Maybe you have a story to tell about the harm to people's health caused by radiation from electromagnetic fields from some electronic and electrical equipment.
You could tell your story, quite factually, like this:
Electromagnetic waves are a type of non-ionizing radiation, i.e., a type of low-frequency radiation without enough energy to break off electrons from their orbits around atoms and ionize (charge) the atoms. Microwaves, radio waves, radar and radiation produced by electrical transmission are examples of radiation sources that generate electromagnetic fields (EMF). Electric lighting generates electromagnetic fields. Fluorescent lighting and many types of low-voltage lighting produce fields that are particularly high compared to incandescent lighting. In addition, computers and many other types of wired and wireless electronic equipment (e.g., cell phones) all create electromagnetic fields of varying strengths.
The United Nations cancer agency has classified EMF as possible human carcinogens based on the scientific literature related to EMF and childhood leukemias. In 1998, a U.S. federal government EMF team recommended that low-frequency EMF, such as those from power lines and electrical appliances, be classified as possible human carcinogens, again primarily based on evidence related to childhood leukemias.
Etc.
Or you could show your story like this:
Even if this turns out to be a hoax (hidden microwave under the table?), it certainly gets your attention.
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