By Benjamin Seiler
It's getting harder and harder - in fact, almost impossible
- to die from natural causes. Coronary diseases and heart attacks
are the most common causes of death in the industrialized world,
with cancer coming in a close second.
Which is a completely unnatural phenomenon. A hundred years
ago, the incidence of cancer was 1 in 500; nowadays, it is practically
one in two. Breast cancer has become the most common cause of
death in women aged 35 to 54. Back in 1971, the risk of breast
cancer for women was one in 14. Today, the risk is closer to
one in eight.
Why more and more people are dropping like flies from heart
trouble or cancer can be attributed to numerous reasons, not
the least of which includes medical malpractice. Nevertheless,
we should be asking ourselves why these disease statistics are
increasing at such an alarming rate. And why hyperactivity,
attention deficit disorder and difficulty with concentration,
as well as chronic fatigue, are emerging in increasingly epidemic
proportions. Most of us do not see the significance of the perhaps
most important cause of these diseases, although the illnesses
just mentioned are obvious symptoms of it. "We all live in a
global microwave oven, where the intensity of radiation keeps
going up, and which is slowly but surely cocking us to death."
A
straightforward message from a scientist who has been warning
people about the dangers of modern microwave technology for
decades. For many years, the lone voice of Dr. Hans U. Hertel
was like a cry in the wilderness, only to be (almost) sown shut
through the legal powers that be. Meanwhile, many other voices
have joined with him in chorus. Practically no one else is like
Hertel, who (an agronomist by profession, by the way) possesses
such a profound understanding of nature, and who is best suited
to connect science with spirituality in simple words - something
he does again and again in his lectures and teachings through
the World Foundation for Natural Science. We all live
in a bustling, hectic world. Time has become our most precious
commodity, after good health. But the more time we save, thanks
to our microwave ovens and mobile phones, the higher the increase
to our insurance premiums. A mere coincidence?
True, with microwaves in the oven and in the cell phone at our
ears, we save a lot of time - time, however, which we subtract
from our own life spans. You will certainly agree with me once
you've read this article. And since I know how valuable your
lifetime is, I've already taken care of the work for you: The
most important facts and figures are laid out for you here,
short and sweet, so that you really can be well informed. Please
feel free to pass on this information, because it is information
that all people should know. The time that you expend on the
following pages is well spent - and if it means any consolation
to you, I needed a much greater amount of time just to write
this article…
A Known Hazard for Years
Today, young people can hardly imagine that human society once
functioned without cellular phones, and actually quite well.
No one died from overwork either, because cooking everyday,
without microwave ovens, required more time.
This makes the microwave oven used in today's kitchen seem truly
'modern,' even though its technology is almost 70 years old.
The health risks, too, have been known for just as long. It
was the Germans who during the 1930's first developed microwave
technology. By the time the Second World War broke out, German
scientists had already developed a radar system based on technically
generated microwaves, in order to detect British bombers in
advance of a raid. In the midst of bitter cold wintertime, the
soldiers used gather around the radar screen to get warm - and
wound up getting sick. They developed cancer, which initially
manifested as leukemia, or cancer of the blood. Upon learning
this, the Supreme Command of the 'Wehrmacht' immediately responded
by issuing a general order to abandon the use of radar.
Because it was apparent that human-engineered microwaves heat
tissue, Humboldt University in Berlin was given a grant in the
early '40s to develop microwave ovens. The objective was to
provide German soldiers with a warm meal that could be prepared
both fast and with no fuel, for use during the Barbarossa Campaign
against the Soviet Union. However, anyone who consumed this
microwaved food likewise developed cancerous blood, just like
the radar technicians. Obviously, the immune system underwent
a severe stress reaction to this type of food. The use of microwave
ovens was subsequently forbidden in the entire Third Reich.
After the war, East Berlin and Humboldt University fell within
the Soviet Union's sphere of influence. The Russians seized
the University archives and with that, the medical files and
research documents on experimental microwave ovens. After 1957,
the research which the Germans had started was continued by
Russians at the Institute for Radio Technology in Kinsk (in
what is today Belarus), among other places. In the end, the
Soviet Union promulgated a state law in 1976 banning the use
of microwave ovens, and it published an international statement
of warning. The prohibition was lifted during the period of
Perestroika, although today, the threshold levels of acceptable
exposure used by the Russian telecommunications industry are
still several thousand times less than in the USA, and at least
one thousand times less as those levels in West Europe.
By reading the research results, now more than a half-century
old, from the German and Russian scientists, it is evident that
government officials and developers could and should have fully
understood the health hazards associated with microwave ovens.
(See also the sidebar, Dangers of Microwave Ovens in
our edition no.1)
New Evidence from Switzerland
A while later, in 1989, two Swiss researchers decided to investigate
the hazards of microwave ovens, without having any prior knowledge
that the German and Russian studies even existed. To support
their research, Professor Bernard Blanc of the University
of Lausanne, and an independent researcher, Dr. Hans U.
Hertel, sought a research grant from the Swiss government. They
requested 150,000 Swiss Francs from the Swiss National Research
Fund. But their application was rejected with the explanation
that the interests of the public would not be served by this
type of research.
So Hertel financed the research from his own pocket, as well
costs of a similar magnitude incurred from the ensuing legal
proceedings. The Swiss Association of Manufacturers and Suppliers
of Household Electrical Appliances (MHEA) was anything but
pleased with the conclusions from their research, and filed
suit against Hertel under the Federal Unfair Competition Act
(UCA). Hertel failed to win his case within the Swiss judicial
system, and was only awarded full restitution before the International
Court of Human Rights. Naturally, you could understand that
microwave oven manufacturers would react to Hertel's studies
as if they were stung by a hornet. But the scientist's basic
conclusion, to put it succinctly, remains the same: "Food, heated
by microwaves, causes pathogenic changes in the blood of individuals
who consume such food, similar to what is seen in the initial
stages of cancer."
But how do you measure whether or not technically generated
microwaves are hazardous to your health? The word "microwave"
is merely a designation for a specific frequency range of electromagnetic
waves which are also found in normal sunlight. From a purely
physical perspective, natural and manmade microwaves both have
the same frequencies and wave lengths. How does one establish
the qualitative differences between these waves when their physical
characteristics are identical? Quality can only be observed
indirectly through its effects on living beings. Therefore,
the only way to determine if microwave food is a health hazard
is to look at how the body reacts to this type of nourishment.
For this reason, Hertel and Blanc concentrated primarily on
the immune system, the most sensitive organ in the body. Its
components are blood and lymph. Human test subjects were given
food prepared in various ways, including food that required
no cooking, food prepared with conventional cooking methods,
microwave food and food defrosted with a microwave. Blood samples
were taken prior to and after the food was consumed, and then
analyzed in the lab. The basic conclusion: food that was
cooked with the microwave, and food that was "just" defrosted
with the microwave, were both equally harmful. How could
this be determined through blood samples?
Hertel's Research Results
Hematocrit: The hematocrit (also called HCT, Crit, PCV
or Packed Cell Volume) describes a form of viscosity (density)
in the blood. Healthy blood is relatively thin. If blood thickens,
i.e., the hematocrit values increase, then the danger of embolism,
thrombosis or infarction - the number one cause of death
- likewise increases.
Hertel's studies indicated that raw foods and conventionally
prepared meals always led to a thinning of the blood. Microwave
food, however, led to unhealthy clumping, or agglutination,
in the blood. Each time, the effect would last up to two hours
or longer.
The reason: In a healthy bloodstream, all blood particles have
an electrically negative charge. That means they cannot cluster
together, because there is no attraction between them. But when
blood cells, because of stress, become depolarised, there are
also electrically positive charged cells present, which may
form clusters with oppositely charged cells.These clusters are
like a stack of coins, which can clog up miniscule capillaries.
Leukocytes: Any intake of food places stress on the body
for a brief period, thereby stimulating a moderate increase
in the number of white blood cells. Microwave food however generates
an unusually high increase in leukocytes. A further indication
of an abnormal stress level.
Hemoglobin: These red blood corpusules, important for
delivery of oxygen, decreased significantly with microwave food
- likewise a stress symptom.
Cholesterol: VMicrowave food drastically elevates the
cholesterol levels in the blood. That is a clear stress signal,
because the body only increases its cholesterol levels in emergency
situations. Cholesterol helps the cells to maintain their oxygen
exchange, even under stress conditions. Hence it is not advisable
to lower cholesterol artificially through pharmaceutical means
- and also not necessary: by eliminating the cause of stress,
the cholesterol level will decrease on its own. >
The topic of cholesterol was a natural fit for Hertel, as he
was once a designated scientific representative for a large
Swiss dairy company: "The industry has asserted over the last
fifty years that butter, cheese, eggs, and meat - animal products
which themselves contain a lot of cholesterol - were the cause
of heart attacks and high cholesterol levels in the blood. But
that was a lie used to promote margarine - derived from vegetable
oils - as the ostensible healthy alternative to butter."
According to Hertel, a study conducted at the Swiss Federal
Institute of Technology in Zürich demonstrated incontrovertibly
that margarine did indeed produce a high cholesterol level in
the blood, whereas butter actually lowered cholesterol.
Hertel's own microwave research came up with the same results:
even unprocessed milk, rich in cholesterol, led to a reduction
in blood cholesterol levels on human test subjects, whereas
carrots (practically no cholesterol) raised cholesterol levels
when cooked in a microwave.
Blood cholesterol has nothing to do with the cholesterol content
of the foods consumed, but rather with the amount of stress
caused by these types of food.
Microwave food places an especially heavy burden on the body,
because harmful microwave energy is
inductively transmitted to the blood via the food. Conventional
cooking methods reduce the energy content of food. Microwave
food, by contrast, is enriched with energy. However note: this
does not make it automatically healthier, because at the same
time, life-giving vital energy in the food is zapped by up to
ninety percent (a statistic validated by Soviet researchers
back in the 1950's).
Using bacterial bioluminescence methods, Hertel and Blanc were
successful in proving that microwave radiation energy is transferred
to the irradiated food fed to human test subjects: The bacteria,
fed with blood serum, glowed most intensely if the subject had
eaten microwave food.
The extent to which this microwave heating energy is unhealthy
can also be seen through the microscope: healthy blood will
crystallize into fine, beautiful crystals. Blood from persons
who have eaten microwave food, by contrast, crystallizes into
cruciform structures typically seen in patients suffering from
cancer.
As Hertel explains, "It is not chemistry, but energy on which
we thrive. It is not the molecules of protein or sugar, for
instance, that our bodies require, but the energy they consist
of, which is manifested in the structures of these molecules.
We live from the energy which has built these chemical structures.
So chemically understood are for instance, both natural and
artificial vitamin Cs identical. Nevertheless, while naturally
occurring vitamin C is manifested in beautiful crystalline structures,
pharmaceutically produced vitamin C tends to form amorphous
clumps.
(…)
In our printed issue of ZeitenSchrift you will find much more
historical, vital and scientific information concerning microwaves.
For instance, you will also learn the difference between the
law of Paracelsus and the law of Petkau - and why this (not
so common) knowledge should reform all of science.
For more details click here.
© 2005 ZeitenSchrift