By B.N. Frank
Jean Twenge, child psychologist and author of ‘iGen’ has been warmly welcomed by many media outlets to discuss her book on how digital technology has affected the youngest generation.
Here she is May 1, 2018 on CBS.
A documentary called Screenagers was also produced to assist to families in helping the youngest generation with “Screen” issues including “Digital Addiction.”
Over the last year or so, remorseful tech inventors and investors have confessed that they knowingly and deliberately created software and products that could lead to “Digital Addiction.”
Another documentary, Generation Zapped, addresses what cell phone and wireless WiFi radiation exposure is doing to today’s youth and everybody else.
GENERATION ZAPPED investigates the potential dangers of prolonged exposure to Radio Frequencies (RF) from wireless technology; its effects on our health and well-being, as well as the health and development of our children.
Today we encounter a hundred thousand times the level of radiation from wireless technologies than we did decades ago. Yet the safety standards set by federal regulatory agencies are outdated.
New wireless devices such as smart phones, tablets and baby monitors to the latest “Internet of Things” continue to enter the market without any proper pre-market testing or post-market monitoring.
In fact,
Despite all of this, tech companies ignore “The Precautionary Principle” and continue marketing their products to kids and everyone else.
When marketing to children, it’s like Joe Camel all over again. But tech companies use Sesame Street characters to endorse and represent their products instead.
Trying to warn the public about radiation exposure risk is nothing new. Several medical sources including Dr. Oz and The American Academy of Pediatrics have been warning about exposing kids to cell phone and wireless WiFi radiation for many years already.
On May 1, 2018 The American Academy of Pediatrics published a new video about reducing exposure.
As the documentary, Generation Zapped, points out though – it’s very difficult to limit children’s exposure in today’s world – even in public schools.
Kids spend a significant amount of time using tech in the classroom and for completing homework because we’ve been told all of this is necessary for them to get a good education.