This is the most basic reason I can’t give
@living_energy ‘s theory further credence. The viral post that started it all is very bold and certainly what helped it takeoff-
We have PROOF!
No, we do not have anything even remotely close to proof. We have a theory. A curious one to think about and I can appreciate that, but supporters of this have allowed it to spread like wildfire with the assumption it’s proven fact.
I have no idea what certification/training is involved in being a board certified quantum biologist, but in most scientific fields you don’t have proof of anything when you haven’t even collected the most basic data regarding your claim (pic 2 from part 4 of his series)
get real onsite data before claiming proof, get real data from other facilities to compare. Break out the injury data to remove the outliers of major contact trauma that are unavoidable. Account for the confounding factors that are known to influence injuries (training staff, play style, individual player histories, age, etc) then let’s discuss in a true scientific fashion
Right now you have a theory. Yes, it’s interesting to think about. But it’s miles away in scientific terms from being proven as he initially claimed.
Mainstream academic scientists aren’t engaging with it because the media narrative threw the scientific method to the wind.
I can’t believe this EMF conspiracy is still getting traction.
So they’ve been practicing next to the plant since 1988, but it’s only become an issue in the last 7 or 8 years, which actually coincides perfectly with when Shanahan took over. And he has a notoriously rigorous practice philosophy that’s been talked about countless times. It’s literally meant to break players down to then build back up (hopefully..but hmm maybe it doesn’t?)
Oh and they made widespread changes to their athletic training/strength staff around 2019 that are still in place
But sure, let’s blame it on some baseless theories about a power plant