Subject: Nov. 17/18: Dr. Martin Blank Coming to LA City Council
Nov. 17/18. Dr Martin Blank Coming to LA City Council
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PIease forward to your So Calif. area contacts!
For those in LA area:
Dr Martin Blank, the leading expert in Wireless Cancerous and Neurological Health Effects, is coming to Los Angeles this TUES AND WED to talk sense to city leaders about their plan to WiFi the entire city with 20,000 WiFi transmitters on street light poles and place Cell Tower transmitters on hundreds of our stop lights!
WE NEED PEOPLE TO COME DOWN TO CITY HALL WITH US TO GIVE DR. BLANK THEIR PUBLIC COMMENT TIME SO HE CAN SPEAK TO SEVERAL CITY COUNCIL COMMITTEES AND THE CITY COUNCIL ITSELF. We need you all day TUES OR WED OR BOTH PLEASE.
We need dependable, professionally dressed people to simply cede their public comment time to Dr Blank in these committee meetings and city council meeting and show their support to what he is saying.
Click to watch:
VIDEO: International Scientist Appeal on Electromagnetic Fields, Martin Blank, PhD Spokesperson
Martin Blank PhD, Columbia University, Cellular Biologist-Wireless Health Effects
https://vimeo.com/123468632
Wed Itinerary:
9am- Be there and wait outside room until we arrive
City council meeting- media hopefully there so be there at 9am meeting to start at 10:00am
3rd floor
200 North Spring Street Los Angeles, CA 90012
Room 1010, City Hall
Arrive at 2:00pm for 3:00pm Energy and Environment Meeting
Room 1010 City Hall
200 North Spring Street Los Angeles, CA 90012
Must bring Id to get in building. Keep food or water in bottom of bag
Parking:
225 N. Los Angeles St., public parking on P1 Level, Monday – Friday, 4 A.M. – 6 P.M. (Vehicles left in the garage after 6 P.M. may be cited and towed). The rate is $2.50 each 10 minutes, to a maximum of $16.00 per day.
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Stop OC Smart Meters
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AT&T Inc. Is Teaming Up With the U.S. Government to Expand Smart Cities
Posted by Wes Penre on October 3, 2015
Posted in: Artificial Intelligence (AI), Genetic Engineering and Manipulation, Nano Technology, Singularity, Super-Soldiers and Transhumanism, Transhumansim. Tagged: alien invader force, artificial intelligence, cyborgs, Enki, evolved human, machine kingdom, marduk, smart cities, wes penre, wes penre papers. 1 Comment
Posted: Saturday, October 3, 2015 @ 2:55 PM
Source: http://www.fool.com/investing/general/2015/09/20/att-inc-is-teaming-up-with-the-us-government-to-ex.aspx
pdf_icon2ATandT Inc. Is Teaming Up With the U.S. Government to Expand Smart Cities [PDF]
Model of a Smart City
Model of a Smart City
Wes Penre’s Comment: I wrote substantially about Smart Cities in the Wes Penre Papers, and I suggested that they will be built and go hand in hand with Artificial Intelligence and the so-called “Machine Kingdom” that will eventually replace today’s Homo sapiens sapiens, which is a race close to extinction. The species that will replace what we call the biological human body is going to be half machine and half human–a cyborg type of species–entirely in the hand of the Alien Invader Force.
The alternative human species that will exist side by side with the cyborgs to begin with I call Homo Nova in my papers. This species–less in numbers–will be the future, evolved human that eventually will break out of the “machine timeline” and create their own future in a much more peaceful and compassionate environment. This is what I predict–you will soon see it coming more and more into existence.
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This week, the White House announced $160 million in new funding and research grants to develop smart cities in the U.S. While that may be a moderate sum of money, it’s yet another step the U.S. government is taking to make the Internet of Things (IoT) more of a priority at the local and federal levels.
At the same time, AT&T (NYSE:T) announced that it’s now a lead member of the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and will help the government agency set up smart city projects across the country.
The company will help bring new smart city technology to 10 U.S. cities, including connected solutions for lighting, transportation, safety, buildings, and parking. Much of the technology involves sensors that can track vehicle traffic, electric meters to monitor energy usage, apps to remotely manage city lighting, and even sensors that can detect gunfire.
The company will also host a Smart Cities hackathon with the NIST and the participating cities at its Developer Summit this coming January. AT&T hasn’t disclosed which cities it will work with, but the move marks a bigger shift toward the potentially lucrative smart city market.
A bet on smart cities
The company’s been building its smart city capabilities and already has 16.5 million smart energy meters in the the U.S. And just last month, the telecom giant teamed up with IBM to implement water sensors in Las Vegas, Atlanta, and Los Angeles. The sensors allow cities to track water usage during droughts and find leaks in old pipelines. The company said in a press release that cities all over the world face water shortages and that a typical pipeline leak can waste 400,000 gallons of water per year.
AT&T is trying to tap into a growing trend among cities to conserve their resources, improve their services, and reduce traffic and crime. According to Navigant Research, by 2023, global smart city technology revenue will hit $27.5 billion, up from $8.8 billion last year.
AT&T is not stopping there
Since January, the company has partnered with more than 136 companies for new IoT projects. Right now, AT&T connects more than 40% of all the connected farm machines in the U.S. and has 22 million IoT connections worldwide, including more than 600,000 connected cars.
As the U.S. government expands funding and research into connected cities, AT&T is in a great position to benefit. Its current projects and new partnership with the NIST make it an ideal carrier to bring more IoT connections to America.
It’s still too early to tell how much AT&T could make from smart city technologies, but Cisco Systems thinks the IoT will save the public sector $4.6 trillion between now and 2023. Part of those savings will come from telecoms enabling sensors to connect, monitor, and analyze city data in new ways. Right now, AT&T is leading the pack in bringing those connections, and that should eventually translate into more IoT revenues in the years to come. Just as with most IoT solutions, the promise of future benefits (and earnings) are just around the corner.
The next billion-dollar iSecret
The world’s biggest tech company forgot to show you something at its recent event, but a few Wall Street analysts and the Fool didn’t miss a beat: There’s a small company that’s powering their brand-new gadgets and the coming revolution in technology. And we think its stock price has nearly unlimited room to run for early-in-the-know investors! To be one of them, just click here.
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Company to Blanket City Streets With WiFi Connected “Smart Pavement”
TOPICS:Kevin SamsonSurveillance
October 18, 2015
phpe7mrntBy Kevin Samson
Awareness continues to increase surrounding the health dangers of Electromagnetic Fields (EMFs) emanating from our daily gadgets, as well as from the rise of the Smart Grid. For example, a prominent neuroscientist went on record in a lecture to the medical community itself where he exposed the many health risks as well as an industry-wide attempt by telecom to cover up the negative consequences. A world-renown biochemist is seeking to abolish WiFi in schools. And a British ER physician has made it her mission to educate people about what steps they can take to minimize exposure and damage to WiFi. A slew of peer-review scientific studies support the warnings of these experts.
So what happens when your entire city becomes one giant WiFi signal?
Telecom giant Virgin Media has been given the green light to begin doing just that. Coverage will be enabled by “discreet street furniture” and the “UK’s first Smart Pavement.”
The pilot will begin with a focus on the center of the town of Chesham, UK where all 21,000 residents and businesses can use the network. The Chiltern District Council has joined forces and is touting the increased connectivity at massively increased speeds up to 166Mbps – 7X the average in the UK.
Virgin Media’s press release cites one very happy local business owner who sees potential:
Martin Parkes, local business owner and spokesperson for The Better Chesham Group, said: “It’s great that our customers have access to Virgin Media’s public Wi-Fi both in and outside our salon. We’re a very unique high street with many independent shops so we don’t have the IT infrastructure that big chains benefit from. This will hugely help levelling the playing field and will hopefully bring more people to Chesham too.”
The company has high hopes that this will not be contained to one test city; rather, they make it clear that their mission is much wider in scope:
Virgin Media is building better digital infrastructure by re-drawing the UK WiFi map. It is the first in a series of initiatives to deliver better out-of-home connectivity. It is not just about extending the company’s ultrafast network to more homes and upgrading speeds to Vivid 200Mbps but being the defacto provider of trusted connectivity both in the home and out of the home.
Gregor McNeil, Managing Director of Consumer at Virgin Media said: “Not only is this the first time we’ve built metropolitan WiFi directly from our street cabinets, it is also the UK’s first deployment of a WiFi connected pavement. It is literally public WiFi under your feet. We want to build more networks like this across the UK and encourage more forward thinking councils just like Chesham to get in touch.” (additional emphasis added)
Even if you don’t believe having a permanent WiFi signal radiating across the city under your feet is a danger to your health, another aspect of pervasive WiFi may be of concern: privacy and surveillance.
It is true that citizens of the UK already have become one of the most constantly surveilled on the planet, so perhaps they are becoming desensitized, but in the States it was a major news story when Seattle was discovered to have put in a secret WiFi mesh network funded by Homeland Security. The discovery led the ACLU to document the ways that residents and visitors could be spied upon while having their movements fully tracked. Although most of the outrage was directed at the secretive nature of the plan, the surveillance component is clearly present as a justified concern.
There is also new WiFi tracking technology being developed that does not even need a connected device to home in on individuals or groups of people. You can read the chronicle of those developments HERE.
This little device delivers turnkey Internet privacy and security (Ad)
Finally, this is about more than having super-fast Internet to download your favorite movie in seconds while you wait for the bus, or to boost your business capabilities. It’s about the rise of fully connected Smart Cities that are multi-use, imposed without debate, and are very easily warped for less than noble purposes. It’s about merging the domestic “Internet of Things” with an industrial smart grid that is part of a technocracy endgame as defined by the UN’s Agenda 21. It is an all-encompassing agenda that has political support and the investment of every major tech company on the planet.
It is imperative that we learn and share what this overall Smart Cities agenda entails, and reveal each piece of the superstructure that is being built in front of us. The road has now been paved….
]]>In other words, the more often you’re exposed, the longer you’re exposed, and/or the higher the level to which you are exposed, all add up to cumulative damage to your health. Young, growing children are affected much more strongly than fully-grown people, but make no mistake – we are all being affected.
It’s one thing to decide we want to set up a wifi network for ourselves, in our own homes. It’s another when neighbors’ wifi systems are causing damage to our health, and worse yet when corporations profit from bathing us in wifi and other RF signals while hiding and denying the truth about the resulting health impacts. People should be free to choose what exposures they are willing to tolerate, and no one (especially corporations and government) has the right to force exposures on us without our fully informed prior consent.
Smart meters fail the fully-informed-prior-consent test. Likewise, Comcast has been quietly rolling out a smart-meter-style wifi “service” by co-opting its customers’ modems into serving as nodes in a PUBLIC wifi system. The XFinity modems now include a separate system which operates at a significantly higher power than the customers’ own, private system. Within the XFinity modem, there are TWO wifi services running simultaneously. Comcast is NOT telling customers about this and it results in much more RF exposure, 24/7/365. Even if you’re turning off your own wifi router at night or when not in use, if you’ve got XFinity, you’re bathing in amplified public wifi RF all day and night. This definitely FAILS the fully-informed-prior-consent test.
I hope this latest assault on our natural right to choose our own RF exposure level in our own home will be taken up by others in the Stop Smart Meters movement.
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