17 Comments
User's avatar
Frances Leader's avatar

EMFs are causing horrible symptoms but they do not have metal toxins! How do you account for this?

Expand full comment
Mark.Kennard's avatar

Metals make people hypersensitive to the environment in people with gene mutations like mthfr. It’s metals which make people hypersensitive to emf and everything else in the environment. Metals are the great sensitised of the human race and are seen as an existential threat to the human race as they trigger the disease process

Expand full comment
Frances Leader's avatar

You provided me with a study, in our exchange elsewhere: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1ukG5aNMyhfK3sTl1ZDXFlL0hMkFD7ZMj/view

"The earliest descriptions of metal allergy date back to the late 1800s (Thyssen et al. 2021)." ~ quoted from that study.

This is interesting because it was in 1880 that electrification was initiated in cities around the world and people began reacting to that with influenza and neurasthenia. So what Thyssen et al are identifying as metal allergy could simply be reaction to electrification. You can see a chart of the correlations between developments in electro-magnetics and new illnesses at the end of my article here:

https://francesleader.substack.com/p/there-is-no-virus-there-is-no-lab

Expand full comment
Mark.Kennard's avatar

Metal allergy cannot be confused with emf hypersensitivity but does cause it. Back in the late 1800s, people with gene mutations that make them hypersensitive to metals would have been the only people affected by emf from electrification.

Expand full comment
Frances Leader's avatar

I have an aversion to this phrase - gene mutations. It is offensive and almost racist. I think that all people are sensitive to EMF from electrification to some degree or another. Also I understand, from my studies, that microwave sickness is cumulative, meaning that sufferers will worsen over time if they cannot mitigate their exposure to EMFs.

Expand full comment
Mark.Kennard's avatar

Gene mutation is a noun. It’s not offensive and to say it discriminates against people with different skin colours is pretty ridiculous and pathetic really. Ignore you gene mutations at your own peril

Expand full comment
Frances Leader's avatar

These 'gene mutations' you are so fond of..... (yes I know what a noun is)....

Why do you consider them mutations? Why not variations?

Expand full comment