When you are going through job search websites, working with cell phone towers and Wi-Fi is a job you don't want. This is probably the most dangerous job and threat to your health. 

Read on to find out why.

The job you don't want to choose:

Communications antennas blast the human habitat with many different electromagnetic frequencies simultaneously.

Human DNA hears this energetic cacophony loud and clear, reacting like the human ear would to high volume country music, R&B plus rock and roll screaming from the same speaker simultaneously.

Irradiated cells struggle to protect themselves against this destructive dissonance by hardening their membranes.

They cease to receive nourishment, stop releasing toxins, die prematurely and spill micronuclei fragments into a sort of "tumor bank account."

This is the story of Kenneth Hurtado who was an installer for a large international corporation manufacturing electronics equipment for wireless providers and his experience with radiation poisoning:

Now unable to work at his job, Hurtado says he was relatively healthy in 1998 when he began a career as an installer for wireless providers.

At the base of cell towers there is an equipment "hut" where installers assemble the radios, amplifiers and filters which generate man-made microwave frequencies and route them up to transmitter antennas through huge cables.

Mounted on sector supports aptly named alpha, beta and gamma, the antennas send and receive these carcinogenic radio waves and their pulsed data packets at the speed of light.

Posted on locked fences around the huts are "danger" warning signs.

Hurtado says, "You look around these sites and you find many dead birds on the gravel.

They can’t take the radiation and they’ll just die. You don’t have to ponder that too long to figure it’s bad."

Hurtado doesn’t know how much radiation he got on the job. He says there are at least four connection spots inside the hut where radiation can leak. He could not avoid the "heat" when he turned the radios on for testing and he wonders if his cancer is the result.

"When I first got hired, we had safety meetings, but they pretty much minimized the hazards," he remembers.



He was issued no electromagnetic safety clothing and it was not until 2002 that he got a radiation meter to wear. "The meter is supposed to warn you if you are getting too much radiation," he said, "but I put mine on a stick and placed it next to antennas and the alarm never went off."

Today Hurtado experiences constant roaming pain. He’s been to hell and back, starting with a seven-pound tumor on a kidney, diagnosed in 2002. The cancer spread to his brain. His first brain tumor was removed by craniotomy, the second by the cyber knife.

In 2005, cancer nodes were found in his lungs. By 2006, the cancer had metastasized to his legs. In 2007 he began battling three excruciating tumors on his spinal cord. Hurtado hates his seizures. His last one came on while he was driving. "It’s like the devil taking over your body," he says.

A medical report in the International Journal of Occupational and Environmental Health confirms that workers exposed to high levels of RF/microwave radiation routinely have astronomical cancer rates.

The report notes that, for these workers, the latency period between high radiation exposure and illness is short compared to less exposed populations.

Hurtado said there are many industry workers who are dangerously over-exposed. "I’ve talked to guys on power crews who have to climb around the antennas and they’ve told me that before a work day is half over, they start feeling really sick." He added, "In my mind they are getting cooked."

Hurtado suspects that, since the early days of the wireless buildout, there has been illegal activity related to public exposure from transmission sites. "I’m pretty sure," he says, "that some of the carriers are exceeding FCC exposure limits.”

”They can turn the radios and amplifiers up to get a bigger footprint and they don’t care if the alarms go on once the installers are gone."

Regulatory inspectors could identify violators because channels can be spectrum analyzed. "But," he says, "there is just no one to check and I believe that the public is getting way too much radiation now."

The FCC, the single agency with authority to regulate the communications industry, has neither money, manpower nor motive to properly monitor radiation output from hundreds of thousands of commercial wireless installations spewing carcinogenic waves across the nation.

The FCC admits that physical testing to verify compliance with emissions guidelines is relatively rare.

Critics say that FCC appointees, with virtually no medical or public health expertise, represent an old-boy network and a cheering squad for the telecommunications and broadcast industries. FCC officials have been bribed by the industries with such perks as expensive trips to Las Vegas.

Dr. Carlo confirms that there is no regulatory accountability. He says, "You have to go to those base stations and independently measure what is coming out of them because we have had many instances where you have an antenna that is allowed by law to transmit at 100 watts and we have seen up to 900 to 1000 watts.

You can turn things up when nobody is looking."

This is why when you are looking at job search websites do not tae a job working with cell phone towers and Wi-Fi. It is a job you definitely do not want.