domingo, 6 de abril de 2025

Trump’s Tariffs Are Extremely Dumb, Just Not For The Reasons You Might Think



Yves here. Brian Berletic makes a point of saying, and documenting, how in the foreign policy arena, Trump represents continuity of agenda rather than the sort of break his backers claim he represents. This post makes a similar argument about the Trump tariffs and trade program.

By Iza Camarillo, the Research Director for Public Citizen’s Global Trade Watch. Before joining Public Citizen, she worked as an international arbitration and trade attorney, specializing in investment arbitration, global supply chain compliance, and WTO disputes on unfair trade practices. Originally published at Common Dreams

On April 2, Donald Trump declared a national emergency and announced sweeping tariffs on nearly all imported goods. The headlines were dramatic — tariffs on China, allies like Canada and Mexico, and everything from cars to coffee beans. His administration framed the move as a patriotic stance for “reciprocal trade” and economic sovereignty.

Don’t be fooled. This isn’t the collapse of “free trade.” It’s the continuation of corporate globalization — just with a MAGA bumper sticker slapped on it.

Trump says he’s standing up for American workers. But he’s the same president who signed the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) and called it “the fairest, most balanced, and beneficial trade agreement we have ever signed into law.” The rebranded North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) deal — despite some improvements forced in by congressional Democrats and civil society organizations — contained much of the same structural rot that has enabled outsourcing, empowered monopolies, and tied the hands of governments trying to protect their people and environment.

For decades, “free trade” deals like NAFTA locked in rules written by and for multinational corporations: rules that made offshoring easier, gutted environmental protections, and prioritized investor rights over worker rights. Stagnant wages, emptied factory towns, and rising income inequality have caused widespread pain and frustration among working Americans — which Trump has weaponized again and again.

Tariffs can be part of the answer to these problems, but Trump’s ham-handed approach ain’t it. There’s no industrial strategy. No labor plan. No climate protections. Just a unilateral, top-down stunt that does nothing to dismantle the corporate architecture still rigging the global economy.

Pair this “concept of a plan” with the rest of his agenda: gutting investment in vital sectors such as biomedical research, support for basic science and clean and affordable energy technologies and products; slashing all efforts to combat child labor and other egregious labor rights violations around the world, providing tax cuts for billionaires and corporations; stripping away health care, food support and other vital services for the most vulnerable Americans, undermining Social Security, and decertifying and undermining the power of labor unions.

It’s clear working people will not be the winners here.

Who Wrote the Rules? U.S. Corporations, Not Foreign Adversaries

Trump loves to blame other countries, claiming global trade has “looted, pillaged, raped, and plundered” the U.S. economy in his “Liberation Day” speech. He claims that the U.S. has been victimized by other countries and has been “too nice” in response.

Nothing could be further from the truth — the rules of the neoliberal trade system were rigged in favor of large corporate interests in the Global North. While workers in the U.S. and around the world were the losers, Wall Street, Big Tech, Big Ag, Big Pharma, and other U.S. corporate giants have always been the winners.

For decades, U.S. corporate lobbyists have used their privileged access to closed-door trade negotiations to rig the rules to maximize their profits, not to serve working people, small businesses, or the environment.

They pushed for extreme intellectual property rules to entrench Big Pharma monopolies that keep the price of medicines sky high, with deadly consequences. They demanded open capital markets and deregulated financial flows for Wall Street while securing rules that let agribusiness giants flood foreign markets with subsidized U.S. commodities, displacing millions of farmers and leading to forced migration.

At the same time, they ensured that governments couldn’t support domestic industries, raise labor standards, or enforce environmental protections without being accused of “trade distortion.” The result was a race to the bottom for workers and communities — here and abroad — with record profits for corporate giants.

It matters a lot that Trump is identifying the wrong perpetrators of the failed global trade system because that sets the table for wrong solutions.

Once we identify multinational corporations as the architects of the current system, we’re directed toward the right solutions – not blanket, high tariffs based on mindless formulas, but a new trade policy and new trade rules that prioritize the interests of workers, consumers, and the environment.

NAFTA to USMCA: Same Corporate Model With Some Improvements (No Thanks to Trump)

Trump spent years railing against NAFTA as the “worst trade deal anybody in history has ever entered into,” tapping into the legitimate grievances of workers and communities harmed by its race to the bottom. He campaigned on a promise to eliminate it and replace it with a better agreement for workers.

However, once elected, he opted to renegotiate and rebrand the deal in the form of the USMCA, which he then insisted was “the best trade deal in history.” Now, in a dizzying reversal, he’s claiming the USMCA has been a disaster that only an aggressive wave of “retaliatory” tariffs on Canada and Mexico will fix.

In reality, while some improvements were forced into the negotiation, the USMCA largely preserved the core logic that made NAFTA so harmful in the first place. It expands corporate rights, limits democratic oversight, and undermines public protections in the name of increased trade.

The new labor provisions — often cited as proof of a “new era” in trade — were not original features of Trump’s deal. They were won through months of intense organizing and negotiation by House Democrats, labor unions, and civil society groups.

Congressional Democrats working in close alliance with the AFL-CIO drew a hard line. Backed by the relentless organizing of groups like Public Citizen, the Communications Workers of America, United Steelworkers, and a transnational coalition of Mexican and Canadian labor and civil society partners, they made it clear: they would block passage of any deal unless meaningful labor enforcement were included and damaging Big Pharma giveaways were removed.

Trump’s administration favored language that preserved corporate prerogatives and offered only symbolic nods to labor rights. Still, in the end, it acquiesced to congressional Democrats’ demands. It incorporated essential tools like the facility-specific Rapid Response Mechanism for labor enforcement and eliminated some of the most egregious giveaways to Big Pharma.

However, the structural rot from NAFTA remained.

While experts across the ideological spectrum lauded the drastic reduction of controversial investor privileges that allow corporations to sue governments over public interest laws through investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS), Trump preserved ISDS for fossil fuel firms operating in Mexico — a carve-out aggressively pushed by Big Oil.

Agribusiness also retained its arsenal. The ongoing U.S. trade challenge to Mexico’s restrictions on genetically modified corn — measures rooted in precautionary health standards and cultural preservation — reveal the deal’s true intent. Rather than respecting national policy space over food safety, trade rules are once again being deployed to dismantle domestic protections at the behest of corporations.

Not only did Trump fail to fix NAFTA, but he made it even worse in at least one crucial way: Big Tech secured its wishlist in the form of a digital trade chapter. These new terms undermine the ability of U.S. states, Congress, and other countries’ governments to hold Big Tech accountable for gender and racial bias in AI, rampant abuse of our privacy, and monopolistic overreach.

Performative “Protectionism” and the Authoritarian Trade Playbook

Far from dismantling the corporate trade regime, Trump’s first term revealed him as a loyal steward of it — so long as he could plaster his name on it. Despite the USMCA rebrand, he left the core NAFTA structure intact and continued to stoke public anger over working people’s struggles — not by confronting the root causes but by scapegoating other nations. And he has been increasingly employing tariff threats as his weapon of choice — not in pursuit of justice but as a blunt instrument of control.

Just weeks ago, Trump threatened new tariffs unless Mexico deployed troops to militarize the border. He pressured Colombia to accept a deportation flight of asylum seekers.

Big Tech companies are awaiting their handouts, as it is widely expected that Trump will lift tariffs on countries that agree to undo tech accountability policies.

And perversely, he is using tariffs as a cudgel to pressure other countries into signing the very liberalizing trade agreements he claims to oppose.

“Liberation Day” was more of the same from this ever-more-authoritarian White House: an emergency decree bypassing Congress, escalating instability, and concentrating power in the executive. Trump hasn’t rejected the anti-democratic nature of the neoliberal trade model — he’s replicating it with a vengeance.

All Madness, No Method

While tariffs can be a useful tool, they must be transparently employed in strategic sectors for a clear purpose following careful analysis and open debate.

Trump’s tariffs, however, are based on misleading data and flawed logic. He uses exaggerated trade deficit calculations and stays silent on how the U.S. dollar’s dominance enables America to import far more than it exports, a luxury most Global South nations — burdened with debt and structural trade deficits — cannot afford.

The methodology behind these tariffs has experts scratching their heads.

Trump claimed that the “reciprocal tariffs” were derived from a detailed assessment of each country’s tariff and non-tariff barriers (more on these in a moment). In fact, the number assigned to each country seems to be based on the difference between the total value of imports the U.S. receives from a country versus the amount we export to it.

Apparently, no regard was given to why there may be a large imbalance. For example, Lesotho, which Trump dismissed as a country “nobody has ever heard of,” was hit with the highest tariff of any country at 50%. Forget the fact that the small, landlocked country’s population of 2 million may not be able to afford Made in America products, leading to a lopsided trade balance.

The crude formula used to determine each country’s “reciprocal” tariff was described by Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman as something that appeared to be “thrown together by a junior staffer with only a couple of hours’ notice,” and “reads like something written by a student who hasn’t done the reading and is trying to bullshit their way through an exam.”

As some commentators have noted, this tariff breakdown is what you get if you ask ChatGPT to come up with a U.S. trade policy. This could very well be the first global economic policy written “of, by, and for” our robot overlords. What could possibly go wrong?

The Corporate Wishlist

Since the Trump administration clearly did not take on the, admittedly Herculean, task of reviewing the thousands of tariffs and trade barriers imposed by hundreds of countries, it simply used trade imbalances as a crude proxy. It’s a stand-in for the cost of that country’s tariffs and, importantly, its non-tariff barriers.

“Non-tariff barrier” is trade-speak for “any policy that’s not a tariff” but might restrict trade — from climate protections to minimum wage laws to consumer protections in the form of toxic food additives. While many non-tariff barriers serve vital public policies, corporations and trade negotiators often treat them as obstacles to profit.

According to the April 2 executive order, Trump can unilaterally decide to lower the tariffs imposed on a country if it takes “significant steps to remedy non-reciprocal trade arrangements and align sufficiently with the United States on economic and national security matters.”

What constitutes a “significant step” isn’t defined, but it certainly looks like an open invitation for governments to slash their tariffs and reverse policies to appease Trump and his billionaire buddies.

For what exactly those policies may be, just look to the report Trump waved around at the beginning of his so-called “Liberation Day” tariff announcement speech in the Rose Garden.

That document is a 400-page list of the policies that other countries have enacted — or are even considering enacting — that U.S. corporations don’t like. It’s the National Trade Estimates Report on Foreign Trade Barriers, an annual government report that has long been criticized as an inappropriate overreach to name and shame other countries’ legitimate public interest policies. It’s also a glimpse of the policies that Trump may seek to have destroyed in exchange for tariff relief.

The policies targeted in this year’s report include climate protections, including Canada’s Clean Fuel Standard, the European Union’s Deforestation-Free Supply Chain Regulation, and Japan’s renewable energy incentives — all of which are aligned with global climate commitments.

Public health regulations aimed at protecting consumers, preserving biodiversity, and preventing long-term health risks were also attacked. Employed by dozens of countries, these include bans, testing requirements, or even labeling policies on pesticides like Roundup’s glyphosate, genetically engineered food, ractopamine in beef and pork, and heavy metals in cosmetics.

Regulations that promote competition in the digital ecosystem, laws that impose digital services taxes on Big Tech firms, place conditions for cross-border data transfers, promote fairness in the digital economy, and laws that regulate emerging technologies such as AI.

Benefits for Trump’s Buddies

Countries are not the only ones who will be supplicating to avoid the full weight of Trump’s tariffs. Despite Trump’s claims that other countries foot the bill on tariffs, it is U.S. importers who must pay this fee … unless they can convince Trump to grant them a special exemption.

It is well-documented that the opaque and chaotic tariff exclusion process created in Trump’s first term quickly overwhelmed government agencies and enabled a quid pro quo spoils system that rewarded the rich and well-connected. A revolving door of lobbyists, including former and future Trump administration officials, were able to secure lucrative tariff exceptions for their CEO clients through political pressure, informal meetings, and campaign contributions.

Through this system, Trump wielded tariffs and tariff exceptions to reward his friends and punish his enemies. CEOs that donated to Republicans had a 1 in 5 chance of having their exemption request granted versus 1 in 10 for CEOs that supported Democrats, according to a January 2025 study.

If Trump’s recent attacks on law firms, universities, and the press are any indication, he’s prepared to double down on using his second term to punish enemies and enrich himself and his friends. And his dismantling of watchdog agencies and boosting of big business ties set the stage for tariff exemptions to be even more corrupt and harmful to workers, consumers, and the U.S. and global economy.

What other displays of political loyalty might companies offer to Trump for a tariff exclusion this time around? Public endorsement of his policies? Promises to monitor employees for DEI ideologies or views critical of the administration?

We Deserve Better

Trade justice requires more than poorly designed tariffs. It demands systemic reform: binding labor rights, climate protections, resilient supply chains, and democratic accountability. Trump offers none of that.

There’s no industrial plan. No support for unions. No climate-resilience vision. Just a chaotic, performative tariff regime, which in practice will surely be wielded to reward loyalty and punish dissent.

Trump’s latest stunt had nothing to do with “liberation.” You can’t fix a rigged trade system while keeping its rules and attacking people at every turn. Trump talks a big game but serves the same corporate interests that gutted labor rights in the first place. Working people deserve a system with them at the center, not one that favors corporations.

This isn’t trade justice. It’s a con.


Source: https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2025/04/trumps-tariffs-are-extremely-dumb-just-not-for-the-reasons-you-might-think.html

The Technological Leap as a Strategic Disruptor

 


Marcelo Ramírez
Noticias Holisticas, April 2nd, 2025


There is a war being fought without cannons or missiles, but it is defining the balance of global power just as decisively. It is invisible to most people, yet it is conditioning every conflict, every alliance, and every geopolitical movement. It is technological warfare.

The United States has dominated the global stage for decades, largely thanks to its technological supremacy. From Silicon Valley to DARPA, innovation has been the lubricant of its military, economic, and cultural machinery. But that dominance is beginning to crack. China, and to a lesser extent Russia, are breaking the siege.

It's not just about producing more microchips or launching more satellites. The real leap, the one that seriously worries Washington's strategists, is qualitative. We're talking about military artificial intelligence, autonomous combat systems, networked platform interconnections, advanced electronic warfare, hypersonic missiles, and sixth-generation stealth platforms. And there, China and Russia are showing their teeth.

The recent unveiling of the Chinese J-36—a sixth-generation fighter with a tailless design, high maneuverability, and the ability to operate in a network with drones—is not a simple aerodynamic advance. It's a message. A declaration that they no longer accept the role of technological follower. And what's worrying for the West is not just the aircraft's capabilities, but its pace. Because China no longer imitates, it innovates. And it does so with breakneck speed.

Meanwhile, the United States is forced to respond with announcements rather than actions. The F-47, presented with great fanfare by Trump, is nothing more than a render. There is no visible prototype, no public testing, not even a model. Just a promise. A drawing. And that, in strategic terms, is a symptom: brawn no longer obeys brains as it once did.

The choice of Boeing as the company responsible for the new fighter jet raised more questions than answers. A firm plagued by quality scandals in civil aviation, which hasn't designed an original fighter jet since the 1930s, is now responsible for producing the most advanced aircraft in the US arsenal. This isn't a technical decision. It's a political gamble. A move to sustain industrial employment, revive a key company, and prevent Lockheed Martin from concentrating all its power.

But the underlying problem is something else. While the West invests fortunes in increasingly expensive, less operational systems with greater dependence on vulnerable global logistics chains, the East opts for a different logic: efficiency, scale, adaptability. Russia, for example, is working on the MIG-41, a hypersonic interceptor with anti-satellite capability and stratospheric operation. It doesn't seek to compete with the F-35 in marketing or design, but in its ability to deny airspace and destroy strategic targets before they cross its border.

This new technological paradigm reshapes power. It's no longer enough to have aircraft carriers if a swarm of drones can saturate your defenses. It's no use hiding stealthily if a quantum radar detects you anyway. Nor is it enough to have the largest number of missiles if you can't guarantee their effectiveness against advanced electronic warfare.

What's at stake is the heart of the Western model of domination. If it loses its technological advantage, it loses everything. That's why the United States is betting big: more investment in R&D, more military contracts, more pressure on its allies to buy obsolete weapons that sustain a decaying system. But the numbers don't lie. The F-35s are more expensive to maintain than they provide in effectiveness. And if the F-47 follows the same path, it won't be a leap forward, but a leap into the void.

China and Russia, on the other hand, play by a different logic. They don't need to control the world. It's enough for them not to be controlled. Their technological leap doesn't seek to impose a new global order, at least not for now. It seeks to negate the current one. To prevent it from being subjugated. And they are succeeding.

The West, failing to understand this, responds with propaganda. It exaggerates its capabilities, hides its weaknesses, and feigns a control it no longer possesses. But technology is unforgiving. No narrative can mask a radar that sees farther, a drone that flies undetected, or a missile that travels five times faster than sound. On the real battlefield—and also on the symbolic one—this difference is lethal.

The world is witnessing a historic transition. The axis of power is shifting. And the driving force behind this movement is neither ideological nor military. It is technological. Whoever controls this key will control the century. And while some are preoccupied with military parades and speeches, others are already building the future. 

 

Source: https://noticiasholisticas.com.ar/el-salto-tecnologico-como-disruptor-estrategico-por-marcelo-ramirez/

quinta-feira, 3 de abril de 2025

Cows, Chemicals, and Control: The Truth Behind Bovaer



Discussing The European Union’s Plan to Alter Cow Digestion and Its Implications for Us All

Mark Trozzi
Apr 01, 2025  (leer en castellano)

This is part one of a two part discussion with Christof Plothe DO on the issue of Bovaer. Bovaer is a drug being labeled as a “feed additive” in Europe. It is produced by DSM-Firmenich and has been approved for use in the European Union to reduce methane emissions from cattle. This drug is being fast-tracked into animals across Europe, with little public awareness, despite serious health risk concerns. 

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You can find and support Dr. Christof Plothe DO at:

Bovaer is a chemical feed additive designed to reduce methane emissions from cows by targeting their digestive systems. The active ingredient, 3-NOP (3-Nitrooxypropanol), is intended to alter the microbiome of cows, suppressing the bacteria responsible for methane production. According to manufacturers, Bovaer will reduce methane emissions by approximately 40%. Yet, this figure only applies to livestock’s contribution to global methane emissions, which itself is merely 12% of the total. In reality, the global impact of Bovaer on methane reduction would be miniscule.

The U.S. FDA has classified 3-NOP as "not for human use," citing significant reproductive harms, particularly for males. Despite this warning, European regulators seem to be moving forward with its application, labeling it as a mere "feed additive" rather than a drug. This semantic manipulation is bound to alter public perception.

Additionally, the claim that Bovaer is "safe and effective" is suspiciously based on censored studies, with nearly 50% of citations unverifiable. This deliberate suppression of data raises serious concerns about the integrity of the research supporting Bovaer’s approval. The safety of this additive is particularly questionable considering its ability to pass through the cow’s milk, potentially reaching human consumers, including infants and children.

The Bovaer initiative is part of a larger effort purportedly aimed at combating climate change, which includes measures to reduce meat and dairy consumption to zero by 2030. Various strategies have been proposed to achieve this, ranging from forcing cows to wear methane-reducing masks to developing vaccines designed to alter their gut bacteria. In one instance, biotech companies are even experimenting with genetically engineered seaweed and CRISPR technology to reduce methane emissions in livestock.

The common thread throughout these approaches is their emphasis on manipulation, whether of genetic materials, microbiomes, or nutritional sources. This kind of tampering with complex, poorly understood systems presents countless unknown risks, especially when it comes to the human consumption of by-products resulting from these interventions.

The fast-tracking of Bovaer under emergency climate change legislation is another aspect of concern. Much like the rushed approvals of "vaccines" during the COVID-19 era, these decisions are being made without adequate research or consideration for potential long-term consequences. Regulators have essentially sidestepped the requirements that should be in place to protect both animals and humans.

The environmental justification for Bovaer’s use becomes even more questionable when one considers the negligible impact it will likely have on global methane levels. The fact that its primary supporters include powerful actors like Bill Gates, who is known for funding various questionable biotech projects, should raise eyebrows. The broader agenda appears to be about control over food production rather than genuine environmental protection.

The push for universal use of Bovaer across Europe reflects a deeper problem of top-down governance and disregard for public consent. Labeling 3-NOP as a mere "feed additive" is a deceptive tactic meant to normalize its use without sufficient scrutiny. Just as COVID "vaccines" were pushed onto the public under a veil of urgency, Bovaer’s promotion follows the same pattern of manipulation and misinformation. The precautionary principle should be applied here. We should not be interfering with complex natural systems when we do not understand them.


Source: https://www.drtrozzi.news/p/cows-chemicals-and-control-the-truth

Japan Issues Alert as Deadly Kidney Failure Surges in Covid-Vaxxed




Japan has just issued a warning after some of the country’s top scientists uncovered direct links between Covid mRNA “vaccines” and surges in deadly kidney failure.

Dr. Yukako Umezawa, a professor at Japan’s Juntendo University Urayasu Hospital, led a team of researchers to investigate alarming spikes in the onset or relapse of glomerular diseases.

Glomerular disease is a condition that causes serious damage to the kidneys.

The disease attacks tiny filters in your kidneys, called glomeruli, where your blood is cleaned.

Glomerular disease can often go undetected for many years as it causes no symptoms until the damage begins to emerge.

The disease causes serious health problems such as high blood pressure (hypertension), nephrotic syndrome, chronic kidney disease, kidney failure, and ultimately death.

Dr. Umezawa and his colleagues are raising the alarm over their findings as they warn of a “ticking time bomb” scenario among the vaccinated population, as many are unaware that they have contracted glomerular disease after receiving an mRNA injection.

Their study found that mRNA “vaccines” trigger and also exacerbate immune-mediated renal conditions.

They published the findings of their peer-reviewed study in the prestigious medical journal Cureus.

The researchers hypothesized that recent surges in renal failure were triggered by the Covid mRNA “vaccines,” which were rolled out for public use shortly before case numbers started to spike.

They analyzed 30 adult Japanese patients presenting with hematuria or proteinuria post-vaccination from January 2021 to December 2022.

Exclusions included patients with non-glomerular sources of hematuria.

Definitive diagnoses were made via kidney biopsy in 26 of the 30 cases, supplemented with serum, urine, and eGFR measurements.

Out of the 30 patients, Covid mRNA “vaccination” triggered 26 new diagnoses of glomerular disease.

The other 4 had relapsed IgA nephropathy (IgAN) post-vaccination.

All 30 of the patients had received mRNA-based Covid injections.

The majority (73%) received a Pfizer-BioNTech shot, while the rest had been injected with a Moderna (mRNA) “vaccine.”

IgAN was the predominant diagnosis, accounting for 76.9% of new cases.

Macrohematuria occurred in 83% of cases and nephrotic syndrome in 13%.

Most symptoms began after the second dose.

Other conditions included minimal change disease (MCD), proliferative glomerulonephritis with monoclonal immunoglobulin deposits (PGNMID), TAFRO syndrome, and anti-glomerular basement membrane (anti-GBM) disease.

This study adds to a growing body of literature on post-mRNA vaccine autoimmune phenomena, particularly kidney-related.

The findings also add to the mounting concern over the long-term damage caused by the vaccines, much of which has yet to reveal itself.

As Slay News reported, the renowned Cleveland Clinic has now stated that millions of people who received Covid mRNA “vaccines” are facing sudden death within the next “five years.”

According to the Ohio-based academic medical center, large numbers of the Covid-vaccinated “may need a heart transplant” to avoid a sudden cardiac arrest.

Meanwhile, one of America’s leading epidemiologists has just raised the alarm after reviewing the latest insurance industry data and uncovering evidence of an “excess mortality crisis” among people who received Covid mRNA “vaccines.”

The warning was issued by McCullough Foundation epidemiologist Nicolas Hulscher, MPH.

According to Hulscher, excess deaths among “vaccinated” people “still persist,” even though many people haven’t received mRNA injections since the pandemic.

Hulscher warns that the data not only reveals an excess mortality spike but also shows that “Americans are dying younger.”

Life expectancy is now worse than a decade ago after mRNA “vaccine” uptake surpassed 80 percent.

Cardiac, neurological, and cancer deaths are all skyrocketing.

Hulscher detailed his findings from the data in a new interview on Worldview Tube with Brannon Howse.

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Hulscher broke down the data in a post on X, revealing that sudden cardiac deaths are up 8-36%.

He also revealed that deaths for multiple severe diseases, such as cancer, are also soaring.

 

Source: https://slaynews.com/news/japan-issues-alert-deadly-kidney-failure-surges-covid-vaxxed/?ref=truth11.com

quinta-feira, 20 de março de 2025

Remembering the Insights of Researcher and Writer Arthur Firstenberg - RIP



Mark Playne
March 1

ARTHUR FIRSTENBERG May 28, 1950 – February 25, 2025

As many of you will remember, I called Arthur Firstenberg's book 'The Invisible Rainbow' "NOTB's book of the century.

He set the level, warning us of the harm of the world of electricity for many of us to follow.

NOTB republished many of his fascinating and insightful emails.

Arthur's book 'The Invisible Rainbow', is a must-read.

It is maybe the most important book for understanding the real cause of the many symptoms we witnessed during the pandemic. Symptoms labelled as due to a 'coronavirus'.

The book provided much of the foundation for my understanding of what we have been going through.

It is Arthur who reminded us that early telescope-enabled astronomers correlated solar flares with a disease that used to strike populations every decade or so.

They called this illness 'Influence of the stars', a name that morphed into 'Influenza.'

This inspired me to point out the similarity of images of the 'corona'-virus matching eruptions on the sun's corona, in the NOTB post Do You Believe In Co-Rona-Incidences?

To give a sense of Arthur's influence, I just popped "Invisible Rainbow" into the NOTB search engine and found 54 articles mentioning his book.

I never got to meet Arthur, which is such a shame as I wished to interview him for the new NOTB film on graphene and dental anaesthetics.

However, I did meet with Arthur's ex-campaigning partner at 5G Space Appeal Claire Edwards, who pointed out that Arthur never seemed to fully acknowledge the possibility that the very domestic technology he was warning the world about could also be used as a weapons.

EMFs, RFs and EFs are without a doubt being used as weapons within a military context as well as well as on civilians, yet IMO this apparent chink in Arthur's armour simply represented the sign of a decent human being. Simply put, good people, which 99.99% of us are, find it hard to imagine such dark actions, which is one of the reasons why so many of us have fallen for the lies of our leaders and their 'evil deeds'.

After suffering a fracture in May 2022, Arthur was again tempted towards the research archives entailing another 'deep dive'.

As he said in his introduction:

"I was astonished by the number of people who contacted me after I broke my arm telling me they had broken theirs too -- some of them this year, and others within the last few years. It occurred to me to wonder: has there been a significant increase in osteoporosis and bone fractures around the world? And if so, is this yet another health effect caused by the use of cell phones and their infrastructure irradiating our bones as well as the rest of our bodies?"

On the 2nd October, Arthur announced he had become ill, with something he could not get to the bottom of.

In his words:

"...I have been extremely ill for six weeks.

I am putting all my energy into making sure The Earth and I, my important book about the environmental crisis, will be released shortly.

On August 20, after spending all day on the computer... my body was seized by an unknown force that has paralyzed and crippled me ever since.... Suddenly, from one moment to the next, as I was shutting down the computer, I could not move and every muscle in my body felt like it had been attacked by a baseball bat. Since then I am in extreme pain all over all the time, from my fingers to my toes, all my muscles are so weak, and I can only move very slowly. I am still trying to find out what is causing this..."

Coming from one of the world's best researchers, such words leapt off the page as I read them.

A couple of months later, Arthur wrote the following words - a stark reminder to our current place are in this stage of man's 'progress' in his supposed evolution.

"...Electromagnetic hypersensitivity” (EHS) is a term that allows doctors to pretend that electricity is harmless and that radiation does not injure their patients.

It allows people who have discovered they can feel electricity and radiation to pretend that there is something wrong with them and that everyone else does not feel it.

It allows environmentalists to pretend that the vanishing of birds and wildlife and the collapse of the Earth’s life support systems are due to something else.

It allows people who use cell phones to pretend they do not feel the radiation and that their insomnia, headaches, joint pains, digestive problems, panic attacks, memory loss, tinnitus, nosebleeds, high blood pressure, heart failure, neurological problems, and diabetes are caused by something else.

It is late autumn here in Santa Fe.

And it is late autumn in the life of the Earth.

We must prevent winter from coming, for there will be no spring if it does.

It is up to all of us..."

ARTHUR FIRSTENBERG - 13th December 2024 newsletter


See more of Arthur's newsletters here: https://cellphonetaskforce.org/newsletters/

Obituary

ARTHUR FIRSTENBERG

May 28, 1950 – February 25, 2025


BY KATIE SINGER

FEB 28 2025

For nearly 50 years, Arthur Firstenberg lived with awareness of technology’s harms. May he rest in peace.

Arthur Firstenberg, author, environmentalist and activist, died in his home after months of an undiagnosed illness, surrounded by family and friends.

Arthur was born in Brooklyn, New York to survivors of the Holocaust. His childhood summers in upstate New York, the Grand Canyon, Yosemite National Park, and on an island near Newfoundland fostered his love of nature. At Cornell University, he devoted half of his time to hiking, canoeing and rock climbing—and half to physics, mathematics, ancient civilizations and foreign languages. After graduating in 1971, he lived with small farmers in Norway and among Guatemala’s traditional Maya.

From 1978 to 1982, Arthur attended medical school at the University of California, Irvine. He left before graduating after more than 40 dental x-rays led to his experiencing microwave sickness.

He became a vegetarian and a Feldenkrais practitioner.

In 1986, Arthur participated in the Great Peace March for Global Nuclear Disarmament. While walking across the U.S., he witnessed modern society’s destruction of the Earth and its creatures. In 1989, in search of a simple life, he traveled to northernmost Canada but found heart-wrenching destruction there, too.

In 1996, to expedite the roll-out of cellular phone service, Congress passed the Telecommunications Act. Its Section 704 prohibits municipalities from denying permits to install cellular antennas based on their environmental effects. Arthur founded the Cellular Phone Task Force and began providing a clearinghouse for information about wireless technologies’ injurious effects and a global support network for people disabled by electromagnetic fields. He began tracking the permit requests that corporations made to municipalities to install cellular antennas, smart meters and other radiation-emitting technologies—and rallied others to try to stop such efforts.

In 1997, based on the rights of states, nature and disabled people, the Cellular Phone Task Force joined other groups to challenge the Federal Communications Commission’s radio-frequency radiation exposure limits. Their efforts were unsuccessful.

In 2002, the U.S. Access Board recognized that under the 1990 Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), electromagnetic sensitivities may be considered disabilities.

Arthur moved to Santa Fe, NM in 2005. Introducing himself to a packed audience at the Women’s Club, he named some of the effects of exposure to electromagnetic radiation—nausea, nosebleeds, diarhea, headaches, insomnia, fatigue, irregular hair loss and nerve pain. Many people were moved to tears as they realized wireless technologies’ effects on their families, pets and themselves.

Each time a corporation proposed a new cell tower or the city proposed installing new WiFi, or a utility proposed transmitting “smart” meters, Arthur notified his mailing list and encouraged people to attend public hearings and speak out. The City Council chambers often overflowed.

Arthur became known for his intolerance of wireless devices, his passionate public comments, his unwillingness to compromise on ecological or public health, and for suing a neighbor whose Wi-Fi disturbed him. The NY Times and other media repeatedly ridiculed Arthur for that lawsuit. The attention did not faze him.

In 2021, through the Santa Fe Alliance for Public Health and Safety, he petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court to rule on 1)whether the Telecom Act’s Section 704 violates the First Amendment right of access to courts and 2)whether “environmental effects” also encompasses “health effects.” Many organizations joined this suit, but the Supreme Court refused to hear the case.

Arthur tracked the dates of his experience of new or intensified symptoms—and found that they correlated with the dates on which satellites, 5G and other technologies turned on. In The Invisible Rainbow, he correlated electrification’s rise with the increase of previously unknown diseases including cancer, heart disease, diabetes and Alzheimer’s. He considered radiation emitted by cordless phones, cellular antennas, mobile phones, laptops, fluorescent lights, satellites, smart utility meters, newer cars and other transmitting devices a violation of nature.

For years, Arthur got around Santa Fe with a bicycle. He never owned a television or a cell phone. He dreamed of people politely accepting neighbors’ requests to turn off mobile devices and unplug WiFi. Because computers ravage the Earth and public health from their cradles-to-graves, he dreamed of a society with shared—not individually owned—computers. He frequently called for people to quit using mobile devices.

As a member of Once A Forest, he opposed forest management policies such as thinning and prescribed fires.

Arthur understood the consequences of the electrical power at our fingertips. “The only thing we can really do for the Earth is to stop destroying it,” he wrote. “Then the Earth will take care of itself. Instead of trying to fix the whole planet, let us attend to our own simple lives.”

Firstenberg’s books include The Invisible Rainbow: A History of Electricity and Life (Chelsea Green, 2020, more than 100,000 copies sold); Microwaving Our Planet: The Environmental Impact of the Wireless Revolution (1997); and, most recently, The Earth and I (Skyhorse, 2025).

Arthur Firstenberg is survived by a nephew and countless people committed to respecting nature and reducing electronic technologies’ harms to ecosystems and public health.


REVIEWS

DR ANDREW GOLDSWORTHY

RETIRED BIOLOGICAL SAFETY OFFICER

IMPERIAL COLLEGE - LONDON

This is an excellent summary of Arthur Firstenberg's book "The Invisible Rainbow", which is itself a much longer summary of the timeline linking the exposure of animals (especially humans) and plants to a wide range of illnesses and metabolic disorders. These include microwave sickness (aka electromagnetic hypersensitivity) diabetes, heart attacks, cancer and many more.

The villain of the piece is pulsed and other alternating electromagnetic fields in the environment that interfere with electric currents used by our own bodies and, in particular, the electric currents that flow through our cell membranes. Their main effect is to make these membranes leak. This short circuits and reduces the normal voltage (trans-membrane potential) that provides the energy for most of our bodily functions In effect, they starve us of our energy and this can have all sorts of unexpected effects.

For example, the mitochondria (the cells' powerhouses) use an electrochemical gradient across their membranes generated from the food we eat to make ATP, which is the main energy currency of our cells. But this ATP is used by the external membrane of the cell to absorb nutrients and excrete toxic byproducts, So, not only do these electromagnetic fields starve us of energy (giving, among other things, symptoms of chronic fatigue) they also poison us with our own toxins. Also, since ATP is needed by our immune systems, we become more susceptible to disease and also to cancer, which arises from the inability of the immune system to weed out precancerous cells.

That said, the body does try to fight back. In particular, the inflow of calcium ions through our leaking cell membranes stimulates metabolic activity in general and repair mechanisms in particular. If you think about it, this is the only way that a cell can "know" that its membrane has been damaged.

But the increased metabolic activity needed to repair the damage has side effects, particularly on the cells of the nervous system. Here the extra activity makes our sensory cells send false signals to the brain to give us the symptoms of electrical hypersensitivity, including ADHD as our brain cells become hyperactive and pain and false feelings of heat or cold anywhere on our body. When the inner ear is affected, we may experience tinnitus, loss of balance and all the symptoms of motion sickness, including nausea.

It is not nice to be electrosensitive and no one knows this more than Arthur Firstenberg, who is the most electrosensitive person that I have ever come across Please read on to see more details and the observations and experiments that inspired Arthur to write his book, "The Invisible Rainbow".

Andrew Goldsworthy PhD

Lecturer (retired)

Imperial College London


DR T - RETIRED GP

It is hard to comprehend how systematic and deliberate the silencing of the harm that electromagnetic radiation causes has been.

It is not accidental that the very youngest have been 'educated' into regarding many of the devices that have incredibly high EMF radiation as essential for their lives.

Whatever age we are we have been programmed to accept more and more EMF radiation into our lives. The other side of this is that those canaries in the coal mines that have been suffering from severe effects of the EMF radiation have been mocked and dismissed by all forms of the biased media.

Startling instances of men, women and children suffering harm have been suppressed. Moving forward to our present time we can now see that so many of these devices that are causing harm are also part of surveillance capitalism.

It is little wonder that this agenda of 'smart' everything would be pushed forward regardless of any harm it may be causing. This book is so valuable in that it tells the story from the beginning and is immensely readable (yes, I know it's long), and then has all that evidence to back up what is written.

I knew this book was important when it arrived as a gift from Mark, and I have been recommending it to others ever since.

Knowledge is power.

Dr T


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About Arthur Firstenberg the author Arthur Firstenberg is a scientist and journalist who is at the forefront of a global movement to tear down the taboo surrounding this subject.

After graduating Phi Beta Kappa from Cornell University with a degree in mathematics, he attended the University of California, Irvine School of Medicine from 1978 to 1982.

Injury by X-ray overdose cut short his medical career. For the past thirty-seven years he has been a researcher, consultant, and lecturer on the health and environmental effects of electromagnetic radiation, as well as a practitioner of several healing arts.

About the Book This remarkably well-documented and -referenced book is a cornerstone in the sense that it traces the deployment of electricity in our civilization, in terms of its interaction with living organisms, from its initial discovery in the 1740s all the way to our time, and even projected into the future.

It should be noted that the title refers to the entire electromagnetic spectrum comprising the colors of the rainbow, including the invisible frequencies such as radio frequencies and the fields generated around conducting wires.



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