Trump T1 SAR Cell Phone Radiation Levels: Why FCC Compliance Is Not Enough
The Trump Mobile T1 SAR report shows radiation levels near FCC limits in multiple categories. RF Safe explains why thermal compliance is not biological safety, why Li‑Fi compatibility matters, and why Trump Mobile and Starlink should lead America into the Light Age.
Executive Summary: The Trump T1 Is a Turning Point
The Trump Mobile T1 should be more than a gold smartphone with patriotic branding. Because it carries the Trump name, it should be held to a higher standard: a presidential standard, an American standard, and a biological-safety standard.
The FCC SAR report for the Trump T1 shows a conventional RF smartphone operating extremely close to the FCC’s maximum allowable SAR limits in simultaneous transmission conditions. The phone may be legally compliant, but that is not the same thing as being biologically safe.
The T1 deserves credit for keeping the 3.5 mm headphone jack. That single feature makes it easier to use wired and air-tube headset solutions, which keep the phone away from the head and reduce reliance on Bluetooth earbuds. The video transcript discussing the T1 specifically calls out the “hole in the top of the phone,” identifies it as a headphone jack, and notes how unusual that feature has become in the wireless-earbud era.
But the headphone jack is only the first step.
A safer phone must go beyond wired audio. A truly safer phone must support a lower-RF indoor data path. That means Li‑Fi compatibility.
RF Safe’s central message is direct:
Keep the jack. Add the light. Lead America into the Light Age.
The Trump T1 FCC Filing: What the SAR Report Says
The FCC SAR report identifies the device as a Smart Phone, brand name T1, model number SGG-06, with FCC ID 2BSZG-SGG06SM8661. The applicant is Smart Gadgets Global, LLC, the report number is USSC25O135001, and the report was issued on Jan. 7, 2026 by Eurofins E&E Wireless Taiwan Co., Ltd.
The report states that the device was tested for compliance with FCC portable-device RF exposure requirements. The issue is not whether the T1 passed the FCC test. The issue is that the FCC test itself is an outdated thermal-compliance framework that does not answer the modern biological-safety question.
The report’s highest reported SAR table lists both standalone radio values and the final simultaneous SAR values. The simultaneous numbers are the numbers that matter most for the modern user because smartphones do not operate as single-transmitter devices. They combine cellular, Wi‑Fi, Bluetooth, hotspot, carrier aggregation, and other transmit functions depending on the use case.
Trump T1 SAR Levels: Standalone vs. Simultaneous
SAR stands for Specific Absorption Rate, measured in watts per kilogram. It describes the rate at which RF energy is absorbed by tissue. That is useful, but it is incomplete. SAR measures energy absorption under test conditions. It does not measure biological timing disruption, oxidative stress, mitochondrial stress, calcium-signaling fidelity, DNA repair burden, sleep disruption, or developmental sensitivity.
Here is the key data from the Trump T1 SAR report.
Non-Simultaneous / Standalone SAR
| Exposure condition | Separation distance | Highest standalone SAR | FCC limit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Head | 0 mm | 1.19 W/kg | 1.60 W/kg, 1g SAR |
| Body-worn | 10 mm | 1.19 W/kg | 1.60 W/kg, 1g SAR |
| Hotspot | 10 mm | 0.79 W/kg | 1.60 W/kg, 1g SAR |
| Product Specific / Extremity | 0 mm | 2.82 W/kg | 4.00 W/kg, 10g SAR |
Simultaneous SAR
| Exposure condition | Separation distance | Highest simultaneous SAR | FCC limit | Percent of FCC limit |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Head | 0 mm | 1.52 W/kg | 1.60 W/kg, 1g SAR | 95.0% |
| Body-worn | 10 mm | 1.57 W/kg | 1.60 W/kg, 1g SAR | 98.1% |
| Hotspot | 10 mm | 1.58 W/kg | 1.60 W/kg, 1g SAR | 98.8% |
| Product Specific / Extremity | 0 mm | 3.99 W/kg | 4.00 W/kg, 10g SAR | 99.75% |
The report’s summary table lists Simultaneous SAR per KDB 690783 at 1.52 W/kg head, 1.57 W/kg body-worn, 1.58 W/kg hotspot, and 3.99 W/kg product-specific / extremity, with FCC limits shown as 1.60 W/kg and 4.00 W/kg.
That means the Trump T1 is not a low-radiation phone.
It is a phone that appears to operate essentially right up against the FCC ceiling in multiple simultaneous transmission conditions.
Why the Hotspot Number Jumps From 0.79 to 1.58 W/kg
The standalone hotspot number, 0.79 W/kg, can look surprisingly low. But that is not the full story.
Standalone hotspot SAR is measured under a single-transmission framework. Simultaneous hotspot SAR reflects the combined-transmitter problem. The T1 report explains that when the user enables personal wireless router functions, actual operation includes simultaneous transmission of Wi‑Fi with a separate licensed transmitter. Because those transmitters often operate at different frequencies, the report says SAR must be evaluated separately for each transmission and then spatially summed with the Wi‑Fi transmitter.
That is why the hotspot number nearly doubles from 0.79 W/kg standalone to 1.58 W/kg simultaneous.
That jump is the modern smartphone problem in one number.
The public does not use smartphones as isolated single radios. People stream, hotspot, text, browse, sync, pair, upload, and connect across multiple radios. The simultaneous SAR result is the better warning signal because it reflects the combined-use reality of the device.
FCC Compliance Is Not Biological Safety
The T1 report reproduces the FCC limits for general population / uncontrolled exposure: 1.6 W/kg over 1 gram for local head/body SAR, 4.0 W/kg over 10 grams for local extremity SAR, and 1.0 mW/cm² power density from 1.5 GHz to 100 GHz.
Those are legal limits. They are not proof of biological safety.
The FCC’s RF exposure framework is rooted in a thermal model: the idea that the primary danger is excessive tissue heating. That assumption is no longer adequate. It was never designed for today’s always-on smartphone environment, Wi‑Fi saturation, Bluetooth earbuds, smart homes, 5G densification, hotspot use, and childhood lifetime exposure.
A device can pass the FCC test and still fail the biological-fidelity test.
That is exactly why RF Safe keeps repeating this principle:
Compliance is not safety. Compliance is only proof that a device passed the rulebook it was tested against.
And that rulebook is outdated.
The FCC Already Lost the Lawsuit
In Environmental Health Trust v. FCC, the D.C. Circuit held that the FCC failed to provide a reasoned explanation for its determination that its guidelines adequately protect against harmful effects of RF exposure unrelated to cancer. The court also found that the FCC’s failure undermined its explanation for retaining testing procedures and failing to address children, long-term exposure, RF pulsation or modulation, technological developments since 1996, wireless ubiquity, Wi‑Fi, 5G, and environmental impacts.
That ruling matters because it breaks the industry’s favorite argument: “The FCC says it is safe.”
The court did not say the FCC proved safety. The court said the FCC failed to provide a reasoned explanation.
That is a major difference.
A phone bearing the President’s name should not hide behind a 1996 framework that a federal court already found inadequate. It should help lead the replacement of that framework with one that accounts for biological fidelity, long-term exposure, children, pregnancy, indoor chronic exposure, and real-world simultaneous transmission.
The New Mandamus Petition: FCC Still Has Not Fixed the Problem
The latest legal pressure is a Petition for a Writ of Mandamus. On May 18, 2026, Children’s Health Defense filed a new federal case seeking to force the FCC to comply with the 2021 court order. CHD says the petition asks the D.C. Circuit to direct the FCC to comply with the 2021 mandate within 90 days and to require a 45-day status update.
This is the correct word: mandamus.
It means petitioners are asking the court to force an agency to perform a duty it has failed to perform. In this case, the duty is to comply with the 2021 mandate requiring a reasoned explanation for how current RF limits protect people and the environment.
That is the current regulatory context in which the Trump T1 arrives.
The T1 is being tested under a standard that the FCC has not adequately defended.
The FDA Walked Back Blanket Safety Assurances
The federal government’s old posture is also cracking.
Reuters reported in January 2026 that HHS would launch a new study on cellphone radiation and that the FDA had taken down old webpages saying cellphones are not dangerous. HHS spokesman Andrew Nixon said the FDA removed webpages with old conclusions about cellphone radiation while HHS studies electromagnetic radiation, health research, knowledge gaps, and new technologies.
That is not full reform yet.
But it is a federal walk-back from blanket reassurance.
The government cannot credibly say “we need a new study” while still telling the public that the issue is settled. The issue is not settled. The FDA’s removal of categorical safety pages confirms that the old public messaging was too confident for the current evidence base.
Melnick and Moskowitz: Current Limits Are Far Too High
The most important recent risk-assessment paper is by Ronald L. Melnick and Joel M. Moskowitz, published in Environmental Health in March 2026 on behalf of the International Commission on the Biological Effects of Electromagnetic Fields. The paper is titled “Exposure limits to radiofrequency EMF do not account for cancer risk or reproductive toxicity assessed from data in experimental animals.”
The authors applied public-health risk-assessment methods to animal cancer and reproductive-toxicity data. Their conclusion is devastating for the old thermal-only model.
They reported that current public regulatory limits are:
15- to 900-fold higher than exposure levels estimated to correspond to a 1-in-100,000 excess cancer-risk benchmark.
8- to 24-fold higher than levels estimated to protect male reproductive health.
The paper also states that recent WHO-commissioned systematic reviews concluded with high certainty that RF-EMF exposure increases cancer risk and reduces male fertility in experimental animals.
This point must be communicated clearly: the Melnick–Moskowitz paper is addressing whole-body RF exposure limits and public-health risk assessment. It is not a simple one-to-one conversion of the Trump T1’s localized SAR number into “900 times too high.” But it proves something more important: the regulatory framework behind the T1’s compliance label is not biologically protective enough when modern animal cancer and reproductive endpoints are taken seriously.
In plain English:
A phone can pass the FCC SAR test while being judged by exposure limits that independent risk assessment now shows are orders of magnitude too permissive.
The WHO-Commissioned Animal Cancer Evidence Is No Longer Reassuring
The WHO-commissioned animal cancer systematic review included 52 studies and evaluated RF-EMF exposure and cancer in laboratory animals. The review judged the certainty of evidence as high for increased glioma risk and high for increased heart schwannomas in male rats. It also explains that high certainty means the true effect is highly likely to be reflected in the apparent relationship, and it notes that animal cancer bioassays are commonly used to identify potential human carcinogens.
That is not internet speculation.
That is a WHO-commissioned systematic review.
The tumor endpoints matter because they align with the National Toxicology Program’s major findings. NTP found clear evidence of malignant heart schwannomas in male rats, some evidence of malignant gliomas in the brain of male rats, and some evidence of adrenal gland tumors.
The old story was: non-ionizing radiation cannot matter unless it heats tissue.
The new evidence says: that story is obsolete.
The Pregnancy and Fertility Evidence Demands Precaution
The reproductive evidence is also serious. The Melnick–Moskowitz paper notes that WHO-commissioned reviews concluded with high certainty that RF-EMF exposure reduces the rate of pregnancy in experimental animal studies, and the authors used that information to derive exposure limits protective of male fertility.
A WHO-coordinated systematic review of pregnancy and birth outcomes in non-human mammals included 88 papers and found statistically significant increases in resorbed and dead fetuses, decreases in fetal weight and fetal length, increases in fetal malformations, and detrimental neurobehavioral findings in exposed animals, while also noting limitations in the evidence for below-heating exposure levels.
Public health does not require absolute certainty before engineering controls are adopted. Public health requires that credible evidence of risk be treated seriously, especially when the exposure is involuntary, chronic, widespread, and imposed on children and pregnant women.
That is why RF Safe is not asking for fear.
RF Safe is demanding engineering.
SAR Measures Energy Absorption. It Does Not Measure Biological Fidelity.
SAR is a limited metric. It measures absorbed energy under controlled conditions. It does not measure the fidelity of living systems.
The T1 report itself illustrates the compliance-machine problem. For Wi‑Fi SAR testing, the report explains that normal network operating configurations are not suitable for SAR measurements because unpredictable traffic and antenna-diversity conditions can introduce variations. Test software and engineering modes are used, and the reported SAR must be scaled to 100% transmission duty factor to determine compliance at the maximum tune-up tolerance limit.
That may be how compliance testing works, but it is not how biology works.
Biology is not a plastic phantom filled with tissue-simulating liquid.
Biology is a living timing network.
Cells communicate through membrane voltage, calcium oscillations, mitochondrial redox balance, nitric-oxide signaling, radical chemistry, transcriptional timing, and repair cycles. Safety cannot be reduced to the question, “Did it heat tissue?”
That is the failure of the 1996 framework.
Biological Fidelity: The Real Standard
RF Safe’s biological-fidelity framework is based on a simple principle: the body is not merely absorbing energy; the body is processing information.
Cells rely on precisely timed signaling. Voltage-gated calcium channels contain S4 segments with gating charges that sense changes in the electric field and initiate conformational changes that open the pore. Calcium oscillations are not just about calcium quantity; frequency modulation of calcium oscillations differentiates biological responses in cells.
Timing matters.
A biological system can be damaged by timing error even when it is not heated.
That is what RF Safe means by low-fidelity biology: the degradation of biological signal precision by chronic, pulsed, modulated, non-native electromagnetic noise.
The issue is not simply “how much energy was absorbed?”
The issue is: what did that signal do to timing?
The S4–Mito–Spin Framework
RF Safe’s S4–Mito–Spin framework names the failure modes.
S4 refers to voltage-sensing structures that respond to electric-field changes. These structures are not passive. They are part of the body’s electrical language.
Mito refers to the mitochondrial layer. Mitochondria are not just “power plants.” They are redox regulators, calcium buffers, metabolic sensors, and timing amplifiers. Disturb the upstream timing, and mitochondria can turn that timing error into oxidative stress, inflammatory signaling, metabolic inefficiency, and repair burden.
Spin refers to the field-sensitive chemistry of radical pairs, heme systems, flavins, cytochromes, and magnetically sensitive biochemical control points. This is where the body’s chemistry intersects with electromagnetic timing.
A 2026 Cell paper identified Cyb5b as an essential mediator in an EMF-inducible gene-switch system and reported that activation occurred through rhythmic oscillatory calcium dynamics rather than generic calcium influx.
That distinction is critical.
Biology is not merely asking, “How much calcium entered?”
Biology is asking, “Was the calcium signal timed correctly?”
RF Safe’s position is that chronic RF exposure can create timing noise. That timing noise becomes biological entropy. The body must spend energy correcting, buffering, detoxifying, repairing, and adapting to that signal disorder. That wasted energy is what RF Safe calls entropic waste.
The Trump T1 Headphone Jack Is a Real Win
Trump Mobile should be praised for keeping the headphone jack.
That one design choice matters because it allows the use of wired headsets and air-tube headset solutions. An air-tube headset creates distance between the phone and the head and avoids placing a wireless transmitter directly in or next to the ear.
This is practical prevention.
This is not nostalgia.
It is safer design.
Trump Mobile should own that decision proudly. It should not treat the headphone jack as a throwback feature or a leftover from a hardware platform. It should turn it into a health-and-safety advantage.
Trump Mobile should say:
We brought back the wired audio port because Americans deserve safer options.
Then it should bundle every T1 with a durable RF Safe-style air-tube headset.
But the headphone jack only solves one part of the problem.
A safer phone needs a safer indoor data pathway.
That pathway is Li‑Fi.
Li‑Fi Is Not a Gimmick. It Is an Engineering Control.
Li‑Fi uses light for wireless data transmission. IEEE 802.11bb-2023 is already an official light-communications amendment in the IEEE 802.11 wireless networking family, specifying bidirectional operation with throughput from 10 Mb/s to 9.6 Gb/s.
Li‑Fi does not replace all RF.
RF will still matter outdoors, in vehicles, in rural coverage, in emergency systems, in satellite links, and in mobile environments where line-of-sight optical communication is not practical.
But indoors, Li‑Fi can replace a large share of unnecessary RF data traffic.
That distinction is the key.
Americans spend approximately 90 percent of their time indoors, according to the EPA. Bedrooms, classrooms, nurseries, hospitals, offices, secure conference rooms, and homes are exactly where chronic RF exposure should be reduced.
Li‑Fi is where exposure reduction and high-performance connectivity meet.
Li‑Fi Also Solves a Security Problem
Li‑Fi is not only a health technology. It is also a national security technology.
PureLiFi explains that light does not penetrate walls or leak through materials like curtains, so Li‑Fi can be contained in a room or coverage cone, reducing the risk of interception outside that physical space.
That matters for homes.
It matters for schools.
It matters for hospitals.
It matters for government buildings.
It matters for the White House.
RF signals leak. Light can be contained.
That is not a weakness. That is a security advantage.
The White House Photonics Pilot: From Memo to Market
RF Safe has already proposed the logic of a White House Photonics Pilot: install secure, room-contained, infrared Li‑Fi in sensitive White House spaces to reduce microwave exposure, improve data containment, and protect sleep and recovery environments. The proposal argues that infrared Li‑Fi can create a secure, biologically aligned wireless network in the Executive Residence and position America to reclaim leadership in photonics.
The Trump T1 can become the consumer version of that same principle.
The White House should lead by example.
Trump Mobile should lead by product.
Schools, homes, hospitals, secure offices, and small businesses should follow.
Starlink + Trump Mobile: The Light Age Stack
The most powerful engineering move would be a Starlink–Trump Mobile Li‑Fi alliance.
Starlink already solves the broadband-from-space problem. But once the signal reaches the home, today’s router still distributes data through conventional RF Wi‑Fi. Starlink’s current router specifications list Wi‑Fi 6, tri-band 4×4 MU-MIMO, and two Ethernet LAN ports.
The missing piece is obvious:
Make Starlink routers Li‑Fi compatible.
The architecture writes itself:
Starlink to the roof. Ethernet to the router. Li‑Fi to the room. Trump T1 to the user. Air-tube headset to the ear.
That is the Light Age stack.
Starlink brings the signal from space.
Trump Mobile puts the phone in the hand.
Li‑Fi carries the data through light indoors.
RF Safe brings the biological-fidelity standard.
The Immediate Demand: Launch the Starlink–Trump Mobile Li‑Fi Compatibility Project
RF Safe calls for an immediate engineering project with three deliverables.
First, Starlink should build a Li‑Fi-compatible router platform. It can retain conventional Wi‑Fi for legacy support, but it should include native or modular IEEE 802.11bb Li‑Fi support for rooms where users choose lower-RF indoor connectivity.
Second, Trump Mobile should make the T1 Li‑Fi ready now through a certified USB‑C Li‑Fi accessory and should make the next hardware revision natively Li‑Fi compatible. The phone should include a Light Mode that prioritizes Li‑Fi, Ethernet, wired audio, and air-tube headset use while reducing Wi‑Fi, Bluetooth, and hotspot transmitters indoors.
Third, Starlink and Trump Mobile should pilot Li‑Fi deployments in homes, schools, rural clinics, veterans’ facilities, small businesses, secure federal spaces, and classrooms. The pilot should measure RF reduction, connection performance, cybersecurity containment, sleep quality, headache incidence, cognitive fatigue, and environmental RF density.
This is how America leads: not by waiting for obsolete standards to collapse, but by building the safer network first. RF Safe’s Starlink–Trump Mobile Li‑Fi alliance concept already frames this as a satellite-to-light ecosystem for reducing unnecessary indoor RF and protecting biological fidelity.
A Five-Year Federal Procurement Mandate
The federal government should use its purchasing power to push the market forward.
The White House has recognized that the federal government is the largest buyer of goods and services in the world. Federal procurement already shapes technology standards in areas like cybersecurity and connected devices, including NIST-linked IoT cybersecurity requirements.
The same logic should now apply to wireless biological safety and optical-network readiness.
Within five years, no federal agency should purchase a router, laptop, tablet, mobile phone, headset, classroom connectivity system, hospital communications system, or government wireless device unless it meets one of two standards:
Native Li‑Fi compatibility, preferably IEEE 802.11bb or successor optical wireless standards.
Certified Li‑Fi expandability, meaning the device can securely support approved Li‑Fi modules through USB‑C, Ethernet, PoE, PCIe, or another high-integrity interface.
This is not a ban on RF.
It is a compatibility mandate.
It says America will no longer buy devices that trap citizens inside a microwave-only indoor connectivity model.
Li‑Fi Is a 6G and 7G Supremacy Issue
The future of communications is not just “more towers” and “more spectrum auctions.” The future is heterogeneous: fiber, satellite, cellular, private networks, Wi‑Fi, Li‑Fi, optical wireless, edge computing, sensing, AI, and photonics working together.
The ITU’s IMT‑2030 framework for 6G highlights security, resilience, sustainability, connection density, latency, and reliability as key future-network capabilities. NIST describes 6G work as addressing spectrum management, interference mitigation, data privacy, and mission-critical applications.
Optical wireless belongs in that future.
Li‑Fi compatibility is not a side feature. It is a strategic capability.
The country that leads indoor optical wireless will lead the next era of secure, high-speed, biologically aligned communications.
America should not wait for China, Europe, or the United Kingdom to define the Light Age.
America should define it.
Bell’s Legacy Belongs to America
There is a deeply American story here.
In 1880, Alexander Graham Bell transmitted speech on a beam of light in Washington, D.C. The photophone was completed at the Franklin School, and Bell considered it one of his greatest achievements.
America’s first great wireless breakthrough was not radio.
It was light.
The Trump T1 can help bring that legacy back.
The message is powerful: a phone bearing President Trump’s name becomes the first major American-branded handset to champion wired headset safety, Li‑Fi indoor connectivity, secure optical networking, and domestic photonics leadership.
That is not a product feature.
That is a national technology doctrine.
A Clean Ether Act for the Light Age
The Clean Air Act proved that health protection and innovation can move together. EPA states that cleaner air and economic growth have gone hand in hand since 1970 and that the Act created market opportunities that inspired cleaner technologies.
America now needs the same mindset for the wireless environment.
A Clean Ether Act would not ban communication. It would modernize communication.
It would require biologically informed exposure standards, Li‑Fi compatibility, wired-first design in sensitive spaces, RF-reduction modes, children’s exposure protections, and domestic photonics manufacturing.
The goal is not less technology.
The goal is better technology.
The goal is not fear.
The goal is fidelity.
RF Safe’s Immediate Action: Test, Build, Protect
RF Safe is not standing on the sidelines.
Quanta X Technology has ordered a Trump Phone T1 so RF Safe can evaluate the device and design an RF Safe Approved TruthCase for the Trump Phone. The purpose is not to attack the device. The purpose is to improve the safety ecosystem around it.
That is the constructive path.
Test the phone.
Publish the SAR findings.
Build safer accessories.
Support wired and air-tube use.
Push for Light Mode.
Demand Li‑Fi compatibility.
Help Trump Mobile become the first smartphone brand to treat biological fidelity as a design requirement.
What Trump Mobile Should Announce Now
Trump Mobile can turn the T1 from a controversial phone launch into a historic pivot.
The company should immediately announce:
- A T1 RF Safety Roadmap explaining how users can reduce exposure through distance, wired headsets, air-tube headsets, speakerphone use, and reduced hotspot time.
- A bundled air-tube headset that makes the 3.5 mm headphone jack a health-and-safety feature.
- A certified USB‑C Li‑Fi accessory path for the current T1.
- Native Li‑Fi support in the next hardware revision.
- A Light Mode setting that prioritizes Li‑Fi, Ethernet, wired audio, and low-RF indoor operation.
- A Starlink–Trump Mobile Li‑Fi pilot for homes, schools, rural clinics, veterans’ facilities, and secure government spaces.
- A federal procurement proposal requiring Li‑Fi compatibility in phones, routers, tablets, laptops, and classroom connectivity systems within five years.
This would not weaken Trump Mobile.
It would make Trump Mobile the first major American-branded phone platform to address the next real problem in telecommunications: biological compatibility.
What Parents Should Understand
Parents should not be told that FCC compliance equals safety.
The Trump T1 SAR report shows simultaneous values at 95.0%, 98.1%, 98.8%, and 99.75% of the FCC limits in major use categories. The FCC lost in court because it failed to adequately explain why its old framework protects against non-cancer effects, children’s exposure, long-term exposure, modulation, technological developments, wireless ubiquity, and environmental impacts. Melnick and Moskowitz now show that current public limits are 15 to 900 times too high for a cancer-risk benchmark and 8 to 24 times too high for male reproductive-health protection.
Parents should understand the practical rule:
Do not use the phone against the body when avoidable. Do not let children sleep with transmitting devices near the head. Use wired or air-tube audio. Use speakerphone. Turn off unnecessary radios. Use Ethernet and Li‑Fi indoors when available. Demand safer design from manufacturers.
This is not anti-technology.
This is pro-child.
This is pro-engineering.
This is pro-America.
The Central RF Safe Message
The Trump T1 is the perfect case study because it shows the entire problem in one product.
It has a headphone jack, which is good.
It lacks Li‑Fi, which is the missing innovation.
Its SAR values press close to outdated FCC limits, which exposes the weakness of the compliance framework.
It carries the Trump name, which creates an opportunity to demand leadership.
It arrives at the exact moment when the FCC is under legal pressure, FDA has removed categorical safety pages, NTP findings remain on the record, WHO-commissioned animal reviews show high-certainty cancer endpoints, and Melnick–Moskowitz risk assessment shows public limits are far too high.
The conclusion is unavoidable:
The phone is not failing the old rule. The old rule is failing the public.
Final Call: Keep the Jack. Add the Light. Build the Safer Network.
President Trump, Trump Mobile, Elon Musk, Starlink, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., and the Make America Healthy Again movement have a historic opportunity.
They can treat the Trump T1 as just another Android phone.
Or they can turn it into the beginning of the Light Age.
The demand is simple:
Trump Mobile must make the T1 Li‑Fi ready.
Starlink must build Li‑Fi-compatible routers.
The federal government must require Li‑Fi compatibility in purchased electronics within five years.
Schools, homes, hospitals, federal buildings, veterans’ facilities, and secure offices must be given lower-RF indoor connectivity options.
The next American wireless standard must account for biological fidelity, not just tissue heating.
America should not settle for a phone that barely passes yesterday’s test.
America should build the network that protects tomorrow’s children.
Keep the jack. Add the light. Build the Starlink–Trump Mobile Li‑Fi network. Lead America into the Light Age.
