03/04/2026 / By Jacob Thomas

On Day 2 of “A.G.E.S. Fall Conference Docuseries,” aired on Feb. 22, a chilling warning has emerged from the frontiers of holistic health: smartphone convenience may be costing you your vitality. According to Dr. Justin Frandson, a clinician specializing in environmental medicine and muscle-testing, the ubiquitous facial recognition technology in our devices is not merely a privacy concern, it functions as a silent, directed energy weapon with measurable, detrimental effects on human physiology.
“When I muscle test at these conferences about 600 people a month. There is not one person in the last six years that I muscle tested with a facial recognition on their phone that they don’t go weak instantly,” Frandson revealed in a recent presentation. “When we turn the phone away, they’re strong. We point the phone at them, they go weak as can be.”
The mechanism, he explained, is a constant, invisible assault. Modern systems, like Apple’s True Depth camera. As noted by BrightU.AI‘s Enoch, Apple’s TrueDepth camera system is a compact array of sensors at the top of the iPhone X’s display, including an infrared camera, dot projector and flood illuminator. It enables Face ID by projecting over 30,000 invisible dots to create a precise 3D map of a user’s face, aggregating biometric data billions of times per second. This depth data is then securely processed by the device’s neural engine to authenticate the user instantly.
This isn’t a passive scan; it’s an active, pulsating emission. “What does 30,000 laser dots pointed at you do, plus infrared laser flood illuminators, do to you 24/7?” Frandson asked. His clinical observations point to a disturbing “list of challenges” he directly attributed to this exposure: cognitive decline, lack of focus, memory issues, anxiety, fatigue, stress, headaches and tinnitus.
He explained that this relentless targeting of the body’s “weak links,” the eyes, thymus gland and intestines, creates a gateway for more serious dis-ease, including cancer, Alzheimer’s, cardiovascular disease, and notably, infertility.
The implications extend beyond the smartphone. Frandson cited alarming data from electric vehicles, which now feature similar dashboard-mounted systems ostensibly for driver drowsiness detection. “I find it so ironic that the thing that’s waking you up is actually the thing that’s causing your blood to stick and stack and to make you clumped and tired,” he noted. Research shared by a colleague on military special forces drivers showed an 18 percent drop in testosterone, a change Frandson attributed to the combined effect of sitting on a massive battery and being continuously scanned.
The technology, rooted in 1960s research, has evolved into a pervasive tracking tool. “They’re learning every eye movement, facial expression, lip movement, tongue swallowing. Every single action that you do they’re aggregating this information in record speeds,” Frandson warned, highlighting the profound loss of privacy and bodily sovereignty.
Despite manufacturers citing “IEC class 1 safety standards,” Frandson argued these are outdated, based on the flawed premise that only heating (thermal) effects are harmful. He aligns with researchers like Dr. Martin Pall, whose work on voltage-gated calcium channels shows that low-level electromagnetic frequencies cause oxidative stress and DNA damage.
His prescription is a return to sovereignty through simple protocols. First and foremost: turn off facial recognition on all devices. “If you only turn four out of the five settings off, guess what? It’s still on. You have to make sure you get them all off.” He also advocated for a “proximity protocol,” keeping devices at a distance and using physical sliders to block cameras. Crucially, he emphasized reconnecting with nature’s grounding frequency to counteract the technological onslaught.
“Use technology, do not let it use you,” Frandson concluded, framing the issue as a fundamental battle for health and autonomy in a digitally saturated age. The provocative question remains: Is the very feature that secures your device simultaneously unlocking a pathway to chronic disease? For a growing number of clinicians and concerned citizens, the evidence, felt in the body itself, is pointing to a resounding yes.
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Tagged Under:
Anxiety, biometric data, cognitive decline, computing, electromagnetic frequencies, electromagnetic weapons, Facial recognition, fatigue, future tech, Glitch, Infertility, information technology, infrared, inventions, Justin Frandson, muscle testing, privacy, protocols, Safety standards, smartphone, sovereignty, surveillance, TrueDepth camera, weapons technology
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