@Samprasfan:
I know there is a difference between measuring an immediate painful reaction to one thing, and knowing the consequences of prolonged exposure to another.
Nearly all remarks prior to mine made those filing the suit out to be either in it for the money (lack of reading comprehension), crazy, or scared of technology.
The fire/pain illustration was intended to show that they may have come to the wi-fi/chest pain conclusion through a logical process (even if the conclusion was incorrect) and that neither greed, nor neurosis, nor fear was necessarily a motivating factor in the formation of said conclusion.
You're right when you say that there have been many provocation studies on "electrical sensitivity."
However, the statement "In every one, subjects could not tell the difference between true EMF and a nocebo" is patently false.
A truer (read: not complete BS) statement would have been that while many studies support the notion that the suffering of those claiming electrical sensitivity is in their head, dozens have suggested otherwise.
So the studies are not clear: they are conflicted.
I will include URLs to a few of them at the bottom of this comment. Please feel free to cherry-pick data in support of your confirmation bias and argue that any study that disagrees with it was unscientific.
You should also bear in mind that I am not arguing that wi-fi is the cause of their symptoms.
I only commented because I saw lots of people, many probably having little to no real knowledge of the subject, speaking as though they'd done thorough studies of the matter themselves and found that there is NO POSSIBLE WAY that wi-fi could have an effect on the human body.
That's nothing more than BS arrogance, and it retards true understanding.
And no, I am in not in any way involved with that T.V. station, with that case, or with any such similar case.
This first link -
http
/www.es-uk.info/info/research.asp - is to a page containing links to many different studies that have found positive associations between electrical sensitivity and their suspected electromagnetic causes.
I'm including the following three links because their findings suggest that radiation from cell phones might affect tissue.
These experiments preclude the possibility of the phenomena being psychological in origin (in these particular cases) as the first looks at the effect cell phone radiation has on protein expression in human skin, the second looks at it's effects on human sperm motility, and the third examines cell death in insects from exposure to it.
http
/www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18267023
http
/www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16971222?dopt=Abstract
http
/www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17045516?dopt=Abstract
@Cuddles:
I understand what you're saying, but I disagree with your reasoning.
These people are not saying that every frequency on every band on earth bothers them, and it does not appear that you have to be sensitive to all in order to be sensitive to a few.
From one study on EMF sensitivity (http

/aehf.com/articles/em_sensitive.html):
"When evaluating frequency response, 75% of the 16 patients reacted to 1 Hz, 75% to 2.5 Hz, 69% to 5 Hz, 69 % to 10 Hz, 69% to 20 Hz, and 69% to 10 KHz (Table 3). No patient reacted to all 21 of the active frequencies in the challenges"
From what I've read, other factors can make a difference such as whether the transmission is continuous (radio) or pulsed (wi-fi).
From what I understand, these people are asking for wi-fi access points to be banned in public buildings in Sante Fe.
Whether that is "reasonable" or not something I'm interested in addressing, as I feel that's another matter entirely. But I can understand why you feel that way.