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drakarnat
Iron
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- Nov 10, 2019
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As if your body and hormonal system wasn't getting raped by the environment enough new research is out to suggest we're eating 5 grams of plastic a week! I don't even know where to begin with this, it's sounds ridiculous but in the clown world that is 2020 anything is possible it seems
. You need to buy a reverse osmosis water filter or at the very least buy a charcoal filter. Don't use plastic water bottles at all and avoid eating lots of seafood (especially oysters imo, literally filter feed plastic all day, jfl).
Plastics have chemicals that mimic estrogen and will make you a fucking girl. No wonder sperm rates are plummeting and balding men with glasses are guzzling down soy while watching Marvel. It's a fuck ton of micro plastics leeching feminising, test killing hormones into their system everyday. Take action to keep your test high and estrogen low from demonic plastics.
"Microscopic pieces of plastic have been discovered in the most remote locations, from the depths of the ocean to Arctic ice. Another place that plastic is appearing is inside our bodies. We’re breathing microplastic, eating it and drinking plastic-infused water every day.
Plastic does not biodegrade. Instead, it breaks down into smaller pieces, and ultimately ends up everywhere, including in the food chain. Pieces that are less than five millimeters in length, around the size of a sesame seed, are called “microplastics.”
Dozens of reports have been published on microplastics but the scientific community is still only scratching the surface of understanding just how much plastic we consume and how harmful it could be.
People could be ingesting the equivalent of a credit card of plastic a week, a recent study by WWF International concluded, mainly in drinking water but also via sources like shellfish, which tend to be eaten whole so the plastic in their digestive systems is also consumed.
Based on the findings of the study, Reuters created the following images to illustrate what this amount of plastic actually looks like over various time periods."
Every week
5 grams of plastic
That’s about the same weight as a plastic bottle cap and enough shredded plastic to fill a porcelain soup spoon.
https://dailystormer.name/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/plastics-week-1.jpg
Every month
21 grams of plastic
That’s about the same weight as five casino dice and enough shredded plastic to half-fill a rice bowl.
Every 6 months
125 grams of plastic
That’s enough yellow shredded plastic flakes to fill a cereal bowl, as pictured below.
https://dailystormer.name/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/plastics-six-months-1.jpg
Every year
250 grams of plastic
That’s a heaped dinner plate’s worth of shredded plastic, as pictured below.
Every 10 years
2.5kg of plastic
Reuters did not have enough shredded plastic to weigh in order to visualise this comparison. However, a standard life buoy weighs 2.5 kilograms so we found one of those.
In our lifetime
20kg of plastic
The average human lives for 79 years. Using the current estimate of microplastic in our diets and assuming the situation doesn’t improve or worsen, that equates to 20 kilograms of plastic consumption. That’s more plastic than the two mobile recycling bins shown below, which only weigh 10kg each.
What a fitting image to some up a lifetime of plastic consumption. Article detailed in this post and more articles about how fucking bad plastic is below.
www.nationalgeographic.com
phys.org
ecologycenter.org
www.newsweek.com
Plastics have chemicals that mimic estrogen and will make you a fucking girl. No wonder sperm rates are plummeting and balding men with glasses are guzzling down soy while watching Marvel. It's a fuck ton of micro plastics leeching feminising, test killing hormones into their system everyday. Take action to keep your test high and estrogen low from demonic plastics.
"Microscopic pieces of plastic have been discovered in the most remote locations, from the depths of the ocean to Arctic ice. Another place that plastic is appearing is inside our bodies. We’re breathing microplastic, eating it and drinking plastic-infused water every day.
Plastic does not biodegrade. Instead, it breaks down into smaller pieces, and ultimately ends up everywhere, including in the food chain. Pieces that are less than five millimeters in length, around the size of a sesame seed, are called “microplastics.”
Dozens of reports have been published on microplastics but the scientific community is still only scratching the surface of understanding just how much plastic we consume and how harmful it could be.
People could be ingesting the equivalent of a credit card of plastic a week, a recent study by WWF International concluded, mainly in drinking water but also via sources like shellfish, which tend to be eaten whole so the plastic in their digestive systems is also consumed.
Based on the findings of the study, Reuters created the following images to illustrate what this amount of plastic actually looks like over various time periods."
Every week
5 grams of plastic
That’s about the same weight as a plastic bottle cap and enough shredded plastic to fill a porcelain soup spoon.
https://dailystormer.name/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/plastics-week-1.jpg
Every month
21 grams of plastic
That’s about the same weight as five casino dice and enough shredded plastic to half-fill a rice bowl.
Every 6 months
125 grams of plastic
That’s enough yellow shredded plastic flakes to fill a cereal bowl, as pictured below.
https://dailystormer.name/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/plastics-six-months-1.jpg
Every year
250 grams of plastic
That’s a heaped dinner plate’s worth of shredded plastic, as pictured below.
Every 10 years
2.5kg of plastic
Reuters did not have enough shredded plastic to weigh in order to visualise this comparison. However, a standard life buoy weighs 2.5 kilograms so we found one of those.
In our lifetime
20kg of plastic
The average human lives for 79 years. Using the current estimate of microplastic in our diets and assuming the situation doesn’t improve or worsen, that equates to 20 kilograms of plastic consumption. That’s more plastic than the two mobile recycling bins shown below, which only weigh 10kg each.
What a fitting image to some up a lifetime of plastic consumption. Article detailed in this post and more articles about how fucking bad plastic is below.
![www.nationalgeographic.com](/proxy.php?image=https%3A%2F%2Fi.natgeofe.com%2Fn%2F70f35691-8f56-45e1-8c77-895be0ccb8a1%2Fplastic-waste-single-use-worldwide-consumption-health2_16x9.jpg%3Fw%3D1200&hash=ff52baec6a1a507df15584de48eaa36f&return_error=1)
We Know Plastic Is Harming Marine Life. What About Us?
There often are tiny bits of plastic in the fish and shellfish we eat. Scientists are racing to figure out what that means for our health.
![phys.org](/proxy.php?image=https%3A%2F%2Fscx2.b-cdn.net%2Fgfx%2Fnews%2Fhires%2F2017%2F589db901a8183.jpg&hash=caa0cc750393e94849c6773856c5e7e7&return_error=1)
New study reveals higher microplastics in London air compared to other cities
Researchers from King's have carried out the first study of microplastics in the atmosphere in London to determine what people within the city might be exposed to and where this comes from.
![graphics.reuters.com](/proxy.php?image=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.reuters.com%2Fgraphics%2FENVIRONMENT-PLASTIC%2F0100B4TF2MQ%2Fimages%2Fshare-card.png&hash=9c64ab01ce60a85ea4c514e652ac01a5&return_error=1)
Adverse Health Effects of Plastics | Ecology Center
![ecologycenter.org](/proxy.php?image=https%3A%2F%2Fecologycenter.org%2Fwp-content%2Fuploads%2Ffbrfg%2Ffavicon-32x32.png%3Fv%3Dpgq8x358kw&hash=5f0c2aafef5396e26b2c72c5426d9bb0&return_error=1)
![www.newsweek.com](/proxy.php?image=https%3A%2F%2Fd.newsweek.com%2Fen%2Ffull%2F799602%2Fbisphenol-cans.jpg&hash=f15451a653110d232ff322e634fa16d4&return_error=1)
Avoiding BPA May Be Nearly Impossible, Study Finds
"You can choose to go organic, you can become a vegan, but according to this particular study, you couldn't choose to be free of BPA in your diet."
![www.newsweek.com](/proxy.php?image=https%3A%2F%2Fg.newsweek.com%2Fthemes%2Fnewsweek%2Ffavicons%2Ffavicon-32x32.png&hash=f96e8f492030546e9fb30d6beac18767&return_error=1)