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Thursday, 22 January 2026

The Invisible Assault: Why HHS’s Long-Overdue Scrutiny of Wireless Radiation Can’t Come Soon Enough

 For decades, a silent plague has been woven into the fabric of modern life, emanating from the cellphones in our pockets, the Wi-Fi in our homes, and the cell towers that dot our horizons. The government and its captured regulatory bodies have long dismissed concerns about this electropollution, labeling those who spoke of its dangers as alarmists. 

Now, a seismic shift is underway. Under the leadership of Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has launched a landmark study into the health effects of wireless radiation, and the Food and Drug Administration has scrubbed its outdated online safety claims. This move isn't just a bureaucratic review; it is a direct confrontation with a decades-long institutional cover-up of a major public health threat. For millions suffering in an invisible sea of radiofrequency radiation, this scrutiny can't come soon enough. 

The era of institutional denial is cracking. In January 2026, U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. publicly declared wireless radiation a "major health concern," pointing to "literally over 10,000 studies" documenting ill effects, including cancer tumor growth. [1] This statement, made as HHS launched a new study, marks a radical departure from the past, where federal agencies consistently downplayed or ignored the risks.

The same day, under Kennedy's direction, the FDA scrubbed old webpages that had falsely assured the public of cellphone safety. This is more than a symbolic gesture; it is an admission that the previous safety narrative was built on a foundation of sand. For advocates like Miriam Eckenfels of Children's Health Defense, this moment is critical. She notes that while scientific evidence piles up, the Federal Communications Commission is aggressively pushing to strip local communities of control over where cell towers are placed. [1] This federal power grab, also proposed in congressional legislation, would forcibly increase involuntary public exposure, making the HHS's intervention not just timely, but essential to counter a captured agency prioritizing industry rollout over public well-being...<<<Read More>>>....