The age-old adage First Do No Harm should be the tempering goal of not only medicine, but government and industry, especially when they team up to deploy new technologies, set policies and serve the people.

This blog exists to reveal and analyze areas in which these powerful groups are failing to "first do no harm."

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Microwave Nation: What is H2O Red Hot Spray anyways?

You will not find H2O Red Hot Spray at Wikipedia.

This exciting, new spray signaling technology is a metaphor for radiofrequency radiation in the painstakingly unfolding new comic strip, Microwave Nation: Making Waves (see first three strips below). But unlike microwaves, these spray signals can be seen by the viewer's naked, unabashed eye (but not by the comic strip characters). Convenient, no?

The budding comic series traces the development and deployment of the H2O Red Hot Spray devices from their simple-minded beginnings to current rabid popularity that knows no reasonable limits.

Settings are minimal, and any resemblance to real or imagined people will not be acknowledged (all characters are canned from the nifty comic creation site - Pixton). The sparse presentation of revealing dialogs is meant as abstracted cultural commentary.

Stay tuned for part Four.

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Thursday, February 16, 2012

Microwave Nation: What is H2O Red Hot Spray anyways?

You will not find H2O Red Hot Spray at Wikipedia.

This exciting, new spray signaling technology is a metaphor for radiofrequency radiation in the painstakingly unfolding new comic strip, Microwave Nation: Making Waves (see first three strips below). But unlike microwaves, these spray signals can be seen by the viewer's naked, unabashed eye (but not by the comic strip characters). Convenient, no?

The budding comic series traces the development and deployment of the H2O Red Hot Spray devices from their simple-minded beginnings to current rabid popularity that knows no reasonable limits.

Settings are minimal, and any resemblance to real or imagined people will not be acknowledged (all characters are canned from the nifty comic creation site - Pixton). The sparse presentation of revealing dialogs is meant as abstracted cultural commentary.

Stay tuned for part Four.

No comments:

Post a Comment