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2023-12-28

I doubt that I am the only person to have noticed the steadily falling numbers of a variety of common garden birds over recent years. Time was when driving across country in summer months we would need to scrape the dead flies off our windscreens - there were even special cleaning products available that claimed to assist in this task. 

No longer - the insect population is severely reduced these days, but nobody seems to take any note.

No doubt there is linkage here with the falling avian population - fewer insects means less food for birds. Not that they don't eat seeds and berries as well, but every little helps as they say, and many blooms (of insects and flowers) are seasonal. A seasonal gap in the food supply isn't something that any life form can benefit from.

I'm not saying that I understand all of these intricacies, but it is clear that something amiss is ongoing, and it could be the birds and insects are the canaries in the coal mine, a warning that we may be next.

Anybody who had read Arthur Firstenberg's book "The Invisible Rainbow" (highly recommended) will be aware that he ascribes many of these problems to the proliferation of man-made electronic radiation of many and various types over more than the last century, latterly in particular to cell phone radiation, and he continues to document likely cases around the world.

In his latest newsletter he describes how plants are now adapting their pollination techniques to get around the lack of insect pollinators. Whilst "Nature always finds a way", can we really afford to keep stressing Nature as we are now?

Why is this not right up there with the assumed perils of "Climate Change" for which all our authorities national and local are so busy upending our lives, demanding that we phase out everything that Al Gore didn't like (despite none of his scary predictions ever coming to pass)? Unlike "Climate Change", this is something that we have all seen happening with our own eyes.

Perhaps in 2024 we should be demanding of our councils that they refocus their attention on the real crises already on our doorstep. Maybe they need reminding that they work for us and not for the WEF.

And for those of us who think that EMFs are a lot of fuss over nothing, perhaps this 2018 article in the Mirror may be of interest. And technology roll-out continues ever since.