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Wind Farm Syndrome making people sick
#1
Now, why does this sound so familiar? Oh, just replace "wind farm" with geothermal and they are almost identical. Psychogenic illness? Interesting. The other interesting aspect is the organizational structure behind the "illness", more anti-science mob mentality being used as a hysteria generation tool. It's odd to see this level of CIA programming tactics used at this level by anti-government civilians.

quote:
The sickening truth about wind farm syndrome

Hilltop turbines are being blamed for myriad maladies. What is the truth behind these outlandish claims?

NEW technology has long attracted "modern health worries". Microwave ovens, television and computer screens and even early telephony all caused anxiety in their time. More recently, cellphones and towers, Wi-Fi and smart electricity meters have followed suit.

Another is gathering attention; the very modern malaise known as wind turbine syndrome. I set out to collect the conditions attributed to wind farm exposure. Within hours, I'd found 50 often florid assertions about different illnesses. Today my total sits at 198, with a range redolent of Old Testament plagues.

The list includes "deaths, yes, many deaths", none of which have ever come to the attention of a coroner, cancers, congenital malformations, and every manner of psychiatric problem. But mostly, it includes common health problems found in all communities, with wind turbines or not. These include greying hair, energy loss, concentration lapses, weight gain and all the problems of ageing. Sleep problems are mentioned most, but insomnia is incredibly common. Animals get a look in. Chickens won't lay; earthworms vanish; hundreds of cattle and goats die horrible deaths from "stray electricity".

In a 35-year career in public health, I have never encountered anything quite so apocalyptic. I've visited wind farms and compared their gentle swoosh to the noises that all city dwellers live with daily. Quickly, this phenomenon began to tick psychogenic boxes.

There are several reasons to suspect that the unrecognised entity of wind turbine syndrome is psychogenic: a "communicated" disease spread by anti-wind interest groups, sometimes with connections to fossil fuel interests. People can worry themselves sick.

Firstly, there are the temporal problems. Wind farms appeared some 20 years ago in the US. There are now just shy of 200,000 turbines globally. But the first recorded claims that they caused disease came a decade later. Two rural doctors, one in the UK and the other in Australia, made claims repeated widely in newspapers but never published in any journal. Turbines have come to be blamed for chronic conditions like (amazingly) lung and skin cancer, diabetes, multiple sclerosis and stroke. But importantly also acute symptoms, that according to Australia's high priestess of wind turbine syndrome, Sarah Laurie, an unregistered doctor, can commence within 20 minutes of exposure. If true, what happened in the early complaint-free years?

Then there's the issue of clustering. The European wind industry sees the phenomenon as largely anglophone, and even then, only in particular regions and around certain farms. Many sites have run for years without complaint. Others, legendary for their vocal opponents even before start up, are hot beds of disease claims. So if turbines were inherently noxious, why do they cut such a selective path? Why do citizens of community-owned turbines in Germany and Denmark rarely complain? Why are complaints rare in western Australia, but rife in several eastern Australian communities?

Opponents readily concede that only a minority of those exposed report being ill but explain this via the analogy of motion sickness: it only happens to those who are susceptible. How then to explain that whole regions and indeed nations, have no susceptible people? The key factor seems to be the presence or absence of anti-wind activists, generally from outside the area.

It is clear the presence of these anti-wind "vectors" is required. Communities which have for years accepted the farms can erupt when activists arrive, spreading alarm and listing health problems. Prominent among these in Australia are wealthy conservative landowners appalled by the very visible presence of the tall green-energy totems, a constant reminder of bucolic decay and the "upstairs-downstairs" disdain they have for those needing income from their often hilly, poorer quality land.

The fact that money seems to be a magic antidote to these ailments further undermines the claims. Health complaints are as rare as rocking horse excrement among turbine hosts. Complaints are rare from those financially benefitting from communal ownership arrangements. It tends to be neighbours of those hosting turbines who make the link with illness. They see the turbines, dislike them and dwell on their misfortune. The perceived injustice can eat away at some, fomented by organised groups.

Wind companies also report residents approaching them with extensive renovation wish lists. One told me of a request for a house to be moved to a lake shore. In rural Australia, residential buy-outs by mining companies are common. Word spreads about shack owners who got lucky. So when a cashed-up company appears, it is understandable that some may see their ticket out via protracted complaints.

Opponents also claim that confidentiality clauses are used to gag hosts, so they can't speak up about illnesses. I've seen several contracts and, predictably, none involve signing away common law rights to claims of negligence.

Finally, there are the apocryphal tales about many families having to abandon their homes. Mysteriously, address lists are never produced. Abandoning unsaleable properties is a sad part of rural decay, a fact which seems to escape fly-in, fly-out climate change denialists.

Previous modern health worries dissipated when the predicted health mayhem never emerged and the feared exotic agents became thoroughly familiar. Hysteria about cellphone towers had its heyday in the late 1990s, at least in Australia, but is rare today. With 17 reviews of the evidence on harm caused by wind farms consistent in their assessment of insignificant risk, how long can this one last?

http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21...drome.html
*Japanese tourist on bus through Pahoa, "Is this still America?*
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#2
Thanks for the laugh of the day Ted ! Title was enuf to get me staated.

aloha,
pog
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#3
It's true: the NIMBY armies and their media hype definitely make ME sick...
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#4
The war against AC current and the resultant electrical / magnetic fields go back to the very begging of electrification.

I'm not a nimby - nor will I keep my seeds on top of the microwave or live under a transmission tower.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/War_of_Currents
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#5
Let's get rid of 80% of humanity and get back to good old fashioned subsistence living.
Technology is sooooo icky.
I keep thinking about the opposition to wind farms off Cape Cod in very recent years because the well to do
residents felt it would spoil their view and property values.
And food farms? How un-natural. Hunting and gathering is the way to go.
Make that 80% above 98%. There- problems solved.[Wink][Big Grin]
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#6
I'll give you this - kinda relates to the short wave topic as well. In the day..... a fun trick was to hold up a grounded florescent tube.

A well tuned 100 watt ssb (single side band) when keyed would get a glow out of said tube.

We use hand held radios putting out 6 watts daily 25 watts overhead in the ships radio. radar putts out 1kw (think microwave with the door removed) ...- while folks scream about cellphones that emit 100ths of a watt.

There is definitely a lot of electrical energy in the air - more every day.

time will tell...........
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#7
The worst are those pesky U.V. light rays that keep BURNing my skin but I heard if the wind is blowing then it keeps them from landing.

aloha,
pog
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#8
Dont know about the other stuff - uv making a mess of my extension cords and any plastic / pvc etc in record time if left outside unprotected here at latitude 20....
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#9
I think I am starting to get ill from too much aloha. Went to Ho'olaule'a and just about hurled from aloha overdose. Just kidding, hardly ever serious except when it comes to Sirius, then I am serious about Sirius.
*Japanese tourist on bus through Pahoa, "Is this still America?*
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