Do they still teach that simple warning in schools?
These results are not surprising, almost every bit of food we consume comes into contact with some form of plastic. Even if it's just in a plastic bag. Even a glass bottle has a plastic seal under the metal cap. If you use a plastic cutting board even your home grown veggie is exposed. To take this to the extreme a wooden cutting board is usually a glue up of many smaller strips of wood to get the 'butcher block' look. That glue is wood glue - most likel
Today in "Where's the lie?", notice the language used in the article:
>One California study found phthalates in three-quarters of tested foods, and a Consumer Reports analysis last year detected BPA or similar chemicals in 79% of foods tested. According to CDC data, more than 90% of Americans have measurable levels of these chemicals in their bodies.
So we have "measurable levels", which means anything from "just above what can even be measured with extremely accurate modern equipment" to "he'd dead". This
According to CDC data, more than 90% of Americans have measurable levels of these chemicals in their bodies
Toxicity is always a function of concentration. Always. Even water is toxic if ingested at high enough levels.
What is the spread between "measurable" and "toxic" for these plastics?
And what health *benefits* do we sacrifice if we give up plastics?
Sealed plastic containers are highly effective at controlling bacterial growth, for example. Flossing your teeth with plastic (nylon) is universally recommended by dentists for dental health. Plastic tubing is universally used in IVs. Many of these health-*positive
More to the point, Autism and Transgenderism can be directly linked to BPA being an endocrine disruptor. Prostate, Breast and Ovarian cancers are a direct result. For Autism, there is significant evidence that BPA prevents the brain from forming the structures that normally develop in a male brain.
Like Transgenderism is a huge topic just because there's at least three distinct paths that lead to it, one of them being the "hormone disruption in-utero", one being SRY-gene translocation (basically XX Male and X
These results are not surprising, almost every bit of food we consume comes into contact with some form of plastic. Even if it's just in a plastic bag. Even a glass bottle has a plastic seal under the metal cap. If you use a plastic cutting board even your home grown veggie is exposed. To take this to the extreme a wooden cutting board is usually a glue up of many smaller strips of wood to get the 'butcher block' look. That glue is wood glue - most likel
Today in "Where's the lie?", notice the language used in the article:
>One California study found phthalates in three-quarters of tested foods, and a Consumer Reports analysis last year detected BPA or similar chemicals in 79% of foods tested. According to CDC data, more than 90% of Americans have measurable levels of these chemicals in their bodies.
So we have "measurable levels", which means anything from "just above what can even be measured with extremely accurate modern equipment" to "he'd dead". This
According to CDC data, more than 90% of Americans have measurable levels of these chemicals in their bodies
Toxicity is always a function of concentration. Always. Even water is toxic if ingested at high enough levels.
What is the spread between "measurable" and "toxic" for these plastics?
And what health *benefits* do we sacrifice if we give up plastics?
Sealed plastic containers are highly effective at controlling bacterial growth, for example. Flossing your teeth with plastic (nylon) is universally recommended by dentists for dental health. Plastic tubing is universally used in IVs. Many of these health-*positive
More to the point, Autism and Transgenderism can be directly linked to BPA being an endocrine disruptor. Prostate, Breast and Ovarian cancers are a direct result.
For Autism, there is significant evidence that BPA prevents the brain from forming the structures that normally develop in a male brain.
Like Transgenderism is a huge topic just because there's at least three distinct paths that lead to it, one of them being the "hormone disruption in-utero", one being SRY-gene translocation (basically XX Male and X