WelcomeUser Guide
ToSPrivacyCanary
DonateBugsLicense

©2025 Poal.co

125

It’s official—the FCC can now be added to the exhaustive list of government agencies that knowingly conceal essential information from Americans, impacting their ability to make choices necessary for optimal health. In step with the CDC, FDA, NIH, and numerous others who put their greedy agendas ahead of the people they are entrusted to protect, the Environmental Health Trust (EHT) recently revealed that the FCC intentionally hid test results showing that radiation exceeded federal limits when smartphones were near the human body, such as in a pants pocket.

Undoubtedly, the FCC’s actions could have negative implications for our health. The EHT has reported that in an apparent attempt to influence ongoing lawsuits about the health effects of cell phone radiation, the FCC—which voted last year on a plan that gives the Biden administration full control over the Internet—failed to disclose crucial information to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit. This action is despite the FCC’s long-standing knowledge that certain smartphones exceeded their safety limits for exposure to wireless radiation when in close proximity to the human body—more of the same, just in a different vehicle. . .

>It’s official—the FCC can now be added to the exhaustive list of government agencies that knowingly conceal essential information from Americans, impacting their ability to make choices necessary for optimal health. In step with the CDC, FDA, NIH, and numerous others who put their greedy agendas ahead of the people they are entrusted to protect, the Environmental Health Trust (EHT) recently revealed that the FCC intentionally hid test results showing that radiation exceeded federal limits when smartphones were near the human body, such as in a pants pocket. >Undoubtedly, the FCC’s actions could have negative implications for our health. The EHT has reported that in an apparent attempt to influence ongoing lawsuits about the health effects of cell phone radiation, the FCC—which voted last year on a plan that gives the Biden administration full control over the Internet—failed to disclose crucial information to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit. This action is despite the FCC’s long-standing knowledge that certain smartphones exceeded their safety limits for exposure to wireless radiation when in close proximity to the human body—more of the same, just in a different vehicle. . . [Archive](https://archive.today/Ib5JV)

(post is archived)