If You’re Reading This, Don’t Just Nod—Pull a Lever

What RF Safe Must Do Next to Turn Awareness Into Action

RF Safe doesn’t exist to win arguments in comment sections. We exist to win something far more important: policy and standards that actually protect biology—especially children. The science is far past the point where “thermal-only” can be defended as a complete safety model. The law is past the point where agencies can pretend they aren’t mandated to keep up. And the public is past the point where we can afford another decade of regulatory paralysis.

The next phase for RF Safe is about one thing:

turning readers into operators.

If you’re here, you already know something is wrong. Now we make it easy to do something about it.


The RF Safe Action Stack

The next content RF Safe should publish—specifically to get people involved

Below are the highest-leverage topics RF Safe should cover next, in an order that builds a real movement. Each one ends in a measurable action—because reading alone doesn’t change policy.


1) The “5-Minute Action Kit”

The fastest way to convert attention into pressure

Most people agree with the premise but don’t know what to do. We fix that with a single evergreen page:

What it includes:

  • A 60-second explanation of the problem

  • Three “levers” we must pull (Section 704, PL 90-602 enforcement, FCC remand compliance)

  • A copy/paste message for Congress

  • A phone script for calling offices

  • A “share one thing” section with one image and one link

The point: make action so easy there’s no excuse.

Call to action (always at the top and bottom):

  • “Copy this message, send it to your Representative and Senators today.”

  • “Call one office. If they don’t answer, leave the voicemail. It counts.”

  • “Share this page with one parent.”


2) The Court Remand Explained (Plain English)

“Here’s what the court said, and here’s what the FCC still hasn’t done.”

People get lost in the legal fog. That fog is useful to regulators. We cut through it.

What it includes:

  • What the FCC’s exposure limits are based on (thermal assumptions)

  • What evidence was in the record

  • What “arbitrary and capricious” means in practice

  • What “remand” means

  • What compliance would actually look like

  • Why delay is unacceptable when children are implicated

Why this mobilizes: it replaces “the system is broken” with “the system has already been called out—now enforce it.”

Call to action:

  • “Tell your Representative: demand FCC compliance with the remand.”

  • “Ask your local government to pass a resolution supporting updated RF standards.”


3) PL 90-602: The Law They’re Ignoring

“Shall means shall.”

This is one of the most underused pieces of leverage. People assume safety research is optional. It isn’t.

What it includes:

  • What Public Law 90-602 established (a federal mandate for radiation-emitting product oversight)

  • The difference between voluntary research and mandated oversight

  • The constitutional problem with agencies ignoring congressional mandates

Why this mobilizes: it reframes the issue as law enforcement, not “debate.”

Call to action:

  • “Demand HHS/agency compliance with PL 90-602.”

  • “Ask Congress for hearings on noncompliance.”


4) “Null Results Done Right” (a continuing series)

Teach the public how to read the RF literature without getting played

The biggest weapon used against RF safety is confusion: “Some studies are null, therefore nothing is happening.”

RF Safe should own the best public education series on:

  • negative controls

  • exposure parameters

  • tissue vulnerability

  • why mechanistic effects are nonlinear

  • why nulls do not equal safety

Why this mobilizes: it makes your readers confident. Confident people recruit others. Confident people call offices.

Call to action:

  • “Share the one chart.”

  • “Submit a study you want mechanism-tagged.”


5) The Children’s Vulnerability Brief

The moral center of the issue—and the easiest to understand

We need a single, rigorous page that stays out of hype and stays locked on biology:

What it includes:

  • Why children are not “small adults” (developmental windows, thinner skulls, longer lifetime exposure)

  • Why standards built around adult thermal models fail the precaution test

  • Why schools are the priority battlefield (chronic exposure + density)

Why this mobilizes: parents move faster than any demographic—if you give them clean steps.

Call to action:

  • “Download the school letter.”

  • “Ask for wired-first classrooms.”

  • “Ask for phone-distance education and policies.”


6) The “FCC Should Lose Health Authority” Argument

If a body can’t respond to evidence, it shouldn’t hold the mandate

RF Safe can publish a sober case that:

  • the FCC is structurally misaligned with health protection

  • it is not staffed or designed as a biomedical standards setter

  • its delays and thermal-only posture demonstrate institutional failure

Why this mobilizes: it gives people a governance solution beyond “update the limits.”

Call to action:

  • “Support shifting health authority back to health agencies.”

  • “Support independent science panels and transparent review.”


7) The Endgame Page: The Light Age

A positive finish line that makes people hopeful, not paranoid

Movements die when people think the future is just permanent fear. RF Safe needs the opposite: a clear technological endgame.

What it includes:

  • why indoor pulsed microwaves are a bad default

  • the case for wired-first + light-based indoor connectivity

  • why innovation follows standards (when rules change, tech changes)

Why this mobilizes: people need hope and a destination.

Call to action:

  • “Share the endgame.”

  • “Ask your school for wired-first + safer indoor policies.”


The one rule RF Safe must adopt immediately

Every post ends with an “Action Box”

If a post doesn’t end with clear actions, you’re building a library, not a movement.

Standard RF Safe Action Box (copy/paste):

  • Do this now: copy this message to your Representative.

  • Do this today: call one office and leave a voicemail.

  • Do this this week: send the school letter or ask your principal for wired-first classrooms.

  • Do this always: share one page with one parent.


Closing: If you’re here, you’re already rare

The algorithm isn’t sending people here as a favor. If you found this, it’s because you’re looking for truth—not comfort.

That makes you valuable.

Now we turn that into leverage.

We repeal what blocks health-based action. We enforce what Congress already mandated. We demand compliance with the remand. And we push the endgame: safer communications technology built around biology—not around convenience and profit.

If you’re reading this, don’t just agree.

Pull a lever.