Posted on 11/16/2022 1:00:23 PM PST by algore
True and it’s even noticeable in the ‘70s and ‘80s. I like music from that era and when I watch old concerts on youtube one of the things that stands out is how thin people are, both the bands and the audience.
Processed food. Lack of exercise.
It is knee jerk when literally every thread having to do with remotely clinical issues in the first 10 responses says vaxx!!! It clearly says over 50 years with the last line saying data was collected in 2017.
Don’t you think it looks foolish when it literally says when you read the article that data were generated years before covid and and someone tried to make iir a vaccine issue? There are reasonable questions that should be answered surrounding covid vaccination. But when the conga line of regular antivax Q theorists give the Pavlovian response of clot shot, vax shill and fhe stream of other propaganda names to literally anything, it diminishes your impact.
Ho hum, vaxx, let’s move on. After four years of industrial malpractice on a global scale that has already costs millions of lives and EVERY DAY there’s a new story about hidden known after affects, well pardon the hell out of me for being a little jaded. Did your dumb arse inject yourself with that crap?
Takes 2 seconds of search to find articles linking soy and low sperm counts.
It takes 2 seconds to see how many chemicals we have put into the water and food chain that are endocrine disrupters.
The report isn’t some men who eat soy have less sperm… this is worldwide.
It’s xenoestrogens, chiefly from urine from women on birth control pills that has made its way to drinking water. It’s not a mystery.
Likely part of the cause. Which H2o is not normally tested for.
Birth-control pills could add 10 million doses of hormones to our wastewater every day. Some of that estrogen may wind up in our taps. (https://www.businessinsider.com/birth-control-pills-hormones-estrogen-drinking-water-health-effects-2019-10)
Also, Endocrine disruptors in bottled mineral water: total estrogenic burden and migration from plastic bottles (https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19274472/)
How many? Heh
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