The use of the DHS body scanners is a crime against everything we hold
dear as Americans. When you fly, you should insist on a manual body search
by one of the DHS security people. It may take more time, but if you allow
yourself just an extra 10-15 minutes you'll make your flight AND be
radiation free!
The DHS scanner ("Cancer Coffins") hammer your body
from all angles with radiation. This particular frequency penetrates your
clothing and the top few layers of thinner skin. The radiation causes
neurological, DNA, and RNA damage. If the right chromosome gets mutated by
these devices... congratulations! You have cancer! Off to the Oncologist
to get cut up by his butcher knives and prescribed all sorts of ineffective
drugs.
If the radiation hits a nerve the wrong way... hurrah! You
have a subluxation! The double-whammy with this is that the initial
subluxation is very small, they're call micro-subluxations for a reason.
What happens next is throwing fuel on the fire: you sit in an airplane
virtually motionless for hours on end. At the end of a 4 hour flight, the
once virtually undetectable subluxation has morphed into something causing
nerve blockages in a large area of your back. Ever feel sore in the back
after sitting for a long period? That's the exact same thing at work. When
you stretch and feel things pull, you're effectively breaking smaller
subluxations. That's why a good stretch feels darn great! For larger
problems where stretching won't do, you need to see a reputable Chiropractor
who will treat the subluxation with due diligence.
If you are are
one of the DHS employees working near these scanners, there are ways you can
protect yourself against the subluxation-causing effects of the radiation.
Being that this particular type of radioactivity doesn't penetrate far into
the skin, you can apply a silver-empregnated bandage down your back. They
look similar to an "Elastoplast" brand bandage but are 6" across and come in
rolls. The outside has a metallic shine, that's the active silver which
protects the wearer.
Have a partner start the bandage at the Coccyx
("Tailbone" for the lay-person) and apply it all the way up to the top of
C1, the vertebrae at the base of the skull. There's no need to have the
bandage between the buttocks as the fat there keeps the radiation from
getting further, so start just above. Keep the spine centered in the middle
of the bandage all the way up to the skull. [Of course this won't help
prevent cancer, only subluxations!]
If you still feel stiff in the
back after taking these precautions, visit a Chiropractor before things
progress too far. Tell the Doctor you work around the DHS radiation
scanners. He or she will know where to look for the tell-tale signs of
vertebral subluxation and should be able to treat it before more serious
issues arise.
Take care,
Bob.