Coffee is disgusting reheated by whatever means used. I cringe when I see people do it.
I now do not have a microwave in my household. 90% of the time I also use the headset (corded, not Bluetooth) on my Blackberry as it's one of the more "potent" EMF-emitting devices on the market. I am actually replacing it with one that gives off about 1/3 less later this month. That isn't the full reason why, but with how often I use it... it gives off 1.54 W/kg when the US (FCC's) acceptable limit is 1.6! The fuck
Ratings from Cnet on cell phone radiation, updated Dec. 22, 2010
There is, of course, a lot of conflicting information, and I freely admit a lot of it is very tinfoily. That having been said, the things really have been around for ~50 years; just as with cell phones, not enough is known to say
conclusively whether or not they are harmful. I choose not to use one.
I am nearly certain that
EMF Sensitivity is an issue for a lot of people. Again, the tinfoil crowd is all over this one, but even when I was a child, I noticed things like microwaves and power lines would make me feel either overly excited or extremely tired. I am not the only one.
I have a (very tinfoily but probably genuinely EMF-sensitive; may also be psychosomatic) friend with an EMF detector. I'll ask him if I can borrow it and report back in the next few weeks. It won't be a scientific experiment by any means, but I will be driving/working off-site/everyday socializing quite a bit over the next 2 weeks - also I will be flying twice in the next 3 weeks, so if the TSA lets me on the plane with it, and it wouldn't fuck up the navigation equipment (I will ask a pilot directly), I'll see what it actually says and keep a chart. hobhead, you are correct that one is exposed to radiation on a flight. That's also the same argument the TSA uses to subject people to the backscatter/mmwave privacy invasion. They are welcome to pat me down if I am selected for additional screening. I damned sure will never walk into one of *those* things.
Enki - the cataracts thing - is this limited to restaurant employees/professional chefs? In many, if not most, restaurants, the microwave is at head/eye level for the people who operate it. Could explain a repeated exposure hypothesis.