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What is the point of this childish comment? Aside from it being an ad-hominem attack and therefore irrelevant to whether or not my argument is correct, it just reeks of being something a snotty 17-year old kid would say while sitting in his mom's basement, and you've been around here long enough that I know you're not 17.
If you want a seat at the big boy table, you need to talk like a grown-up. Until that happens, you're not worthy of my time.
> This entire culture of having only boys and aborting girls if they don't have a boy, is why their population is declining.
This is a reason, but it's not the main reason. China industrialized extremely fast, which means moving people to the city. When people move to the city they have far fewer kids. Also, most people live in apartments in China, not houses with back yards, which further decreases the willingness to have kids. Who wants to raise a kid in a concrete jungle? China *does* have a lot of space, so if they focused on creating nice places to live with back yards, I suspect they'd make a dent in the birthrate. But the good old "give women more money and time off" has been tried and by itself barely moves the needle.
I'm someone who is concerned about plastic pollution, and particularly concerned about ingesting it. I don't microwave my food in plastic dishes, and I use stainless steel insulated mugs, and I went out of my way to find teabags made without plastic. But the research results in this area were definitely exaggerated by the media. Here's an example:
One of the studies that looked at microplastics in the brain was conducted by taking brain tissue and using a chemical process to dissolve organic tissue, but then the researchers didn't really analyze the composition of what was left. They just assumed that all the remaining material was probably plastic. That's how you got the famous claim that there's *up to* a teaspoon full of plastic in your brain, which is an extraordinary claim and requires extraordinary evidence, in my opinion. In reality the method they used doesn't provably dissolve all brain tissue, so there's probably elements left over, and that's most of what was measured. But that didn't stop the media from grabbing the headline and running with it.
The IBM purchase of ROLM gives new meaning to the term "twisted pair". -- Howard Anderson, "Yankee Group"