Q: Have you measured it?
A: Yes, you measure.
Q: Do you have a source in your review? Did you refer to some source from someone who measured this?
A: Cook.
[....]
Q: Cook. OK, Cook measured it.
A: And there's exactly what kind of radical a measure is, a certain radical, yes.
Q: You don't answer my question again. I asked you if there was anyone who measured the concentration of free radicals in a person exposed to air pollution versus the concentration of free radicals in a person who was not exposed to air pollution. Is it in Cook?
A: There is a person who has measured, but it does not appear in my review.
Q: It doesn't appear in your review.
A: And this person happened to be called Yosef, Dr. Yosef Friedman. He worked at the Weizmann Institute, and it has nothing to do with it, this Lapidman.
Q: Okay. Now you're saying that you can check the concentration of free radicals in a person's body, right?
A: Yes.
Q: Yes. I mean, if they take me to a lab, they can check how many free radicals I have.
A: Yes.
Q: If they were to take it, for example, do you know that one of the plaintiffs in this case is called Mr. Klein?
A: Yes.
Q: You've heard about it. If they had taken Mr. Klein, who claims to have lived in Kiryat Ata since 1948, then it would be possible to check how many radicals there are in his body against a person who lives in Tel Aviv, right?
A: It's not exactly.
Q: Not exactly.
A: You can measure as much as there is now, some of the radicals have returned, if he took antioxidants it lowered his concentration of radicals. These radicals break down over time. It's actually just the end of a chain. It oxidizes one oxygenates the other, oxidizes the third.
Q: So the situation in the end is It is impossible to measure the amount of radicals a person has as a result of exposure to air pollution?