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Monday, 11 October 2021

If You Have Recently Developed Tinnitus, It Is Possibly Because 5G Has Been Turned on Nearby

 This makes perfect sense. We are both suffering from tinnitus - hissing, different frequency sounds and volumes - suddenly out of the blue. 

The last ten months have been unpleasant. Ever since 5G arrived in our area.

 Recently, trees opposite our house were chopped down, due to developing an 'illness' ... yet in truth the trees removal makes a perfect pathway from the main road behind us that have 5G street lamps. 

[The Expose]: I’m sharing my personal story and a little bit of research. It’s uncharacteristic of me to share my personal views but I’m doing this so, together, we can try to work out what could be happening. In return I’d be interested to hear your thoughts and your experiences.

I live in the UK. I haven’t had a PCR test, any Covid injections, any Flu vaccines, nor – excepting the odd occasion in a shop in the first few months of the “pandemic” in 2020 – worn a face covering, a cloth version. I do not have “long Covid” or any symptoms the official narrative could remotely describe as such. I am not on any medication – I’m not an advocate of taking even pain relievers or headache tablets unless absolutely necessary – and I have no “underlying health conditions.” In fact, I am generally asymptomatic, what we call – generally healthy.

About two-and-half -months ago I developed what I can only describe as something, I can only imagine to be, like tinnitus. During the day the hubbub of life drowns the buzzing out and it is in the still of night it’s unavoidably noticeable. There hasn’t been a single night since two or three months ago that I haven’t been annoyed by it.

I wouldn’t describe it as a sound in my ears but rather a high pitch buzzing emanating from my entire skull. Starting about a month ago, most nights, the higher pitch buzzing is joined by a second lower continuous humming. The lower hum changes pitch – I’ve “heard” it changing – from one pitch to another, usually only once in any particular night.

After some weeks, I started suspecting this wasn’t a symptom of an ailment and began wondering if it could be something to do with Wi-Fi frequencies. So, I checked:


“5G frequencies are what mobile networks use to send data between masts and mobile devices, such as smartphones. The same technology is used for 4G and 3G, but the frequencies differ. At mid-August, the 3.4GHz band, the 3.6-4GHz band, and the 700MHz band were being used for 5G in the UK. Ofcom is known to be freeing up spectrum in the 8GHz and 26GHz bands, as well as the 1492-1517MHz band, the latter of which should be available by December 2022.” – 5G News


For many weeks I’ve been checking and my smartphone shows it is receiving 4G from the mobile network and 5GHz from my domestic Wi-Fi hub – I have insufficient technical knowledge to know what that could mean but it seems, using the bands 5G News mentions, 5G has not been “turned on” within my vicinity. Anyhow, I’ve tried turning off my phone at night and the buzzing from my skull continues. I’ve considered turning off the Wi-Fi hub at night but reasoned, rightly or wrongly, if that’s what is causing it, where ever the hub receives its signals from will still be transmitting whether my domestic hub is powered up or down....<<<Read More>....