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    Home > Medical News > Medical World News > Uk ultrasonic mosquito bites bad teenager causecontroversy

    Uk ultrasonic mosquito bites bad teenager causecontroversy

    • Last Update: 2020-07-04
    • Source: Internet
    • Author: User
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    a group of young British men who were about to gather in front of a shop, but as soon as they got there, they were forced to leave by the unbearable shrill noise; This is typical of the time an ultrasonic reheater called mosquito escher takes effectThe device, which was once used in public places in the UK to drive out poor teenagers, is now being questionedAlbert Ainslie-Green, England'sChildren'sCommissioner, launched acampaigncalling for the ban on the device because it violates the rights of young people and is unfair to young peopleThe "adolescent drive"the "adolescent drive" was invented by Howard Stapleton, a south Welsh manIt emits sound waves at frequencies of 17 to 18 kHz, transforming four times per second for a maximum duration of 20 minutesThis drive-out automatically adjusts the volume, always making the sound volume 5 dB higher than ambient noise, with an average sound volume of 85 decibelsSince its inception in the UK in January 2006, drive-outs have been installed in about 3,500 public places, such as shops, railway stations and banksThey use ultrasounds that can only be heard bychildren
    and young people to disperse the ill-wanted teenagers who intend to gatherYoung people have a very fine fluff in their ears that allows them to hear the sound of the drivePeople's hearing is naturally impaired with age Generally speaking, by the time a person is 25, the fluff in the inner ear completely disappears As a result, the vast majority of people over the age of 25 will not be disturbed by the drive Sophie O'Dowd, a 14-year-old young British man, heard the annoying sound of a drive-by outside a shop "It seems like a constant buzz," she said It's really annoying You just want to stay away from it "
    call for a ban on mosquitoes
    on behalf of the 11 million
    children in the UK, Albert Ainslie-Green, 12 launched a "stop the buzz"
    campaign , to say "no" to the deportee Ainslie-Green said: "I have spoken to many children and young people in England who are suffering from ultrasound drives "
    " these devices are indiscriminate and target all children and young people, including babies , regardless of whether they are beleaguered or misbehaving," Ainslie Green told the BBC Ainslie-Green added: "This device is just a stopgap measure It does not target the root causes of the problem and is discriminatory "
    the "Stop the Buzz" movement supported by human rights groups, including the human rights group Freedom Shami Chakrabarti, the head of Freedom, describes the "adolescent drive" as a "sonic weapon aimed at children and young people." Safe and legal? However, Simon Morris, commercial director of Complex Security Systems, a maker of drivers, questioned the motives of the Stop The Buzz campaign to block the drive " Our view is that human rights groups 'freedom' are more discriminatory in the 'Stop The Buzz' campaign than anyone who uses 'mosquitoes'," Morris said " Composite Security Systems ,"s insistence that youth drives are "safe and legal", noting that 75 per cent of the drives on the market were sold to the police and government departments Police and government departments have installed the device in places where poor young people are easily gathered Stapleton, the inventor of the drive, said the case could be the only way to establish the device's legal status " For the past 18 months, I have been contacting the human rights group Freedom, the Home Office and the Association of Senior Police Officers to request the drafting of a document on the fair use of the methods (of youth deporters)," Stapleton said Morris acknowledges that "adolescent deporters" can't solve the anti-social problems of minors in the long run, but they do disperse the youth population (Liu Peng)
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