Scientific American  - Scientific American  is is the oldest continuously published monthly magazine in the United States.  Many famous scientists, including Albert Einstein, have contributed articles to it. It publishes 18 foreign-language editions around the globe.  In an article written by University of California, Berkeley health researcher,  Joel M.  Moskowitz and published,  October 17, 2019 , it is stated: 
   
 "5G, along with previous wi-fi and cellular technology, is much more harmful than the       government and telecom  industry wants the public to believe. The safety standards         that the FCC wishes to  maintain are severely outdated and fail to reflect the growing       body of scientific  evidence demonstrating harm."
                             ______________________________________________________
Chris Kressner, health coach, on his website, documents some of the research relating to the health dangers of cell phone radiation.
     
"Several epidemiological studies have found an association between cell phone use          and male infertility and decreased sperm quality. For example, a study published in          2008 found that of 361 men attending an infertility clinic, participants who used a            cell phone more frequently had lower sperm count, motility, and viability, and had            more sperm with abnormal structure."
     
 The WHO has classified cell phone  radiation as “possibly carcinogenic to humans,”          primarily based on a couple  observational studies that found associations between        cell phone use and brain  cancer. (24) The first one, the Hardell study conducted in            Sweden, was a control study that matched each “case” (a person with brain cancer)          to  a  “control” (a person  as similar as possible to the case, but without cancer).
 They published their results in several papers, reporting an increased risk for brain          cancer in people who used cell phones, particularly cancers occurring on the same          side of the head that the phone was used on. (25, 26, 27, 28) Risk increased with                increasing time spent on the phone, and was highest in people who started using a          cell phone before age 20."