You can see smog. You can taste contamination in water. You can smell a chemical spill.
You cannot see, taste, or smell the electromagnetic fields saturating every square inch of your home, your office, your child’s school, and the air between them. They pass through your walls, your skull, and every cell in your body, twenty-four hours a day. And the agency responsible for ensuring they’re safe hasn’t updated its safety standards since 1996, based on research from the 1980s involving five monkeys and eight rats.
This is Part 1 of the new EMF series covering the invisible infrastructure all around us.
What EMF Actually Is
Electromagnetic fields are invisible fields of energy produced wherever electricity flows or radio waves transmit. That’s not exotic physics. It’s the fundamental operating principle of modern civilization. Every wire, every antenna, every motor, every screen, every charger, every “smart” device produces them, mostly intentionally to operate as it needs to, and sometimes spuriously due to insufficient precautions or poor engineering.
The word “electromagnetic” tells you what you’re dealing with: coupled electric and magnetic fields that radiate outward from their source. Some are natural. The Earth generates a magnetic field. The sun emits the full electromagnetic spectrum. Lightning strikes (about 50 per second globally) sustain the Schumann resonance: a set of ultra-low frequency peaks centered at 7.83 Hz that form the planet’s natural electromagnetic heartbeat. Life evolved in this environment over billions of years.
Then, in the geological blink of an eye, we changed the game.
The Scale of Change
Professor Olle Johansson of the Karolinska Institute (Sweden’s Nobel Prize-granting medical university) and Professor Einar Flydal of the Norwegian University of Science and Technology have calculated that man-made electromagnetic pollution now exceeds Earth’s natural electromagnetic background by a factor of roughly one quintillion. That’s 10^18, or 1,000,000,000,000,000,000. A one with eighteen zeros after it.
A 2022 peer-reviewed paper in Reviews on Environmental Health documented that “ambient levels of electromagnetic fields have risen sharply in the last 80 years, creating a novel energetic exposure that previously did not exist,” with “exponential increases in nearly all environments, including rural/remote areas and lower atmospheric regions.”
Let that land. Not double. Not ten times. Not a thousand times. The human-generated electromagnetic environment is roughly a quintillion times stronger than the one every living organism on Earth evolved to function in. And this happened in about 120 years.
No other environmental change in human history comes close.
The Four Types of EMF (and Why This Matters)
Most people, when they hear “EMF,” think of cell towers and WiFi. That’s one type. There are actually four distinct categories of electromagnetic pollution in a typical modern home, each with different sources, different behaviors, and different measurement tools. Understanding the distinction matters, because you could turn off every wireless device you own and still be swimming in three other types of EMF.
1. Radio Frequency (RF) Radiation
This is the one everyone talks about. RF covers frequencies from about 3 kHz to 300 GHz: the range used by WiFi routers, cell phones, cell towers, Bluetooth, cordless phones, smart meters, baby monitors, and 5G antennas. It’s measured in microwatts per square meter (µW/m²) or milliwatts per square meter (mW/m²).
Sources you probably already suspect: your WiFi router, your phone, the cell tower down the street. Sources you might not suspect: your neighbor’s smart meter, your baby monitor (which is a continuous RF transmitter sitting next to your infant’s head), your wireless security cameras, your Bluetooth earbuds.
2. AC Magnetic Fields
Wherever electrical current flows through a wire, a magnetic field radiates outward. These fields are measured in milligauss (mG) or microtesla (µT). They penetrate walls, floors, and most building materials. You can’t shield against them easily - what helps here is distance.
Sources: power lines, electrical panels, wiring errors (net current from improperly bonded neutrals), appliance motors, transformers, dimmer switches. The sneaky one: if an electrician miswired something in your house years ago, you could have elevated magnetic fields in rooms you’d never suspect. This is more common than you’d think.
3. AC Electric Fields
This one surprises people. AC electric fields exist wherever voltage is present in a wire, even when no current is flowing and nothing is turned on. If a lamp is plugged in but switched off, the cord and wiring still radiate an electric field. Measured in volts per meter (V/m).
Sources: every wire in your walls (carrying 120V at all times), extension cords, power strips, lamp cords, chargers. The key realization: you spend roughly eight hours sleeping surrounded by live wiring embedded in the walls, floor, and ceiling of your bedroom. Those wires radiate electric fields into your body the entire time.
4. Dirty Electricity
The weirdest one. Your home’s electrical wiring is supposed to carry clean 60 Hz AC power (50 Hz in Europe). In practice, modern electronics dump high-frequency voltage transients and harmonics back onto the wiring, creating what epidemiologist Samuel Milham called “dirty electricity”: “high frequency voltage transients and harmonics riding along on the 50 or 60 Hz wave form and contaminating the electricity delivered to users.”
Most generators, for instance, produce such dirty electricity that charging your laptop with them can break it - you need special inverter generators to produce a clean-enough sine wave for modern electronics.
Sources: LED dimmer switches, CFL and some LED bulbs, switch-mode power supplies (every laptop charger, phone charger, and USB adapter you own), solar panel inverters, variable-speed motors (modern washing machines, HVAC systems). Dirty electricity rides along your house’s wiring and radiates outward, effectively turning your entire home into a low-grade antenna broadcasting kilohertz-range electromagnetic noise. Measured in millivolts peak-to-peak (mV p-p).
It’s Complicated
The point is - the EMF soup we’re all swimming in is complicated. There is no single meter that measures all four. The popular TriField TF2 handles RF, AC magnetic, and AC electric, but not dirty electricity. For dirty electricity, you need a dedicated line EMI meter.
And here’s the kicker: you could live in the middle of nowhere, off-grid from cell towers, with your phone in airplane mode and your WiFi off, and still have dangerous levels of AC magnetic fields (from wiring errors), AC electric fields (from the wiring in your walls), and dirty electricity (from your solar inverter). RF is the one that gets all the press. It’s not the only one that matters.
The “Thermal Only” Dogma
Now for the question that should be obvious: if we’ve increased the electromagnetic environment by a factor of a quintillion, how did regulators decide this was safe?
The answer is a masterclass in institutional capture.
The story begins in the 1980s, when US Navy researchers trained food-deprived rats and monkeys to press levers for food pellets, then blasted them with RF radiation to see how much it took to disrupt their behavior. The answer: enough to raise their body temperature by about 1°C, which corresponded to a whole-body specific absorption rate (SAR) of about 4 watts per kilogram (W/kg).
That’s it. That’s the foundation.
The entire edifice of American RF safety regulation rests on 40-60 minute exposure sessions with 5 monkeys and 8 rats in the early 1980s, measuring whether the radiation got hot enough to make them stop pressing a lever for food.
Not DNA damage. Not cancer. Not reproductive harm. Not neurological effects. Not chronic exposure over years. Just: did it heat them up enough to change their behavior in the next hour?
From that 4 W/kg threshold, regulators applied a 10x safety factor for workers (0.4 W/kg) and an additional 5x for the general public (0.08 W/kg whole body). For localized exposure from cell phones held against the head, the FCC set the limit at 1.6 W/kg.
These limits were formally adopted by the FCC in 1996, the same year Congress passed the Telecommunications Act. They have not been updated since.
The assumption baked into these limits is explicit and extraordinary: the only way RF radiation can harm you is by heating your tissue. If it doesn’t cook you, it’s safe. Everything else, every biological effect that doesn’t involve measurable temperature increase, does not exist in the regulatory framework.
This is like declaring that the only way a car can hurt you is if it catches fire. It ignores the crash, the whiplash, the airbag deployment, and the slow buildup of exhaust fumes in your garage. But the model was clean, the math was simple, and the telecom industry liked it. So it stuck.
The Telecom Act: Locking the Door Behind Them
The 1996 Telecommunications Act didn’t just happen to coincide with the FCC adopting thermal-only limits. Section 704 of the Act explicitly prohibited local governments from opposing cell tower placement on the basis of health or environmental concerns, as long as FCC exposure limits were met.
Read that again. Congress didn’t just set weak safety standards. It made it illegal for your town to use health concerns as a reason to keep a cell tower away from your kid’s school. As long as the tower meets FCC guidelines (the ones based on whether it heats 8 rats enough to disrupt lever-pressing), your community has no legal standing to object.
The health agency that was supposed to be managing this, the EPA, was defunded and stripped of its authority over RF safety standards. The job went to the FCC, an agency whose mission is to promote the communications industry it’s theoretically regulating.
The $30 Million Study They Wish Didn’t Exist
In the early 2000s, the U.S. National Toxicology Program (NTP) launched the most comprehensive study of cell phone radiation and cancer ever conducted. It would take over a decade and cost $30 million of taxpayer money.
The NTP exposed thousands of rats and mice to RF radiation at 900 MHz (a standard cell phone frequency) at various SAR levels for two years, which is roughly a rat’s full lifespan. The results, released in draft form in 2016 and finalized in November 2018 after expert peer review, were unambiguous.
The peer review panel’s final conclusions:
“Clear evidence” of carcinogenic activity: malignant schwannomas of the heart in male rats (both GSM and CDMA modulations)
“Some evidence” of malignant gliomas of the brain in male rats
“Some evidence” of tumors of the adrenal glands in male rats
“Clear evidence” is the highest classification in the NTP’s evidence scale. The peer review panel actually upgraded the conclusions from the draft report, where NTP staff had initially listed the heart tumors at “some evidence.” The independent reviewers looked at the data and said: no, this is clear.
The tumor types are significant. Schwannomas (tumors of Schwann cells that wrap nerve fibers) and gliomas (tumors of glial cells in the brain) are the same types of tumors found at elevated rates in epidemiological studies of heavy cell phone users. The animal data matched the human data. Different methodology, same result.
For context, “clear evidence” of carcinogenicity from the NTP is the kind of finding that, for any other substance, would trigger immediate regulatory action. When the NTP found “clear evidence” that a food additive or industrial chemical caused cancer, agencies moved. When the substance was RF radiation, the regulatory response was silence.
Then it got worse.
In 2024, the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) announced that the NTP would no longer study cell phone radiation at all. The most expensive, most rigorous animal study on RF radiation ever conducted found clear evidence of cancer, and the government’s response was to shut down the research program.
The stated rationale: the technology had advanced faster than the science could follow. Which is a bit like finding out the bridge is structurally unsound and responding by firing the bridge inspector.
The Ramazzini Replication
If the NTP study were the only evidence, you could make arguments about methodology, about high-dose exposure, about rats not being people. The telecom industry tried.
Then the Ramazzini Institute in Bologna, Italy, published its results.
The Ramazzini study, published in Environmental Research in 2018, was the largest long-term animal study on RF radiation ever conducted: 2,448 rats, exposed from prenatal life until natural death to 1.8 GHz GSM radiation (representative of cell tower emissions), 19 hours per day.
The critical difference from the NTP study: Ramazzini used far-field exposure (simulating living near a cell tower) at real-world exposure levels. The three exposure groups received 5, 25, and 50 V/m, corresponding to whole-body SARs of approximately 0.001, 0.03, and 0.1 W/kg. For reference, the FCC’s localized SAR limit for cell phones is 1.6 W/kg. The lowest Ramazzini dose was 1,600 times below that limit. These are the exposure levels millions of people experience daily from cell towers.
The results: a statistically significant increase in malignant schwannomas of the heart in male rats at the highest dose. The same tumor type, in the same organ, as the NTP study. Different country, different lab, different exposure method, different power levels, same result.
The study’s authors were explicit: “The RI findings on far field exposure to RFR are consistent with and reinforce the results of the NTP study on near field exposure, as both reported an increase in the incidence of tumors of the brain and heart in RFR-exposed Sprague-Dawley rats.”
This was independent replication at environmental exposure levels. In any normal scientific process, this would be the point where regulators sit up and pay attention.
The Court Ruling Damning the FCC
On August 13, 2021, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit issued a ruling in Case 20-1025 (Environmental Health Trust et al. v. FCC) that should have been front-page news. It wasn’t.
The court found that the FCC’s 2019 decision to maintain its 1996 exposure limits was “arbitrary and capricious.” The agency had failed to provide a reasoned explanation for keeping guidelines that were a quarter-century old, in the face of thousands of pages of submitted scientific evidence documenting harm.
The court’s mandate ordered the FCC to:
Explain why it retained its outdated testing procedures for cell phones and wireless devices,
Address the impacts of RF radiation on children, long-term exposure, the ubiquity of wireless devices, and technological developments since 1996,
Address non-cancer health effects: impacts on the immune, endocrine, nervous, and reproductive systems,
Address environmental impacts on wildlife, plants, and animals.
A federal court looked at what the FCC was doing, looked at the evidence the FCC was ignoring, and told them to explain themselves.
As of this writing, the FCC has not responded to the court mandate. Not partially. Not inadequately. Not at all. A federal appeals court ordered a federal agency to justify its safety standards, and the agency simply... didn’t. For over four years. And counting.
The Gap Between the Standards and the Science
Let’s put some numbers next to each other.
The FCC’s maximum permissible RF exposure for the general public from cellular towers is approximately 580 µW/cm², which converts to 5,800,000 µW/m².
The Building Biology SBM-2015 guidelines, developed by practitioners who actually study biological effects of EMF in living environments, classify RF exposure for sleeping areas as:
Below 0.1 µW/m² - No concern
0.1 - 10 µW/m² - Slight concern
10 - 1,000 µW/m²- Severe concern
> 1,000 µW/m² - Extreme concern
The FCC says 5,800,000 µW/m² is fine. Building Biology says anything over 1,000 is “extreme concern.”
The FCC’s limit is 5,800 times higher than what Building Biology considers “extreme concern” and 58 million times higher than the “no concern” threshold. These are not rounding differences. This is a gap that can only exist when the standard-setters are measuring the wrong thing, on purpose, because they are evil and corrupt.
In 2011, the World Health Organization’s International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) classified radiofrequency radiation as Group 2B: “possibly carcinogenic to humans.” The same category as chloroform and gasoline engine exhaust. Since then, multiple researchers have argued the evidence now warrants an upgrade to Group 1: “carcinogenic to humans.”
Where This Leaves You
Here’s what we’ve established:
The electromagnetic environment has changed by a factor that’s difficult to even comprehend, in a timeframe that’s instantaneous by evolutionary standards. Life didn’t evolve for this. Nothing did.
The safety standards are based on the wrong measurement. They test for heating. The damage mechanisms are non-thermal: oxidative stress, DNA damage, calcium channel disruption, immune interference. Measuring thermal effects and declaring everything else safe is like testing food for radiation and declaring it free of pesticides.
The most expensive government study on the subject found clear evidence of cancer at the highest classification level. The government’s response was to cancel the research program.
An independent lab in Italy replicated the cancer findings at real-world exposure levels, far below the FCC’s already-weak limits.
A federal court told the FCC its standards were “arbitrary and capricious” and ordered it to explain itself. The FCC hasn’t bothered to respond in over four years.
The law makes it illegal for your community to object to cell tower placement based on health concerns, as long as the (arbitrary and capricious) FCC limits are met.
This is the structure. The telecom industry sets the terms. A captured regulator rubber-stamps them. Congress locks out local dissent. And the electromagnetic environment keeps intensifying.
This is the quintessential exit-and-build problem. The regulatory system isn’t broken. It’s working exactly as designed, just not for you.
The good news: you don’t need the FCC’s permission to protect yourself. You can measure the fields in your home. You can understand what’s generating them. You can reduce your exposure systematically, with tools and strategies that cost less than your monthly cell phone bill. You can choose where you live, how you wire your home, and what devices you keep near your family.
That’s where this series goes next. Part 2 is the practical guide: the meters, the numbers, the room-by-room walkthrough, and the surprisingly simple fixes that make the biggest difference.
The field you can’t see is the one you most need to understand. Now you’ve started.
See also how this ties into declining fertility and the reproductive collapse that might lead to the extinction of our species, in our Biology & Survival series.
Sources:
- NTP Cell Phone Radiation Study (official page): ntp.niehs.nih.gov
- Falcioni et al. (2018), Ramazzini Institute: DOI: 10.1016/j.envres.2018.01.037
- EHT v. FCC, DC Circuit Case 20-1025 (2021): cases.justia.com
- Melnick et al. (2022), “Scientific evidence invalidates health assumptions underlying the FCC and ICNIRP exposure limit determinations”: PMC9576312
- IARC Press Release, Group 2B classification (2011): iarc.who.int
- Levitt, Lai, Manville (2022), “Effects of non-ionizing electromagnetic fields on flora and fauna”: DOI: 10.1515/reveh-2021-0026
- FCC SAR limits: fcc.gov
- FCC RF exposure guidelines for cellular sites: fcc.gov
- Telecommunications Act Section 704 (47 U.S.C. § 332(c)(7)): law.cornell.edu
- Environmental Health Sciences case summary: ehsciences.org
- Building Biology SBM-2015 guidelines: buildingbiologyinstitute.org



