Hi ANGuy,
It seems we've become disagreeing pen pals. You wrote:
True Journalists will yes, reference studies they didn't participate in, but they will also post contradictory information when it exists. There are volumes of studies that have shown NO RELATIONSHIP yet he didn't cite any that I can see.
You make an excellent point. An objective -- professional -- journalist would have included studies with contrary results, and so Mr. Burrell certainly won't be up for a Pulitzer, but he isn't competing for one either; he's what I think most people would call an advocacy journalist, a citizen journalist, or, in our global online world, a blogger. And he's quite clear about his goals, which stem from his personal experience, so, as you rightly pointed out in an earlier comment, we can't fault him for misrepresentation.
In response to another of your comments:
I don't recall him calling himself a journalist or listing one single educational or professional credential even in the section of his website that is reserved for just that. We don't even know if this guy finished high school.
Mr. Burrell graduated from London Metropolitan University in 1988.
And while credentials are important, they're no foolproof guide to the truth, because if they were we wouldn't have multiple "expert" witnesses on court cases. Plenty of credentialed professionals can be bought and sold.
I opened your second link and the article is very long, too long for me to read carefully right now; however, I did skim it and one section stood out:
It is not very likely that the average person has anything to worry about from power lines cell phones, microwave ovens, cordless phones, baby monitors, or Wi-Fi. Most of us do not get that close to power lines to be significantly affected by their EMFs. Our exposure to them, even if they are nearby, is not direct, up close, and constant.
I've specifically been referring to an "intimate" relationship with an electromagnetic field, one in which the cell phone becomes another bodily appendage. While I myself am not a scientist, I have spoken to a couple of well-respected oncologists and a professor with a PhD in environmental engineering, and while none of them has claimed that there's incontrovertible evidence linking cells to cancer/ ANs, they nevertheless concluded that such a relationship is highly probable, especially over long periods of time, up close and personal.
Finally, there are studies -- I think I put a link of one in an earlier comment -- that provide evidentiary food for thought on the topic.
Is your unquestioning belief in the harmlessness of EMFs due to your having a lot of stock in Verizon Wireless or Nokia? If so, I'm sorry to pile financial suspense on top of your Watch and Wait suspense, but you can always sell before it's too late!
Best,
Emmaline