I did not say I didn't trust you, I was disagreeing with you. One example quoted from a 2001Tetrahedron Review by Lidström etal, Tetrahedron 2001, 57, 9225-9282 which states the following:
The rate of the reac- tion can be described by the Arrhenius, there are basically two ways to increase the rate of a chemical reaction. First, the pre-exponential factor A, which describes the molecular mobility and depends on the frequency of vibrations of the molecules at the reaction interface. We have described previously how microwaves induce an increase in molecular vibrations and it has been proposed that this factor, A, can be affected. Other authors, however, have proposed that microwave irradiation produces an alteration in the exponential factor by affecting the free energy of activation, DG.17
In most examples, the specific microwave effects claimed, can be attributed to thermal effects.
So I think the final answer is not known with any certainty.