Modern electric vehicles make this shift impossible to ignore. These cars are high voltage electrical systems on wheels. Massive lithium ion batteries run beneath the cabin floor. Power electronics cycle continuously. Antennas handle cellular data, Bluetooth, WiFi, GPS, and telemetry at all times. Large touchscreens glow inches from the driver and passengers. All of this takes place inside a metal shell that traps electromagnetic activity close to the body. People sit in these environments for hours, often daily, without thinking about what prolonged exposure might mean for a biological system built on electrical signaling.
The effects are becoming increasingly visible. Adults report strange rashes that do not behave like ordinary skin conditions. Persistent brain fog that feels physical rather than psychological. Fatigue that never fully resolves. Head pressure. Sleep disruption. Heart rhythm abnormalities. Neurological symptoms that never land neatly in a diagnostic box. Some develop serious illnesses that are written off as unlucky coincidences. These complaints are not scattered randomly across time. They cluster in the same decade, alongside the same environmental changes