For environmentalists and Eva Joly, who are struggling in the polls, it’s the final stretch. After actions on issues such as housing, shale gas, education, electromagnetic waves, agriculture, AIDS, etc., this week is dedicated to handing out flyers to various audiences.
Besides the presence of activists in markets and heavily trafficked areas, special focus is on the youth. All universities in Nice have been visited this week by environmentalists to explain that the project supported by their candidate, Eva Joly, is most capable of addressing both immediate living condition issues (housing, employment, transportation) and long-term concerns (climate change, resource and environmental preservation).
Annabelle Jaegger and Louis Nรฉdรฉlec, spokespersons for EE/LV in the Alpes-Maritimes, outlined the program for us:
“Activists will also be present at the exits of primary and nursery schools to communicate the results of electromagnetic wave readings conducted over nearly two months.
These readings, carried out with a measuring device certified by CRIIREM, have consistently shown abnormally high levels, with peaks ranging from 10 to 23 volts per meter in the schools of Fuon Cauda, Saint-Barthรฉlรฉmy, Ventabrun, and Nikaรฏa (the precautionary threshold recommended by the WHO is 0.6 volts per meter).
These measurements are even 16 to 38 times higher than the French standard, which is one of the highest tolerance standards in Europe at 3 volts per meter.”
To continue: “The case of electromagnetic waves thus demonstrates the disregard for human life on the part of telephone operators and highlights the urgency of putting humans at the center of public action to end the culpable complicity we see today.
We must enable the emergence of a power that will ensure the preservation of our lives and the environment, rather than submitting to the pursuit of profit at all costs. This is the essence of the struggle led by Eva Joly and the environmentalists in this presidential election.”