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Explosion in Nashville that damaged dozens of buildings is believed to be an intentional act

And the inverse square principle would apply anyway. Nobody used to hold oldtime television sets to their heads.

Oldtime TVs didn't transmit...they were receivers only. :banghead:

Old time tvs were pretty poorly insulated. I remember in one of my classes the teacher pulled a video circuit wire out (don't remember which one it was, it was forty years ago) and showed us the blue corona coming off it.
 
And the inverse square principle would apply anyway. Nobody used to hold oldtime television sets to their heads.

Oldtime TVs didn't transmit...they were receivers only. :banghead:

Old time tvs were pretty poorly insulated. I remember in one of my classes the teacher pulled a video circuit wire out (don't remember which one it was, it was forty years ago) and showed us the blue corona coming off it.

The anode wire delivered about 20,000 volts if memory serves me. I know from direct personal experience. My intro to electronics was in the back of discarded TV's. I had some fun making Jacob's ladders and amazing my friends.
 
Maybe they'll re-name the street after him.
5G paranoia? Half this country is mentally ill, consuming conspiracy theories like candy.

5G won't do all the things these loonies say, but I am not so confident about its safety

From

Dr. Devra Davis (HUJI)

2020 Expert Forum: Wireless and Cellphone Radiation and Public Policy
Tel Aviv University
10.2.20



5G uses the same radio bands as the old analog television signals, and at a lot less power. I don't remember anyone complaining of Ozzie And Harriet giving them cancer.


Gave me diabetes.
 
Old time tvs were pretty poorly insulated. I remember in one of my classes the teacher pulled a video circuit wire out (don't remember which one it was, it was forty years ago) and showed us the blue corona coming off it.

The anode wire delivered about 20,000 volts if memory serves me. I know from direct personal experience. My intro to electronics was in the back of discarded TV's. I had some fun making Jacob's ladders and amazing my friends.

Had a fellow student who, while carrying a crt, stuck his finger in the anode connecter hole. It was fully charged. That was the last of that crt and he was fairly numb over most of his body for the rest of the day.
 
Old time tvs were pretty poorly insulated. I remember in one of my classes the teacher pulled a video circuit wire out (don't remember which one it was, it was forty years ago) and showed us the blue corona coming off it.

The anode wire delivered about 20,000 volts if memory serves me. I know from direct personal experience. My intro to electronics was in the back of discarded TV's. I had some fun making Jacob's ladders and amazing my friends.
Color TV CRT anodes were generally 20-35kV depending on size...
 
Old time tvs were pretty poorly insulated. I remember in one of my classes the teacher pulled a video circuit wire out (don't remember which one it was, it was forty years ago) and showed us the blue corona coming off it.

The anode wire delivered about 20,000 volts if memory serves me. I know from direct personal experience. My intro to electronics was in the back of discarded TV's. I had some fun making Jacob's ladders and amazing my friends.

The voltage was dependent on the size of the screen, the bigger the screen the more voltage needed to make it work.
 
Old time tvs were pretty poorly insulated. I remember in one of my classes the teacher pulled a video circuit wire out (don't remember which one it was, it was forty years ago) and showed us the blue corona coming off it.

The anode wire delivered about 20,000 volts if memory serves me. I know from direct personal experience. My intro to electronics was in the back of discarded TV's. I had some fun making Jacob's ladders and amazing my friends.
Color TV CRT anodes were generally 20-35kV depending on size...

I used an old color tv to make a neat light show by connecting the vertical and horizontal deflection coils to my stereo speaker outputs.
 
So, it appears a person in their 60s parked their camper near an AT&T facility and blew it up, with themselves inside it. The van allegedly played music while also did a countdown, which doesn't sound too mentally stable. Regardless, their reason, this person didn't seem well.

I ponder if they left something behind (but the authorities aren't letting it see the light of day) as someone that did something like this, and had no intention of hiding their identity would usually leave behind a diatribe.
 
So...is the implication that he blamed his cancer on some source of radiation in modern tech? I'm a novice with the 5G stuff.
I haven't seen any reporting that he left behind a statement. This kind of Unabomber activist -- although Warner apparently tried to avoid murder -- usually pens a grand statement that explains the wisdom behind his actions. They see themselves as warriors and want to use their crime as a teachable moment. Maybe it's too soon for my guesswork.
 
So, it appears a person in their 60s parked their camper near an AT&T facility and blew it up, with themselves inside it. The van allegedly played music while also did a countdown, which doesn't sound too mentally stable.

Playing Petula Clark’s “Downtown” would indicate a perverse sense of humor.
 
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