Microwave Cooking, the Hidden Hazards
Recent
research shows that microwave oven-cooked food suffers severe molecular damage.
When eaten, it causes abnormal changes in human blood and immune systems.
Not
surprisingly, the public has been denied details on these significant health
dangers.
Back
in May of 1989, after Tom Valentine first moved to St Paul, Minnesota, he heard on the car radio a short announcement that
bolted him upright in the driver's seat. The announcement was sponsored by
Young Families, the Minnesota Extension Service of the University of Minnesota:
"Although
microwaves heat food quickly, they are not recommended for heating a baby's
bottle," the announcement said. The bottle may seem cool to the touch, but
the liquid inside may become extremely hot and could burn the baby's mouth and
throat.
Also, the build up of steam in a closed container such as a baby's
bottle could cause it to explode. "Heating the bottle in a microwave can
cause slight changes in the milk. In infant formulas, there may be a loss of
some vitamins.
In expressed breast milk, some protective properties may be
destroyed." The report went on. "Warming a bottle by holding it under
tap water or by setting it in a bowl of warm water, then testing it on your
wrist before feeding, may take a few minutes longer, but it is much
safer."
Valentine
asked himself: If an established institution like the University of Minnesota can warn about the loss of particular nutrient qualities in microwaved
baby formula or mother's milk, then somebody must know something about
microwaving they are not telling everybody.
A Lawsuit
In
early 1991, word leaked out about a lawsuit in Oklahoma. A woman named Norma Levitt
had hip surgery, only to be killed by a simple blood transfusion when a nurse
"warmed the blood for the transfusion in a microwave oven"!
Logic
suggests that if heating or cooking is all there is to it, then it doesn't
matter what mode of heating technology one uses. However, it is quite apparent
that there is more to 'heating' with microwaves than we've been led to believe.
Blood
for transfusions is routinely warmed-but not in microwave ovens! In the case of
Mrs Levitt, the microwaving altered the blood and it
killed her.
Does
it not therefore follow that this form of heating does, indeed, do 'something
different' to the substances being heated? Is it not prudent to determine what
that 'something different' might do?
A
funny thing happened on the way to the bank with all that microwave oven
revenue: nobody thought about the obvious. Only 'health nuts' who are
constantly aware of the value of quality nutrition discerned a problem with the
widespread 'denaturing' of our food. Enter Hans Hertel.
Hans Hertel
In
the tiny town of Wattenwil, near Basel in Switzerland, there lives a scientist who is alarmed at the lack
of purity and naturalness in the many pursuits of modern mankind. He worked as
a food scientist for several years with one of the many major Swiss food
companies that do business on a global scale.
A few years ago, he was fired
from his job for questioning procedures in processing food because they
denatured it.
"The
world needs our help," Hans Hertel told Tom
Valentine as they shared a fine meal at a resort hotel in Todtmoss, Germany.
"We,
the scientists, carry the main responsibility for the present unacceptable
conditions. It is therefore our job to correct the situation and bring the
remedy to the world. I am striving to bring man and techniques back into
harmony with nature. We can have wonderful technologies without violating
nature."
Hans
is an intense man, driven by personal knowledge of violations of nature by
corporate man and his state-supported monopolies in science, technology and education.
At the same time, as the two talked, his intensity shattered into a warm smile
and he spoke of the way things could be if mankind's immense talent were to
work with nature and not against her.
Hans
Hertel is the first scientist to conceive of and carry
out a quality study on the effects of microwaved nutrients on the blood and
physiology of human beings. This small but well-controlled study pointed the
firm finger at a degenerative force of microwave ovens and the food produced in
them.
The conclusion was clear: microwave cooking changed the nutrients so that
changes took place in the participants' blood; these were not healthy changes
but were changes that could cause deterioration in the human systems.
Working
with Bernard H. Blanc of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology and the
University Institute for Biochemistry, Hertel not
only conceived of the study and carried it out, he was
one of eight participants.
"To
control as many variables as possible, we selected eight individuals who were
strict macrobiotic diet participants from the Macrobiotic Institute at Kientel, Switzerland," Hertel explained.
"We were all housed in the same hotel environment for eight weeks. There
was no smoking, no alcohol and no sex."
One
can readily see that this protocol makes sense. After all, how could you tell
about subtle changes in a human's blood from eating microwaved food if smoking,
booze, junk food, pollution, pesticides, hormones, antibiotics and everything
else in the common environment were also present?
"We
had one American, one Canadian and six Europeans in the group. I was the oldest
at 64 years, the others were in their 20s and 30s," Hertel
added.
Valentine
published the results of this study in Search for Health in the Spring of 1992. But the follow-up information is available
only in a later edition, and also in Acres, USA.
In
intervals of two to five days, the volunteers in the study received one of the
food variants on an empty stomach. The food variants were: raw milk from a biofarm (no. 1); the same milk conventionally cooked (no.
2); pasteurised milk from Intermilk Berne (no. 3);
the same raw milk cooked in a microwave oven (no. 4); raw vegetables from an
organic farm (no. 5); the same vegetables cooked conventionally (no. 6); the
same vegetables frozen and defrosted in the microwave oven (no. 7); and the
same vegetables cooked in the microwave oven (no. 8). The overall experiment
had some of the earmarks of the Pottenger cat
studies, except that now human beings were test objects, the experiment's
time-frame was shorter, and a new heat form was tested.
Once
the volunteers were isolated at the resort hotel, the test began. Blood samples
were taken from every volunteer immediately before eating. Then blood samples
were taken at defined intervals after eating from the above-numbered milk or
vegetable preparations.
Significant
changes were discovered in the blood of the volunteers who consumed foods
cooked in the microwave oven. These changes included a decrease in all
haemoglobin values and cholesterol values, especially the HDL (good
cholesterol) and LDL (bad cholesterol) values and ratio.
Lymphocytes (white
blood cells) showed a more distinct short-term decrease following the intake of
microwaved food than after the intake of all the other variants. Each of these indicators point in a direction away from robust
health and toward degeneration.
Additionally,
there was a highly significant association between the amount of microwave
energy in the test foods and the luminous power of luminescent bacteria exposed
to serum from test persons who ate that food. This led Hertel
to the conclusion that such technically derived energies may, indeed, be passed
along to man inductively via consumption of microwaved food.
"This
process is based on physical principles and has already been confirmed in the
literature," Hertel explained. The apparent
additional energy exhibited by the luminescent bacteria was merely extra
confirmation.
"There
is extensive scientific literature concerning the hazardous effects of direct
microwave radiation on living systems," Hertel
continued. "It is astonishing, therefore, to realise how little effort has
been made to replace this detrimental technique of microwaves with technology
more in accordance with nature.
"Technically
produced microwaves are based on the principle of alternating current. Atoms,
molecules and cells hit by this hard electromagnetic radiation are forced to
reverse polarity 1 to 100 billion times a second. There are no atoms, molecules
or cells of any organic system able to withstand such a violent, destructive
power for any extended period of time, not even in the low energy range of milliwatts.
"Of
all the natural substances-which are polar-the oxygen
of water molecules reacts most sensitively. This is how microwave cooking heat
is generated-friction from this violence in water molecules. Structures of
molecules are torn apart, molecules are forcefully
deformed (called structural isomerism) and thus become impaired in quality.
Heating Food
"This
is contrary to conventional heating of food, in which heat transfers convectionally from without to within. Cooking by
microwaves begins within the cells and molecules where water is present and
where the energy is transformed into frictional heat."
The
question naturally arises: What about microwaves from the sun? Aren't they
harmful?
Hertel
responded: "The microwaves from the Sun are based on principles of pulsed
direct current. These rays create no frictional heat in organic
substance."
In
addition to violent frictional heat effects (called thermic
effects), there are also athermic effects which have
hardly ever been taken into account, Hertel added.
"These
athermic effects are not presently measurable, but
they can also deform the structures of molecules and have qualitative
consequences. For example, the weakening of cell membranes by microwaves is
used in the field of gene altering technology.
Because of the force involved,
the cells are actually broken, thereby neutralising the electrical
potentials-the very life of the cells-between the outer and inner sides of the
cell membranes. Impaired cells become easy prey for viruses, fungi and other
micro-organisms.
The natural repair mechanisms are suppressed, and cells are
forced to adapt to a state of energy emergency: they switch from aerobic to
anaerobic respiration. Instead of water and carbon dioxide, hydrogen peroxide
and carbon monoxide are produced."
It
has long been pointed out in the literature that any reversal of healthy cell
processes may occur because of a number of reasons, and our cells then revert
from a "robust oxidation" to an unhealthy "fermentation".
The
same violent friction and athermic deformations that
can occur in our bodies when we are subjected to radar or microwaves, happens
to the molecules in the food cooked in a microwave oven.
In fact, when anyone
microwaves food, the oven exerts a power input of about 1,000 watts or more. This radiation results in destruction and deformation of molecules
of food, and in the formation of new compounds (called radiolytic compounds)
unknown to man and nature.
Today's
established science and technology argues forcefully that microwaved food and
irradiated foods do not have any significantly higher "radiolytic
compounds" than do broiled, baked or other conventionally cooked foods-but
microwaving does produce more of these critters.
Curiously, neither established
science nor our ever-protective government has conducted tests-on the blood of
the eaters-of the effects of eating various kinds of cooked foods. Hertel and his group did test it, and the indication is
clear that something is amiss and that larger studies should be funded.
The
apparently toxic effects of microwave cooking is
another in a long list of unnatural additives in our daily diets. However, the
establishment has not taken kindly to this work.
"The
first drawing of blood samples took place on an empty stomach at 7.45 each
morning," Hertel explained. "The second
drawing of blood took place 15 minutes after the food intake. The third drawing
was two hours later."
From
each sample, 50 millilitres of blood was used for the chemistry and five
millimetres for the haematology and the luminescence. The haematological
examinations took place immediately after drawing the samples.
Erythrocytes,
haemoglobin, mean haemoglobin concentration, mean haemoglobin content,
leukocytes and lymphocytes were measured. The chemical analysis consisted of
iron, total cholesterol, HDL cholesterol and LDL cholesterol.
The
results of erythrocyte, haemoglobin, haematocrit and leukocyte
determinations were at the "lower limits of normal" in those tested
following the eating of the microwaved samples.
"These
results show anaemic tendencies. The situation became even more pronounced
during the second month of the study," Hertel added.
"And with those decreasing values, there was a corresponding increase of
cholesterol values."
Hertel
admits that stress factors, from getting punctured for the blood samples so
often each day, for example, cannot be ruled out, but the established baseline
for each individual became the "zero values" marker, and only changes
from the zero values were statistically determined.
With
only one round of test substances completed, the different effects between
conventionally prepared food and microwaved food were marginal-although noticed
as definite "tendencies".
As the test continued, the differences in
the blood markers became "statistically significant". The changes are
generally considered to be signs of stress on the body. For example,
erythrocytes tended to increase after eating vegetables from the microwave
oven.
Haemoglobin and both of the mean concentration and
content haemoglobin markers also tended to decrease significantly after eating
the microwaved substances.
Leukocytosis
"Leukocytosis," Hertel
explained, "which cannot be accounted for by normal daily deviations such
as following the intake of food, is taken seriously by haematologists.
Leukocyte response is especially sensitive to stress. They are often signs of
pathogenic effects on the living system, such as poisoning and cell damage.
The
increase of leukocytes with the microwaved foods was more pronounced than with
all the other variants. It appears that these marked increases were caused
entirely by ingesting the microwaved substances."
The
cholesterol markers were very interesting, Hertel
stressed: "Common scientific belief states that cholesterol values usually
alter slowly over longer periods of time.
In this study, the markers increased
rapidly after the consumption of the microwaved vegetables. However, with milk,
the cholesterol values remained the same and even decreased with the raw milk
significantly."
Hertel
believes his study tends to confirm newer scientific data that suggest
cholesterol may rapidly increase in the blood secondary to acute stress.
"Also," he added, "blood cholesterol levels are less influenced
by cholesterol content of food than by stress factors. Such stress-causing
factors can apparently consist of foods which contain virtually no cholesterol-the
microwaved vegetables."
It
is plain to see that this individually financed and conducted study has enough
meat in it to make anyone with a modicum of common sense sit up and take
notice. Food from the microwave oven caused abnormal changes, representing
stress, to occur in the blood of all the test individuals.
Biological
individuality, a key variable that makes a mockery of many allegedly scientific
studies, was well accounted for by the established baselines.
So,
how has the brilliant world of modern technology, medicine and 'protect the
public' government reacted to this impressive effort?
A Gag Order
As
soon as Hertel and Blanc announced their results, the
hammer of authority slammed down on them. A powerful trade organisation, the
Swiss Association of Dealers for Electroapparatuses
for Households and Industry, known simply as FEA, struck swiftly. They forced
the President of the Court of Seftigen, Kanton Bern, to issue a 'gag order' against Hertel and Blanc.
The attack was so ferocious that Blanc
quickly recanted his support-but it was too late. He had already put into
writing his views on the validity of the studies where he concurred with the
opinion that microwaved food caused the blood abnormalities.
Hertel
stood his ground, and today is steadfastly demanding his rights to a trial.
Preliminary hearings on the matter have been appealed to higher courts, and
it's quite obvious the powers that be do not want a 'show trial' to erupt on
this issue.
In
March 1993, the court handed down this decision based upon the complaint of the
FEA:
"Consideration.
-
Request from the plaintiff (FEA) to prohibit the defendant (Dr Ing. Hans Hertel) from declaring
that food prepared in the microwave oven shall be dangerous to health and lead
to changes in the blood of consumers, giving reference to pathologic troubles
as also indicative for the beginning of a cancerous process. The defendant
shall be prohibited from repeating such a statement in publications and in
public talks by punishment laid down in the law.
-
The jurisdiction of the judge is given according to law.
-
The active legitimacy of the plaintiff is given according to the law.
-
The passive legitimacy of the defendant is given by the fact that he is the
author of the polemic [published study] in question, especially since the
present new and revised law allows to exclude the necessity of a competitive
situation, therefore delinquents may also be persons who are not
co-competitors, but may damage the competing position of others by mere
declarations.
[Apparently,
Swiss corporations have lobbied in a law that nails "delinquents" who
disparage products and might do damage to commerce by such remarks. So far, the
US Constitution still preserves freedom of the press.]
-
Considering the relevant situation it is referred to three publications: the
public renunciation [sic] of the so-called co-author Professor Bernard Blanc,
the expertise of Professor Teuber [expert witness
from the FEA] about the above-mentioned publication, the opinion of the public
health authorities with regard to the present stage of research with microwave
ovens as well as to repeated statements from the side of the defendant about
the danger of such ovens.
-
It is not considered of importance whether or not the polemic of the defendant
meets the approval of the public, because all that is necessary is that a
possibility exists that such a statement could find approval with people not
being experts themselves. Also, advertising involving fear is not allowed and
is always disqualified by the law. The necessity for a fast interference is in
no case more advised than in the processes of competition. Basically, the
defendant has the right to defend himself against such accusations. This right,
however, can be denied in cases of pressing danger with regard to impairing the
rights of the plaintiff when this is requested.
Conclusion
On
grounds of this pending request of the plaintiff, the court arrives at the
conclusion that because of special presuppositions as in this case, a definite
disadvantage for the plaintiff does exist, which may not easily be repaired,
and therefore must be considered to be of immediate danger.
The case thus
warrants the request of the plaintiff to be justified, even without hearing the
defendant. Also, because it is not known when the defendant
will bring further statements into the public.
The
judge is also of the opinion that because the publications are made up to
appear as scientific, and therefore especially reliable-looking, they may cause
additional bad disadvantages.
It must be added that there does obviously not
exist a just reason for this publication because there is no public interest
for pseudo-scientific unproved declarations. Finally, these ordered measures do
not prove to be disproportionate.
The
defendant is prohibited, under punishment of up to F5,000,
or up to one year in prison, to declare that food prepared in microwave ovens
is dangerous to health and leads to pathologic troubles as also indicative for
the beginning of a cancerous process.
The
plaintiff pays the costs.
(Signed)
President of the Court of Seftigen
Kraemer."
If
you cannot imagine this kind of decision coming from a court in the United States, you have not been paying attention to the advances
of administrative law.
Hertel
defied the court and has loudly demanded a fair hearing on the truth of his
claims. The court has continued to delay, dodge, appeal and avoid any
media-catching confrontation. As of this writing, Hans is still waiting for a
hearing with media coverage-and he's still talking and publishing his findings.
"They
have not been able to intimidate me into silence, and I will not accept their
conditions," Hertel declared. "I have
appeared at large seminars in Germany, and the study results have been well-received. Also,
I think the authorities are aware that scientists at Ciba-Geigy [the world's
largest pharmaceutical company, headquartered in Switzerland] have vowed to support me in court."
As
those powerful special interests in Switzerland who desire to sell microwave ovens by the millions
continued to suppress open debate on this vital issue for modern civilisation,
new microwave developments blossomed in the United States.
Infant Danger
In
the journal Pediatrics (vol. 89, no. 4, April 1992),
there appeared an article titled, "Effects of Microwave Radiation on
Anti-infective Factors in Human Milk". Richard Quan,
M.D. from Dallas, Texas, was the lead name of the study team.
John A. Kerner, M.D., from Stanford University, was also on the research team, and he was quoted in
a summary article on the research that appeared in the 25 April 1992 issue of Science News. To get the full flavour of
what may lie ahead for microwaving, here is that summary article:
"Women
who work outside the home can express and store breast milk for feedings when
they are away. But parents and caregivers should be careful how they warm this
milk. A new study shows that microwaving human milk-even at a low setting-can
destroy some of its important disease-fighting capabilities.
"Breast
milk can be refrigerated safely for a few days or frozen for up to a month;
however, studies have shown that heating the milk well above body
temperature-37°ree;C-can break down not only its antibodies to infectious
agents, but also its lysozymes or bacteria-digesting
enzymes.
So, when paediatrician John A. Kerner, Jr, witnessed neonatal nurses routinely thawing or
reheating breast milk with the microwave oven in their lounge, he became
concerned.
"In
the April 1992 issue of Pediatrics (Part I), he and
his Stanford University co-workers reported finding that unheated breast milk
that was microwaved lost lysozyme activity,
antibodies and fostered the growth of more potentially pathogenic bacteria.
Milk heated at a high setting (72 degrees Celsius to 98 degrees C) lost 96 per
cent of its immunoglobulin-A antibodies, agents that
fend off invading microbes.
"What
really surprised him, Kerner said, was finding some
loss of anti-infective properties in the milk microwaved at a low setting-and
to a mean of just 33.5 degrees C. Adverse changes at such low temperatures
suggest 'microwaving itself may in fact cause some injury to the milk above and
beyond the heating'.
"But
Randall M. Goldblum of the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston disagrees, saying: 'I don't see any compelling
evidence that the microwaves did any harm. It was the heating.' Lysozyme and antibody degradation in the coolest samples
may simply reflect the development of small hot spots-potentially 60 degrees C
or above-during microwaving, noted Madeleine Sigman-Grant
of Pennsylvania State University, University Park.
And that's to be expected, she said, because microwave heating is
inherently uneven-and quite unpredictable when volumes less than four
millilitres are involved, as was the case in the Kerner's
study.
"Goldblum considers use of a microwave to thaw milk an
especially bad idea, since it is likely to boil some of the milk before all has
even liquefied. Stanford University Medical Center no longer microwaves breast milk, Kerner
notes. And that's appropriate, Sigman-Grant believes,
because of the small volumes of milk that hospitals typically serve
newborns-especially premature infants."
Chasing A Story
Journalist
Tom Valentine, after chasing this story, found it interesting that 'scientists'
have so many 'beliefs' to express rather than prove fact. Yet facts eventually
snuff out credential-based conjecture.
Researcher
Quan, in a phone interview, said that he believed the
results of research so far warranted further detailed study of the effects of
microwave cooking on nutrients. The summary sentence in an abstract of the
research paper is very clear:
"Microwaving
appears to be contra-indicated at high temperatures, and questions regarding
its safety exist even at low temperatures."
The final statement of the study conclusion reads:
"This
preliminary study suggests that microwaving human milk could be detrimental.
Further studies are needed to determine whether and how microwaving could
safely be done." Unfortunately, further studies are not scheduled at this
time.
If
there are so many indications that the effects of microwaves on foods can
degrade the foods far above the known breakdowns of standard cooking, is it not
reasonable to conduct exhaustive studies on living, breathing human beings to
determine if it's possible that eating microwaved foods continuously, as many
people do, can be significantly detrimental to individual health?
If
you wanted to introduce a herbal supplement into the
American mainstream and make any health claims for it, you would be subjected
to exhaustive documentation and costly research. Yet the microwave-oven
industry had only to prove that the dangerous microwaves could, indeed, be
contained within the oven and not escape into the surrounding area where the
radiation could do damage to people.
The industry must admit that some
microwaves escape even in the best-made ovens. So far, not one thought has been
given by the industry to the possibility that the nutrients could be so altered
as to be deleterious to health.
Well,
this makes sense in a land that encourages farmers to poison crops and soils
with massive amounts of synthesised chemicals, and encourages food processors
to use additives that enhance shelf-life of foods regardless of the potential
for degrading the health of the consumer.
How
many hundreds of pounds of microwaved food per capita is
consumed in America each year?
Are
we going to continue to take it from established authority, without question,
on the premise that they know best?
Microwaves can also cause cataracts. The wave length affects the
cornea.
Extracted
from NEXUS Magazine, Volume 2, #25 (April-May '95).
PO Box 30, Mapleton Qld
4560 Australia. editor@nexusmagazine.com
Telephone:
+61 (0)7 5442 9280; Fax: +61 (0)7 5442 9381
From our web page
Originally printed from the April 1994 edition of
Acres, USA.
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