>I remember a Law suite a few years ago from a Husband who lost his wife. She
>had a Brain tumor next to where the phone antenna was.
>>I remember a Law suite a few years ago from a Husband who lost his wife. She
>>had a Brain tumor next to where the phone antenna was.
>
>Given a brain tumor, there's about a 50/50 chance of it being on the side of
>your head you use your cell phone on, you know?
When the brain tumor is on the correct side, is right where the
antenna would be held during a call, is about the size and shape
of the radiation envelope from the phone, and you can make out the
cell phone manufacturer's logo on the X-ray of the tumor, then
you've got a good case.
>I'm not surprised he lost the lawsuit -- to win I'd hope he'd have to
>demonstrate that cell phones not only pose a significant health hazard, but
>also that the carriers knew this fact and attempted to suppress it (like the
>tobacco companies did decades back with the smoking/cancer research).
Joel Koltner - 29 Jul 2008 01:20 GMT
> When the brain tumor is on the correct side, is right where the
> antenna would be held during a call, is about the size and shape
> of the radiation envelope from the phone, and you can make out the
> cell phone manufacturer's logo on the X-ray of the tumor, then
> you've got a good case.
That would be compelling. :-)
I don't think the O.P. suggested this was the actual case, though.
Bill - 29 Jul 2008 14:13 GMT
No, not the OP. just something I brought up with some mis spellings.
>> When the brain tumor is on the correct side, is right where the
>> antenna would be held during a call, is about the size and shape
[quoted text clipped - 5 lines]
>
> I don't think the O.P. suggested this was the actual case, though.