Šneček, on 16 November 2022 - 07:55 AM, said:
I'm starting to get the feeling that some of the discussions on this site are deliberately created for one reason, and that is so that debaters here can insult each other and subsequently get banned. Maybe this place will end up getting blocked again, better not hang around here and not sully own nickname, I guess.
Ooh, I've got one, let me try!
How do you guys feel about the fact that government deregulation of industry and the associated environmental pollution has caused all life on Earth, from the plankton in the ocean to the largest animals alive, everything in between, and even our drinking water, to be filled with microplastics?
When these materials degrade and further break down, the components they were produced from are released into their environment (unless the reaction that constitutes the degradation changes those components into something else, of course). Unfortunately, and really rather inconveniently, it turns out the bisphenol A hardening additive, commonly known as simply "BPA" and found in all polycarbonates and epoxy resins, is shaped close enough to estradiol to bind to and interfere with the relevant receptors in the body. For those unaware, estradiol is a naturally occurring estrogen receptor hormone frequently used in the treatment of older women with menopause, and for gender transition related hormone therapies. In fact, the shape is close enough that BPA was long ago considered as a potential candidate for a synthetic estrogen receptor hormone. Though BPA has already since been linked to stuff like obesity, thyroid problems, testicular dysgenesis syndrome and other endocrinological issues, I was curious what other long term effects you guys think could arise from this unstoppable flow of low-dose female hormone analogs that begins long before birth?
Other relevant facts: even if they weren't already present in literally everything we eat, the microplastics in question are too small to filter out with current water filtration technology, and a study performed in South Korea revealed levels of BPA high enough to be detectable in urine for about 85% of a sample size of approximately 300 children.
Personal speculation (e.g. the only part I probably couldn't find a pile of published, peer-reviewed medical papers to refer to): weird shit potentially happens when the body is exposed to hormone analogs capable of activating those receptor networks before the body's own means of production of said hormones is up and running, like connecting a breaker panel while someone is in the middle of trying to run Romex and install junction boxes and receptacles or opening the valve to the main when someone is in the middle of trying to plumb a WC. Observing the ways in which the problems outlined in this post could affect a child all the way through adulthood, potentially manifesting as stark, intergenerational disparities beyond those which can be pinned on cultural, economical, or political differences, is left as an exercise for the reader.