When industry wants science to say something, how does it do it?
In 1993, a lawsuit
alleged that cellphones caused a woman’s terminal brain cancer. As
wireless stocks headed downward, the industry unleashed a five-fold
response.
This
tactical plan can be used by any threatened industry on any issue at
any time to influence science, regulators, public perception and
government policy.
Citizens beware.
The
government never tested the safety of cellphones prior to the cancer
lawsuit. But just one week after it was launched, Tom Wheeler, president
of the Cellular Telecommunications and Internet Association (CTIA) in
the United States, announced that cellphones were safe. He also
announced the industry would fund research that would “re-validate the
findings of the existing studies.” With that, he authored the
conclusions of the Wireless Research Technology project before it even
began.
The
first industry tactic is to buy the science. Biochemistry professor
Henri Lai looked at 326 safety-related studies on cellphone use between
1990 and 2005 and found that 67 per cent of independently funded studies
found biological damage from cellphone radiation, but only 28 per cent
of industry-funded studies did.
The CTIA massaged the message again after the World Health Organization published its Interphone study
in 2000. The study showed that those who used a cellphone for 10 years
or longer saw their risk of glioma (a type of brain tumour) increase by
120 per cent.
Yet John Walls, VP for public affairs at CTIA, told
reporters that “Interphone’s conclusion of no overall increased risk of
brain cancer is consistent with conclusions reached in an already large
body of scientific research on this subject.”
Another
tactic is to kill the research. Biochemistry professor Dariusz
Leszczynski first experienced this in 1999 when he was adjunct professor
at Harvard Medical School. He wanted to investigate the effects of
radiation that were higher than the government-allowed levels but kept
getting overruled by scientists funded by Motorola.
In
2011, Leszczynski said in an interview, “Everyone knows that if your
research results show that radiation has effects, the funding flow dries
up.” A year later, his employer, the Radiation and Nuclear Safety
Authority of Finland, stopped researching the biological effects of
cellphones and released him.
The draft version
of a National Toxicology Program study in 2016 called cellphone
radiation a “probable” or “known” carcinogen with “broad implications
for public health.”
Yet
when the final version was released in 2018, the study’s senior
scientist John Bucher said in a press conference, “I don’t think this is
a high-risk situation at all.”
His best guesses were industry, military and political pressure, as well as leadership changes.
Tom
Wheeler, CTIA president from 1992-2004, chaired the Federal
Communications Commission in the U.S. from 2013-2017. Meredith Attwell
Baker, FCC commissioner from 2009-2011, has presided over CTIA since 2014.
In a Harvard University ethics paper, journalist Norm Alster called FCC a “captured agency,” and cited the CTIA website, which praised FCC for “its light regulatory touch.”
Leave it to big wireless to maintain its message over the airwaves.
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