Where Is the Documentary on Why Our Schools Are Worse Than Prisons?
America is up in arms over Roger Ver, who might face 25 to life—but what about our children, forced to endure something far more sinister and unending? Where is the uproar, the non-stop media coverage, the calls for documentaries about how Section 704 of the Telecommunications Act (TCA) locks our kids into an invisible wireless prison every single school day?
A Violation of Constitutional Rights
Section 704 isn’t just a bad piece of legislation—it’s unconstitutional. It effectively removes parents’ God-given right to protect their children’s health, trampling on both the First Amendment (our right to speak and protest) and the Tenth Amendment (states’ rights to safeguard local communities). Under Section 704, you literally cannot protest a cell tower near a school on health grounds, no matter how many studies scream the dangers.
These laws shorten our children’s lives—and we’re told to accept it.
Schools That Resemble Prisons
Take one look at our “modern” schools:
- Fences locking in kids like inmates.
- Constant surveillance in halls and classrooms.
- Towers beaming radiation just feet away from playgrounds.
Kids like Melanie Coates sit at a desk 460 feet from a cell tower—1/3 the internationally recommended distance. Where is the documentary about the hazardous, high-level exposure hitting her day after day? Why aren’t we flooding social media with hashtags for her freedom?
Forget about “prison yard” talk—this is a real-life, unregulated, forced exposure scenario worse than actual prison conditions. Most inmates have more recourse over harmful environments than American parents have under Section 704.
Pray for Melanie and Millions More
Roger Ver might lose 25 years of his life to a cell, but many of these children—bombarded with hazardous RF radiation—won’t even see 25. Where’s the outcry for them?
We need your prayers, your voices, your activism—not for Roger Ver’s tax woes, but for the millions of children silently enduring radiation exposure that top scientists compare to “clear evidence” of carcinogenic risk.
What America’s Protests Are Missing
I’m not saying Roger Ver shouldn’t have a second chance. I’m saying our children deserve a first chance—a shot at living a healthy life free from telecom greed and bureaucratic negligence.
While people protest to “keep Ver free,” we’re missing the real crisis: kids losing their lives from laws that ignore science, local rights, and basic morality.
We have a generation of children locked in a wireless prison, and if you think that’s hyperbole, remember:
- No mainstream documentary has tackled this head-on.
- No nightly news devotes endless coverage to Section 704.
- No major uproar calls for the enforcement of safer setbacks or the protection of parental rights.
A Call to Action: #TrumpRepeal704
- Repeal Section 704: Let communities protect their kids from dangerous cell tower placements.
- Restore Constitutional Freedoms: Parents must have the legal right to protest health hazards.
- Demand Accountability: The telecom industry should not profit at the expense of our children’s well-being.
America loves a good protest. Isn’t children’s health worth rallying for?
Pray for Melanie Coates. Pray for every child trapped in a “school” that acts like a prison yard. We don’t need more noise about Roger Ver’s second chance; we need a united stand to give our children their first chance at a healthy, radiation-free life.
#TrumpRepeal704
#ProtectOurChildren