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Filters: tag: radiofrequency-exposure Clear

Why the “99% Blocked” Claim is a Myth: The Best Anti-Radiation Phone Case

Independent Voices RF Safe Feb 1, 2026

RF Safe argues that marketing claims such as “blocks 99% of EMF” for anti-radiation phone cases are misleading because many “lab tests” are reportedly performed on shielding fabric alone rather than on a working phone. The piece frames a phone as a “dynamic radio” and suggests real-world performance may differ from simplified test setups. The extracted text also promotes RF Safe’s products and warranty, indicating a commercial/advocacy context.

The Anti Radiation Case That Refuses to Sell a Number

Independent Voices RF Safe Jan 16, 2026

RF Safe argues that many “anti-radiation” phone cases market misleading “% blocked” claims based on lab material tests rather than whole-device, real-world performance. The article promotes RF Safe’s TruthCase/QuantaCase as a “physics-first” design that avoids advertising a single blocking percentage and emphasizes directional shielding and user education. It cites a 2017 CBS San Francisco/KPIX test as an example of how some flip-style shielding cases can reduce measured RF in certain orientations but may increase readings in other common-use configurations.

Rebutting MBFC’s “Medium Credibility” Rationale for RF Safe (MBFC Updated Jan 8, 2026)

Independent Voices RF Safe Jan 10, 2026

RF Safe publishes a rebuttal to Media Bias Fact Check’s (MBFC) decision to rate the site “Medium Credibility,” addressing MBFC’s concerns about selective citation, one-sided interpretation, alarmist framing, and potential conflicts of interest tied to selling RF-safety products. The post argues RF Safe includes null/negative findings, avoids claiming RF “causes” specific diseases, and maintains editorial/transparency policies meant to separate evidence types and disclose commercial relationships. It also contends MBFC’s critique is partly a dispute over tone and wording (e.g., “primarily” funded by product sales) rather than demonstrated sourcing errors.

Correction Request – MBFC RF Safe Entry (Funding, Conflict Framing, and Null-Evidence Handling)

Independent Voices RF Safe Jan 10, 2026

RF Safe publishes a correction request addressed to Media Bias Fact Check (MBFC) regarding MBFC’s credibility entry about RF Safe. The post argues that MBFC should revise or substantiate claims about RF Safe being “funded primarily” by product sales, adjust conflict-of-interest wording, and reconsider an assertion that RF Safe gives limited weight to null (no-effect) evidence. RF Safe proposes alternative language and links to its own transparency policy, product education pages, and a framework it says explicitly anticipates null results.

Open Letter to MrBeast

Independent Voices RF Safe Dec 17, 2025

RF Safe founder John Coates publishes an open letter urging YouTuber MrBeast (Jimmy Donaldson) to make any potential “Beast Mobile” offering explicitly child-protective and “Li‑Fi compatible,” arguing that phones carried close to the body could scale long-term RF exposure among children. The letter frames current regulatory compliance as insufficient for a youth-focused brand and claims that “non-native EMFs” may disrupt biological timing and redox processes via an “S4–Mito–Spin” framework. The piece is advocacy-oriented and does not present new study data in the provided text.

Beast Mobile Ethical Connectivity Is Not Optional

Independent Voices RF Safe Dec 17, 2025

RF Safe argues that companies marketing wireless connectivity to children should adopt a precautionary, “ethical connectivity” approach rather than relying on existing U.S. RF exposure rules. The piece claims current FCC guidelines are outdated and cites a 2021 D.C. Circuit decision criticizing the FCC’s retention of its RF limits, along with assertions about WHO-commissioned reviews and animal evidence. Overall, it frames wireless exposure for children as a credible risk and emphasizes regulatory lag and legal constraints as reasons for voluntary industry action.

How RF Safe Will Serve Humanity in 2026

Independent Voices RF Safe Dec 17, 2025

RF Safe founder John Coates outlines a 2026 advocacy plan focused on increasing enforcement of U.S. federal radiation-control law, pushing consumer technology toward Li‑Fi as a safer baseline for children, and demanding accountability from companies marketing wireless products to children. The post argues that current RF safety rules rely too heavily on “thermal-only” assumptions and that cumulative exposure from smartphones is a preventable risk. It also states RF Safe intends to pursue legal action to compel HHS to fulfill duties under the Radiation Control for Health & Safety Act (Public Law 90-602).

Cell Towers: the Fifth Amendment Takings Clause is absolutely implicated

Independent Voices RF Safe Dec 13, 2025

An RF Safe commentary argues that radiofrequency emissions from cell towers should be treated as a “physical invasion” of private property under the U.S. Constitution’s Fifth Amendment Takings Clause. The author claims courts and agencies have misframed RF exposure as a regulatory issue rather than a per se physical occupation, citing Supreme Court takings precedents (e.g., Loretto and Cedar Point). The piece also asserts that federal law (referencing Section 704) limits objections on health grounds, strengthening the need for a takings-based legal theory.

EMF-The Dangers and How to Mitigate Risk

Independent Voices RF Safe Dec 4, 2025

RF Safe recaps a Truth Expedition podcast episode featuring RF Safe founder John Coates discussing alleged biological risks from EMF exposure and arguing that current regulations lag behind modern science. The piece links EMFs to developmental and health concerns (including neural-tube defects and autism) via Coates’ proposed “S4–Mito–Spin” framework involving voltage-gated ion channels, mitochondrial signaling, and radical-pair/spin chemistry. It also promotes RF Safe’s research library, SAR comparison tools, and mitigation products as part of a risk-reduction approach.

From Bell’s Photophone to the Light Age: How Wireless Took a Wrong Turn — and How We Correct It

Independent Voices RF Safe Nov 29, 2025

This RF Safe commentary argues that wireless communications “took a wrong turn” by prioritizing radiofrequency/microwave transmission over light-based approaches, citing Alexander Graham Bell’s 1880 photophone as an alternative model. It suggests that widespread, continuous RF exposure in modern environments is undesirable and proposes light-based, room-scale wireless as more biologically compatible. The piece also speculates about a historical association between Heinrich Hertz’s close-range RF experiments and his later fatal illness, while acknowledging there is no controlled evidence proving causation.

The True Legacy of RF Safe as a Pioneer in EMF Safety Advocacy: Beyond Bias

Independent Voices RF Safe Nov 28, 2025

This RF Safe article argues that the organization’s EMF safety advocacy should not be dismissed as “biased” or “commercially motivated,” framing its work as rooted in its founder’s personal experience and long-term activism. It recounts founder John Coates’ claim that prenatal RF exposure contributed to his infant daughter’s neural tube defect, and presents RF Safe as combining advocacy, scientific synthesis, and product development. The piece also claims RF Safe’s antenna work helped prompt a 2003 FCC rule change recognizing directional antenna approaches to reduce energy toward users while maintaining performance.

Beyond Bias: The True Legacy of RF Safe as a Pioneer in EMF Safety Advocacy

Independent Voices RF Safe Nov 28, 2025

This RF Safe article defends the organization against accusations of bias, framing its EMF safety advocacy as rooted in founder John Coates’ personal tragedy and long-term efforts in product development, research synthesis, and policy reform. It claims RF Safe helped drive an FCC rule change related to antenna design and promotes various exposure-reduction accessories and training tools. The piece argues that non-thermal biological effects of RF/ELF fields are being overlooked by regulators and calls for policy changes such as revisiting Section 704 of the 1996 Telecom Act and shifting health oversight away from the FCC.

A Root-Cause Hypothesis for Non-Native EMFs as Entropic Waste

Independent Voices RF Safe Nov 23, 2025

An RF Safe article presents a personal narrative and hypothesis that “non-native EMFs” act as “entropic waste” that could disrupt early embryonic neurodevelopment (neurulation), potentially contributing to neural-tube defects and later neurodevelopmental outcomes such as autism/ADHD. The author links a family tragedy to this hypothesis and argues for reducing wireless exposure as a precaution. The post cites several studies/reports (e.g., Farrell 1997, Aldad 2012, NTP 2018, WHO SR4A 2025) but does not provide detailed methods or evidence appraisal within the excerpt.

This is one of the most coherent, mechanistically grounded syntheses I’ve seen linking non-thermal RF/ELF effects across cancer, reproductive harm, and immune dysregulation

Independent Voices RF Safe Nov 22, 2025

An RF Safe commentary argues that a proposed “S4–mitochondria axis” provides a coherent mechanism for non-thermal RF/ELF biological effects, linking voltage-gated ion channel (VGIC) disruption to altered calcium signaling, mitochondrial ROS, and downstream cancer, reproductive, and immune impacts. The post cites several recent reviews and systematic reviews (including a WHO-commissioned animal carcinogenicity review and an SR4A corrigendum) as strengthening evidence for specific tumor and reproductive outcomes in animals. It concludes that regulatory positions emphasizing thermal limits and lack of mechanism are no longer defensible, presenting this as convergent evidence rather than scattered findings.

Executive Summary

Independent Voices RF Safe Nov 15, 2025

RF Safe’s “Executive Summary” argues that non-thermal radiofrequency/microwave exposures from modern wireless technologies can disrupt biological processes, proposing ion-channel voltage-sensor interference as a key mechanism leading to oxidative stress and inflammation. It cites animal studies (NTP and Ramazzini) and claims a WHO-commissioned 2025 systematic review found “high certainty” evidence of increased cancer in animals, and it points to epidemiological trends as suggestive. The piece also criticizes U.S. regulation as focused on thermal effects, highlighting FCC limits dating to 1996 and referencing a 2021 U.S. court ruling that faulted the FCC for not addressing non-thermal evidence.

Beyond Thermal Limits: The Fight for Safe Wireless in a Microwave World

Independent Voices RF Safe Nov 15, 2025

RF Safe argues that U.S. RF exposure limits remain based on avoiding short-term heating (“thermal-only”) effects and have not been meaningfully updated since the FCC’s 1996 guidelines. The piece links this regulatory approach to community concerns about cell towers near schools, citing reported cancer clusters and claiming that compliance with FCC limits may not equate to safety. It also highlights Telecommunications Act Section 704 as limiting local opposition to tower siting on health or environmental grounds.

What non‑native EMFs really do — Ion Timing Fidelity under RF exposure, from S4 voltage sensing to mitochondrial ROS and immune dysregulation

Independent Voices RF Safe Nov 4, 2025

This RF Safe article argues that “non-native” radiofrequency (RF) exposures can deterministically disrupt voltage-gated ion channel timing (via the S4 voltage sensor), leading downstream to altered calcium signaling, mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (ROS), and immune dysregulation without tissue heating. It presents a proposed mechanistic chain linking RF exposure to oxidative stress, inflammation, and autoimmune-like states, and cites assorted animal studies and reviews as supportive. The piece is framed as a coherent explanatory model rather than a single new study, and specific cited findings are not fully verifiable from the excerpt alone.

Ion Timing Fidelity under wireless exposure — from the S4 voltage sensor to mitochondrial oxidative stress, innate activation, and organ‑level inflammation

Independent Voices RF Safe Nov 4, 2025

This RF Safe article argues that pulsed, low-frequency-modulated wireless radiofrequency exposures could disrupt voltage-gated ion channel timing (via the S4 voltage sensor), leading to altered immune-cell signaling, mitochondrial oxidative stress, and downstream innate immune activation and inflammation. It presents a mechanistic narrative linking small membrane-potential shifts to changes in calcium and proton channel behavior, then to mitochondrial reactive oxygen species and inflammatory pathways (e.g., cGAS–STING, TLR9, NLRP3). The post cites animal findings and a described 2025 mouse gene-expression study as supportive, but the piece itself is not a peer-reviewed study and some claims are presented as deterministic without providing full methodological details in the excerpt.

Radio Frequency Exposure in Military Contexts: A Narrative Review of Thermal Effects and Safety Considerations

Research RF Safe Research Library Jan 1, 2025

This narrative review focuses on RF exposure in military contexts, emphasizing thermal effects as the established mechanism of harm and discussing safety limits set by bodies such as ICNIRP and IEEE. It reports that whole-body SAR limits (≤4 W/kg) generally prevent dangerous core temperature rises, but localized heating risks may persist for tissues like skin and eyes, especially when thermoregulation is impaired. The review highlights CEM43 as a potentially useful thermal-dose metric but notes complexity for transient exposures and calls for improved models and methods across relevant frequency bands.

Model Variability in Assessment of Human Exposure to Radiofrequency Fields

Research RF Safe Research Library Jan 1, 2025

This review examines how variability in computational dosimetry models affects assessment of human RF exposure from MHz to terahertz frequencies, focusing on SAR, absorbed power density, and temperature rise. It reports that anatomical scaling and model choices can drive meaningful differences in predicted SAR (including higher values in children/smaller models), while temperature-rise predictions are especially sensitive to thermophysiological parameters and vascular modeling. The authors indicate that computed variability remains within ICNIRP/IEEE safety margins but argue that uncertainties warrant ongoing research and refinement as new technologies (e.g., 6G) emerge.

Synergistic Effects of 2600 MHz Radiofrequency Exposure and Indomethacin on Oxidative Stress and Gastric Mucosal Injury in Rats

Research RF Safe Research Library Jan 1, 2025

This rat study tested whether 2600 MHz radiofrequency field exposure interacts with indomethacin to affect gastric tissue. Both exposures alone were reported to increase oxidative stress and reduce antioxidant markers in the stomach. Co-exposure was reported to intensify oxidative stress, apoptosis, and histological gastric mucosal injury compared with either factor alone, consistent with a synergistic detrimental effect in this model.

Causal relationship between the duration of mobile phone use and risk of stroke: A Mendelian randomization study

Research RF Safe Research Library Jan 1, 2025

This Mendelian randomization study assessed whether duration of mobile phone use is causally related to stroke outcomes using GWAS-derived SNP instruments. The inverse-variance weighted analysis reported a significant increased risk for large artery atherosclerosis (LAAS) with longer mobile phone use duration, while other stroke outcomes showed no significant associations. Sensitivity analyses (including MR-Egger and heterogeneity/asymmetry tests) were reported as suggesting the LAAS finding was robust.

Radiofrequency regulates the BET-mediated pathways in radial glia differentiation in human cortical development

Research RF Safe Research Library Jan 1, 2025

This in vitro study reports that radiofrequency (RF) exposure in the 800–2,400 MHz range modulates differentiation pathways in human cortical organoids derived from embryonic stem cells. RF exposure is described as maintaining radial glia stem cell identity and delaying differentiation, alongside induction of endogenous retrovirus expression and increased expression of ASD-associated genes and retroelements. The abstract attributes these effects to dysregulation of BET proteins and reports that BET inhibition rescues the RF-associated developmental defects.

Dosimetric Electromagnetic Safety of People With Implants: A Neglected Population?

Research RF Safe Research Library Jan 1, 2025

This dosimetric study evaluated whether existing EM safety guidelines protect individuals with conductive implants by assessing implant-related local field enhancements. Across 10 kHz to 1 GHz, the authors report large increases in psSAR10mg and local electric fields near implants, particularly below 100 MHz. In human anatomical models with implants exposed to an 85 kHz wireless power transfer coil and a 450 MHz dipole, the study reports guideline exceedances and elevated psSAR10mg, while the modeled temperature rise at 450 MHz remained under 0.4 K after six minutes. The authors conclude current guidelines are insufficient for people with implants and propose regulatory changes.

Navigating Environmental Crossroads: Pesticides, Bee Pollinators, and the Wireless Revolution

Research RF Safe Research Library Jan 1, 2025

This article summarizes a webinar series and frames pesticides and wireless radiation as concurrent environmental health crises affecting ecosystems and public health. It asserts that evidence is building for adverse effects of EMF/wireless radiation in humans, animals, and bees, including “high-certainty links” between RF radiation and tumors in brain and heart nerves. It also suggests potential synergy between chemical and EMF exposures impacting bee hive productivity and argues for precautionary policy and stronger exposure guidelines.

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