Margie Alfonso grew up in Grosse Pointe, Michigan and graduated from Michigan State University with a degree in Bacteriology and Public Health. She is always interested in the health issues present in our modern world and how we can use technology to serve us, NOT enslave us.
Margie served as the coordinator for The National Conference on HIV/AIDS with the assistance of the Reagan White House, spearheading legislation for nationwide testing.
In 2018, Margie traveled to Washington D.C to educate Congress members about wireless radiation health effects. Here is a letter from the CA Brain Tumor Association that she received thanking her for spreading the truth about wireless radiation exposure.
She has spearheaded three planks on Public Health for the Oklahoma State Republican Convention (Read the OK GOP Platform) and one plank for the Tulsa County Republican Party Platform 2020.
PUBLIC HEALTH CARE PLANKS
OK 2019 State Republican Platform
Page 3, #9 – We support the labeling of all wireless devices and systems including but not limited to Wi-Fi, cellular phones, smart meters, baby monitors, iPads, DECT phones, etc. to disclose the known health risks of RF microwave radiation and EMF radiation emissions including but not limited to cancer, heart disease, infertility, fetal damage and digital dementia.
Page 3 & 4, #10 – We support health and safety testing by independent scientist in relation to 5G millimeter microwave wireless radiation or deployment of 5G.
Page 11, #17 – We support the independent testing of radiation levels in all public schools with full disclosure of the proven hazards and impacts of radio frequency, electromagnetic, and microwave radiation upon children and youth (e.g.: mitochondrial and DNA damage and destruction).
Tulsa County Republican Party Platform 2020
Page 10, #13 – We object to smart meters because of health factors and we wish to replace them with analog meters.
America’s Radioactive Secret (from Rolling Stone)
Read the original article on Rolling Stone In 2014, a muscular, middle-aged Ohio man named Peter took a job trucking waste for the oil-and-gas industry. The hours were long — he was out the door by 3 a.m. every morning and not home until well after dark — but the...