We Have Got to End WiFi Internet: It Too is An Environmental Hazzard that's Causing Global Warming

Get ready for the coming environmental tax on the Internet. It's going to be brought up now that WiFi computer and Internet networks are now having a harmful effect on the environment. A study in the Netherlands says WiFi is hurting and killing the trees, which means WiFi is probably causing global warming too.  You know it's coming, so let's call them out on it.

Radiation from Wi-Fi networks is harmful to trees, causing significant variations in growth, as well as bleeding and fissures in the bark, according to a recent study in the Netherlands.

If you are an environmentalist get off you Mac immediately. Shut down your Mac Airport and do not ever use it again, unless of course you are Al Gore.

It's not just WiFi networks either. The Netherlands report notes cell phones too. It's all killing the trees, and they know this because they need a government grant to continue their studies to promote more fear to push their global environmental agenda. Oh yes, it's a non-stop cycle.

And all the people buy into it ignoring that science is based on money these days. Scientists will say anything for a buck.

According to the report:

All deciduous trees in the Western world are affected, according to the study by Wageningen University. The city of Alphen aan den Rijn ordered the study five years ago after officials found unexplained abnormalities on trees that couldn't be ascribed to a virus or bacterial infection.

Additional testing found the disease to occur throughout the Western world. In the Netherlands, about 70 percent of all trees in urban areas show the same symptoms, compared with only 10 percent five years ago. Trees in densely forested areas are hardly affected.



Now I don't know about you, but in almost every freshman class you take in college, instructors warn you of absolute words like "ALL." Of course as you can see, this poorly written report removes 30% of the all in the next paragraph, and in the following sentence it says most of the trees in the forest are "hardly affected." I am so confused. I thought it was ALL, but it basically eliminates ALL in the next paragraph. I'd say they are looking hard for grant money, and they are creating a scare and lots of wiggle room to go with it.