème et le 14ème.
Le problème majeur reste que "le président de la commission finit par prendre une décision qui est basée sur les seuls seuils d'exposition de la charte. L'opposition des riverains ou la présence d'établissements sensibles (hôpitaux, écoles, crèches, ndlr) ne rentre pas en ligne de compte", note Laurent Touzet, adjoint PS au maire du 12ème.

Crèches exposées?

Certains habitants sont donc inquiets ou en colère. Dans le 19ème, le collectif Bellevue a forcéBouygues à couper la 4G sur une de ses antennes cet automne. L'émetteur, dressé rue de Bellevue, surplombe une crèche agréée par la Ville, une trentaine de mètres plus loin.
Malgré l'obligation prévue par la charte, l'opérateur n'avait jamais mentionné cet établissement sensible dans sa demande d'implantation. Un oubli également passé inaperçu à l'ANFR et à la mairie.
"Toutes les crèches associatives sont passées à la trappe car elles n'étaient pas répertoriées comme des établissements sensibles. (...) Qu'est-ce que ça va donner dans 40 ans pour la santé de nos enfants ?", s'inquiète Elise Provost, la jeune maman aux commandes du collectif.
Rue Jean Cottin, dans le 18ème, le collectif Alliance pour l'annulation de trois antennes relais (Apatar) est allé jusqu'au blocage, pour empêcher Free d'installer son antenne au-dessus de deux écoles. "On a fait comprendre aux ouvriers qu'ils ne passeraient jamais", raconte Natacha Jankowski, porte-parole d'Apatar.
Le collectif reste sur ses gardes. Après que Free a accepté de respecter la charte, les sous-traitants ont tenté de revenir en douce avant la délivrance d'une nouvelle autorisation, rappelle-t-elle. En réunion avec les habitants, l'opérateur a également présenté un plan d'urbanisme erroné, où une école apparaissait plus basse (et donc plus éloignée d'une antenne voisine) qu'en réalité.
Des cas loin d'être des exceptions, regrette-t-on en mairies d'arrondissements.
"Les erreurs et les comportements limites concernent tous les opérateurs. (...) On est parfois obligés de taper du poing sur la table", soupire Laurent Touzet.
Faute de moyens, l'information des riverains par les mairies sur les antennes reste limitée. Les locataires d'immeubles des bailleurs sociaux sont les plus mals lotis, car les opérateurs ne négocient qu'avec le propriétaire.
(avec AFP)

Google Translate

4G : associations alarmed the number of antennas in Paris


Posted on 03-01-2014 at 12h47Challenges.frPar Challenges.fr

More than 1,300 requests for settlements or aerial conversions were recorded in 2013 in Paris . The question of exposure limits which are subject Parisian .


Photo illustration : a smartphone user to a 4G antenna relay . ( SALOM - GOMIS SEBASTIEN / SIPA)
Photo illustration : a smartphone user to a 4G antenna relay . ( SALOM - GOMIS SEBASTIEN / SIPA)
Paris was beautiful limiting exposure of its inhabitants to the airwaves with a unique charter in France, it does not escape the rat race to 4G operators , to the chagrin of residents associations and environmentalists.

By itself , the capital concentrates more than 13 % of the French 4G network , mobile broadband technology very full deployment in France . In early December, the National Frequency Agency ( ANFR ) had authorized the installation of 1,866 new generation transmitters in central Paris , including 1,154 already in service.

" It's a race between operators. Development of 3G was spread over several years. This time , there was a real boom with the arrival of 4G and competition caused by Free ," says Agnes Pezzana Agency urban Ecology , attached to the city .

His service has seen " more than 1,300 " applications implementations or conversions of antennas in 2013. A headache for the City, which is committed to promote settlements and respond within four months to request operators .

Consultation down

"This is participatory democracy with two balls : they make you believe that taking into account the opinions and sits on it " , is frustrated Etienne Ashtray, spokesman Robin roofs .

This summer, several associations - Robin roofs , Priartem and Acting for the environment - have slammed the door of the commission. In early July, she had to decide on a hundred applications . Time for each folder: " about two minutes " , still gets angry Etienne ashtray .

" The MTCC does not really dialogue but rather become a recording chamber . (...) Everything is done in a hurry ," says Jean- Jacques Anding , the consumer organization CLCV latter association to sit .

" It is an intensive pace but not impossible ," retorted Mao Peninou , deputy mayor in charge of antennas and Chairman of the Committee . Approximately 20% of cases examined are shown explains socialist elected.

Real protection charter

Parisian antennas must comply with an exposure of 5 volts / meter ceiling for 2G/3G and 7 V / m for 4G , eight times lower than the national standards. To enforce this charter presented as " more protective Europe " , the city used as a weapon negotiating access to municipal roofs essential for operators to expand their coverage.

" This is not Nirvana (...) , but this is the best charter given the balance of power ," defends Peninou Mao , who led the negotiations. According to him , operators improve after long played cat and mouse with the City.

" The charter is not very restrictive for operators. They do not really need to rape the city sets for them," Julien Pascal contests ( EELV ) , deputy mayor of the 18th arrondissement .

The neighborhood is part of the boroughs slingers and makes a great majority of adverse opinion, as the 12th and 14th .

The major problem is that " the president of the commission finally make a decision that is based solely on the exhibition of the charter thresholds. Opposition from local residents or the presence of sensitive institutions (hospitals , schools, kindergartens , ed ) does not come into play , "says Laurent Touzet , Deputy Mayor of the 12th PS .

Nurseries exposed ?

Some residents are worried or angry. In the 19th, the collective Bellevue forcéBouygues cutting 4G on one of its branches this fall. The issuer, drawn street Bellevue overlooks a manger approved by the City , about thirty yards away.

Despite an obligation under the Charter , the operator had never mentioned this sensitive property in its request for establishment . Forgetting also passed unnoticed ANFR and the town hall.

" All associations nurseries are fallen by the wayside because they were not listed as sensitive institutions. (...) What it will give in 40 years for the health of our children ? " , S ' concerned Elise Provost, the young mother at the helm of the group .

Rue Jean Cottin, in the 18th , the collective Alliance for the cancellation of three antennas ( Apatar ) went up blocking to prevent Free install its antenna over two schools. " It was clear to the workers that they will never pass ," says Natasha Jankowski , spokeswoman Apatar .

The group remains on guard. After Free has agreed to abide by the Charter , subcontractors tried to go soft before the issuance of a new license , she says . Meeting with residents , the operator also presented an erroneous urban plan, where a school appeared lower ( and therefore further away from a nearby antenna) in reality .

Cases far from being exceptions , do we regret by borough councils .

" Errors and limits behaviors affect all operators. ( ...) We are sometimes forced to bang your fist on the table ," sighs Laurent Touzet .

Lack of resources, informing neighbors by municipalities on the antennas is limited. Tenants of social housing buildings are most mals off because operators negotiate with the owner.

(with AFP )

Thursday, January 02, 2014

Cell antenna base station tower is demolished by activist with a tank.

Cell antenna base station tower is demolished by activist with a tank.

11 Reasons To Bring Back Landlines In 2014 (Seriously)

11 Reasons To Bring Back Landlines In 2014 (Seriously)

The Huffington Post  |  By 

While some are saying that landlines will become as obsolete as horse-and-buggy travel, we say that there really is no time better than now to embrace home phones. Yep, I'm siding with your mother and grandmother on this one. While a home phone can't replace a cell phone (for the obvious reason that you can't take them with you everywhere), it's something you should use at home. Here's why:
1. It can save your ass in an emergency. 
telephone
If the power goes out, your phone will still work. You won't have to do what I did after Superstorm Sandy knocked out my power for over a week, which was travel nearly a state over to find a working outlet to recharge my phone.
2. No weird health concerns.
Though research is still ongoing (and hotly debated), there are concerns that cell phones might have a connection to anything from cancer to anxiety.
3. You can hear everyone much better.
jackie kennedy phone
I strongly believe that there's a deadzone specifically over my apartment.
4. Your connection doesn't suddenly drop off mid-sentence.
zsa zsa telephone
See also: Personal deadzone.
5. You're probably paying for it anyway.
I once tried to get rid of my landline in an attempt to decrease my cable bill. Without it, the bill was actually higher. Like Grandmas everywhere, I'm of the opinion that if you're paying for it, you might as well use it.
6. Old-school phones look really cool.
cary grant phone
No doubt about it.
7. You can focus a little bit more on the conversation.
janet leigh telephone
Or, you can actually have a conversation instead of relaying everything in text form.
8. No one can make you upgrade your home phone.
woman on phone
If you want to keep your embarrassingly old cell phone, your cell provider will seemingly do everything in their power to make sure that you eventually upgrade. Conformity is your only option.
9. You can slam down the receiver when angry.
angry call
Pressing "end call" doesn't produce the same feelings of satisfaction.
10. You'll get a better night's sleep. 
Having a phone by your bed is an invitation to check your damn email right before you go to sleep, which is a surefire way not to go to sleep.
11. You can't accidentally butt-dial anyone.
cat on phone
It's happened to every single one of us, usually at the worst times. (But if this vintage photo is any indication, I suppose you could cat-dial someone.)

14. Wireless Technology a Looming Health Crisis

14. Wireless Technology a Looming Health Crisis

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. Extensive deployment of “smart grid” technology hastens this looming health crisis.
By now many residents in the United States and Canada have smart meters—which transfer detailed information on residents’ electrical usage back to the utility every few minutes—installed on their dwellings. Each meter has an electronic cellular transmitter that uses powerful bursts of electromagnetic radio frequency (RF) radiation to communicate with nearby meters, which together form an interlocking network. Such information can easily be used to determine individual patterns of behavior based on power consumption.
Utilities sell smart grid technology to the public as a way to “empower” individual energy consumers, 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 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.
Censored #14
Wireless Technology a Looming Health Crisis
James F. Tracy, “Looming Health Crisis: Wireless Technology and the Toxification of America,” Global Research, July 8, 2012, http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=31816.
Student Researcher: Lyndsey Casey (Sonoma State University)
Faculty Evaluator: Peter Phillips (Sonoma State University)

Study: Dead sea creatures cover 98 percent of ocean floor off California coast; up from 1 percent before Fukushima


Study: Dead sea creatures cover 98 percent of ocean floor off California coast; up from 1 percent before Fukushima

oceanThursday, January 02, 2014 by: Ethan A. Huff, staff writer
Tags: Fukushimaradiationocean life


(NaturalNews) The Pacific Ocean appears to be dying, according to a new study recently published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Scientists from the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute (MBARI) in California recently discovered that the number of dead sea creatures blanketing the floor of the Pacific is higher than it has ever been in the 24 years that monitoring has taken place, a phenomenon that the data suggests is a direct consequence of nuclear fallout from Fukushima.

Though the researchers involved with the work have been reluctant to pin Fukushima as a potential cause -- National Geographic, which covered the study recently, did not even mention Fukushima -- the timing of the discovery suggests that Fukushima is, perhaps, the cause. According to the data, this sudden explosion in so-called "sea snot," which is the name given to the masses of dead sea creatures that sink to the ocean floor as food, has skyrocketed since the Fukushima incident occurred.

"In the 24 years of this study, the past two years have been the biggest amounts of this detritus by far," stated Christine Huffard, a marine biologist at MBARI and leader of the study, to National Geographic.

At an ocean research station known as Station M, located 145 miles out to sea between the Californian cities of Santa Barbara and Monterey, Huffard and her colleague Ken Smith observed a sharp uptick in the amount of dead sea life drifting to the ocean floor. The masses of dead sea plankton, jellyfish, feces and other oceanic matter that typically only cover about 1 percent of the ocean floor were found to now be covering about 98 percent of it -- and multiple other stations located throughout the Pacific have since reported similar figures.

"In March 2012, less than one percent of the seafloor beneath Station M was covered in dead sea salps," writes Carrie Arnold for National Geographic. "By July 1, more than 98 percent of it was covered in the decomposing organisms. ... The major increase in activity of deep-sea life in 2011 and 2012 weren't limit to Station M, though: Other ocean-research stations reported similar data."

No more sea life means no more oxygen in our atmosphere

Interestingly, Arnold does not even make a peep about Fukushima, which by all common sense is the most reasonable explanation for this sudden increase in dead sea life. Though the most significant increases were observed roughly a year after the incident, the study makes mention of the fact that the problems first began in 2011.

"Forget looking at global warming as the culprit," writes National Geographic commenter "Grammy," pointing out the lunacy of Arnold's implication that the now-debunked global warming myth was the sudden cause of a 9,700 percent increase in dead sea life.

Backing her up, another National Geographic commenter jokingly stated that somehow "the earth took such a huge hit in a four-month timeframe of a meltdown via global warming and we as a people didn't recognize this while [it was] happening; while coincidentally during that same time frame the event at Fukushima took place."

It is almost as if the powers that be want us all to forget about Fukushima and the catastrophic damage it continues to cause to our planet. But they will not be able to cover up the truth forever, as human life is dependent upon healthy oceans, the life of which provides the oxygen that we all need to breathe and survive.

Sources for this article include:

http://www.pnas.org

http://enenews.com

http://newswatch.nationalgeographic.com

http://science.naturalnews.com

http://science.naturalnews.com

http://science.naturalnews.com

Learn more: 


http://www.naturalnews.com/043380_Fukushima_radiation_ocean_life.html#ixzz2pHk092ds

Wi-Fi Fearing Parents Knock Out Internet in New Zealand School System