Tuesday, March 17, 2026

Protecting Our Air & Water in McNeal, Cochise County, Arizona

 

Understanding Local Industrial Emissions and What Our Community Can Do

This article was written with the help of Microsoft CoPilot during a conversation based on the above graphic. 

What’s Happening

A facility near McNeal has been approved for industrial‑level emissions. This means certain pollutants — regulated under Arizona and federal environmental laws — may be released into our local air and water. This is not a political issue. It is a public health, land stewardship, and rural‑community issue.

REMEMBER - EVERY CRISIS CARRIES WITH IT AN OPPORTUNITY OF EQUAL OR GREATER BENEFIT. LET'S GO FOR THE GREATER!

What Pollutants Are Typically Involved

Industrial permits often allow emissions such as:

  • Particulate Matter (PM2.5 & PM10) — microscopic dust that enters the lungs and bloodstream.
  • Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs) — chemicals that contribute to smog and respiratory irritation.
  • Hazardous Air Pollutants (HAPs) — substances linked to long‑term health risks depending on exposure.
  • Nitrogen & Sulfur Oxides — gases that form ground‑level ozone and acidify soil and water.

These pollutants are recognized by the EPA and Arizona Department of Environmental Quality as requiring monitoring and control.

Why McNeal And Other Areas of Cochise County Are Especially Vulnerable

  • Airflow is limited in our basin, allowing pollutants to linger.
  • Groundwater is shallow, and contamination can travel quickly.
  • Ranching and agriculture depend on clean soil and water, making even low‑level contamination a long‑term concern.
  • Wildlife, livestock, and families share the same exposures, increasing ecosystem‑wide impact.

Potential Impacts

Exposure to these pollutants can contribute to:

  • Breathing difficulties and respiratory irritation
  • Increased vulnerability to infections
  • Soil acidification and reduced crop resilience
  • Stress on pollinators and wildlife
  • Long‑term cumulative strain on the immune and endocrine systems

These effects are documented in environmental health research and apply to rural and urban communities alike.

Community Actions That Make a Difference

1. Request Transparent Monitoring

Ask for real‑time air and water monitoring near the site, with data made public. Rural communities deserve the same protections as cities.

2. Push for Cumulative‑Impact Reviews

One facility may meet its limits, but combined exposures from dust, agriculture, traffic, and industry add up. Regulators can evaluate total load, not just single permits.

3. Encourage Cleaner Technologies

Many industries can adopt:

  • Low‑emission manufacturing
  • Closed‑loop water systems
  • Solar and magnetic energy systems
  • Hemp‑based or regenerative filtration materials

These technologies already exist and reduce pollution dramatically.

4. Strengthen The Power Of We The People

Community‑level steps can reduce exposure:

  • Planting windbreaks and vegetative buffers
  • Using indoor air filtration (activated carbon or hemp‑based)
  • Supporting regenerative agriculture
  • Encouraging county‑level clean‑energy incentives

5. Communicate Clearly With County Officials

Local leaders respond best to:

  • Calm, factual explanations
  • Community‑supported requests
  • Practical alternatives
  • Consistent follow‑up

This is about protecting Cochise Countys and beyond's health, land, and long‑term economy. This is not the only place on the environmental exemption list as shown on the NRDC map at this article's opening.

Why This Matters

Our strength has always been our environment, its people and the ability to adapt. By staying informed, united and solution‑focused, we can ensure our community, county, state, nation and world. Let us restore ourselves to joyous, healthy, productive and future‑ready status. 

CLEAN THIS MESS UP NOW! 

"Let's get this party started right. Let's get this party started quickly."






Tuesday, January 06, 2026

Are We Dealing With Chronic Exposure To Elevated Levels Of Radiation?

 

We Have No Choice: Blood Strengthening Strategies in the Age of COVID

By J. Nayer Hardin, CURE / Computer Underground Railroad Enterprises
Final Draft for Discussion Purposes — January 2026
ChatGPT Overview

Purpose

This research was developed to address a growing public-health gap: the lack of cumulative-exposure standards and biological modeling for chronic multi-source electromagnetic field (EMF/RF) environments, particularly as next-generation wireless systems (including planned 6G millimeter-wave and terahertz bands) are layered onto already saturated electromagnetic landscapes.

Current regulatory frameworks primarily evaluate single-source, short-term, thermal-threshold exposures. This work examines chronic, low-intensity, multi-source exposure environments and their potential interaction with vascular, neurological, and immune systems.

Core Findings

The manuscript compiles peer-reviewed research and environmental measurements demonstrating:

• Chronic RF-EMF exposure can induce oxidative stress, calcium channel dysregulation, endothelial injury, microcirculatory disturbance, neuroinflammatory signaling, and altered red-blood-cell behavior — often below existing thermal safety thresholds.

• Modern populations experience continuous background exposure from overlapping sources (Wi-Fi, cellular infrastructure, smart meters, IoT, Bluetooth, power wiring, broadcast towers), creating a stacked exposure matrix rather than isolated exposures.

• Vulnerable populations (elderly, cardiovascular, neurological, inflammatory, autoimmune, and stress-burdened individuals) may exhibit heightened biological sensitivity to cumulative EMF load.

• COVID-19 autopsy findings (microvascular clotting, endothelial inflammation, circulatory injury) reveal biological pathways that overlap mechanistically with EMF-linked endothelial stress and oxidative injury, warranting further investigation.

Key Public-Health Concern

Existing exposure standards do not account for:

• Cumulative lifetime exposure
• Multi-source environmental stacking
• Continuous background saturation
• Vulnerable sub-population sensitivity
• Non-thermal biological stress mechanisms

As wireless density increases and 6G planning advances into higher frequency ranges, these omissions represent a growing systemic public-health blind spot.

Requested Consideration

The author respectfully requests that this research be:

• Routed for scientific review within EMF health evaluation bodies
• Considered in future cumulative-exposure modeling and guideline development
• Included in research prioritization for millimeter-wave / terahertz biological interaction studies
• Evaluated for implications to precautionary public-health policy

Proposed Research Directions

• Cumulative exposure modeling (multi-source, multi-band, continuous background)
• Long-term endothelial and neurovascular monitoring studies
• Vulnerability profiling (cardiovascular, neurological, pediatric, elderly populations)
• Updated biological safety benchmarks beyond thermal thresholds

Please post your thoughts and recommendations
in the comments below.