🐱 Pollution is Shrinking Human Penises, Warns Scientist

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CatParty


By now, we all know that humans have done a fair bit to fuck up our planet. Pollution—that big bad wolf that is the result of many of our activities—has messed up not just our lives but that of other creatures we share this planet with too. It’s damaged polar bears’ dicks and given “limp” penises to otters. Now though, completing the circle of life itself, it’s coming for human erections too.


A much-discussed new book by Dr Shanna H. Swan—a renowned environmental and reproductive epidemiologist—ties the use of industrial chemicals in everyday products to smaller penises, lower sperm counts and erectile dysfunction. The wordy title and subtitle of the book itself sounds like a warning bell we can’t afford to ignore: Count Down: How Our Modern World Is Threatening Sperm Counts, Altering Male and Female Reproductive Development, and Imperiling the Future of the Human Race.





In 2017, Swan co-authored a study that found sperm counts had plummeted in the West by 59 percent between 1973 and 2011. In her new book, Swan explores how a low sperm count, low fertility rates, and penis shrinkage is tied to a common culprit: chemicals. “Chemicals in our environment and unhealthy lifestyle practices in our modern world are disrupting our hormonal balance, causing various degrees of reproductive havoc,” she wrote in her new book. Swan also shared her findings on fertility rates. “In some parts of the world, the average twentysomething woman today is less fertile than her grandmother was at 35.” She also added that a man might have half the sperm count of his grandfather.
Swan’s latest research also states that pollutants and chemicals are decreasing semen quality and leading to the shrinking penis size and volume of testes. Swan calls this a “global existential crisis” and warns that this could threaten human survival itself. “The current state of reproductive affairs can’t continue much longer without threatening human survival,” she writes. “Of five possible criteria for what makes a species endangered, only one needs to be met; the current state of affairs for humans meets at least three.”




Swan’s research also found that exposure to phthalates, chemicals found commonly in plastics and toys, at the end of the first trimester in the womb, led to a shorter anogenital distance (AGD) Nobody is going to like that term, so you could use taint or gooch instead,” she told The Intercept, though not like we’re gonna be using her suggested alternative words anytime soon either. “But basically it’s the distance between the anus and the beginning of the genitals. And scientists have recognized its importance for a long time. I have a paper from 1912 that looks at AGD and showed that they were nearly 100 percent longer in males than in females. Our work has shown that chemicals, including the diethylhexyl phthalate, shorten the AGD in males.”


In her column for The Guardian, environmental activist Erin Brockovich discusses the book too and points out the exposure to “forever chemicals” and how they are found commonly in electronics, plastics, food wrapping, and cleaning products. “Some of them, called PFAS, are known as “forever chemicals” because they don’t break down in the environment or the human body. They just accumulate and accumulate – doing more and more damage, minute by minute, hour by hour, day by day. Now, it seems, humanity is reaching a breaking point.”





If you thought this was bad news, we have some more. Chemicals and pollutants can also impact one’s libido. “Yes, we found a relationship between women’s phthalate levels and their sexual satisfaction,” Swan told The Intercept. “And researchers in China found that workers with higher levels of bisphenol A, commonly known as BPA, in their blood were more likely to have sexual problems, including decreased desire.”


According to Swan’s research, BPA, phthalate, parabens, and atrazine are the main culprits behind decreasing libido and fertility. These chemicals are found commonly in plastics, herbicides, toothpaste, and beauty products and act as endocrine disruptors which leads to premature birth, lower IQs, obesity and, according to Swan’s research, smaller penis size. It might be hard to avoid these chemicals since they are often not on labels and are commonly found on plastics, shampoos, cosmetics, cushions, canned foods and even ATM receipts.
A 2018 study by Melbourne scientists confirmed chemicals in plastics are leading to genital defects in male babies. This year, researchers from France’s national public health agency found that young boys who lived in polluted regions where coal mining used to take place were twice as likely to have one descended testicle and five times likely to have two undescended testicles.
Swan warns that reduced fertility and toxic chemicals can impact future generations badly. “If you’re pregnant, and you’re carrying a boy, the chemicals you’re exposed to can pass to him through the placenta. So the germ cells that will create his children are already affected. Plus that boy is exposed to chemicals again as an adult. It’s a two-hit model,” she told The Intercept. “That’s why we have this continuing decline in fertility and sperm quality. If we didn’t have a hit from our parents and our grandparents, then each generation would just start all over again. It would be bad, but the impact would be at the same level each time. The fact that we carry with us the problems of the past generations means that we’re starting at a lower level and getting hit again and again and again.”
So, are we doomed to see future generations grow up with smaller and smaller schlongs, or is there anything we can do? According to Swan, buying organic produce and using less plastic in our everyday life will help eliminate chemicals from our lives. She even advises eating home-cooked meals rather than eating out since food packages and gloves used by restaurant workers transfer phthalates into your food, which then enter your body.
If not for the environment then, it’s time to fight pollution for the sake of protecting your dong and the human civilisation. As Swan writes, “[We must] do what we can to safeguard our fertility, the fate of mankind, and the planet.”
 
Chemicals disrupting the human endocrine system and affecting development is nothing new. I'm sure this has zero to do with why environmental groups only focus on "muh scary CO2" and why troonery is being pushed as stunning and brave
 
the question is, how can you avoid this
like, it's damn near impossible to completely avoid plastics coming in contact with your food. if you eat anything that has been processed or even simply comes packaged, there's your plastics exposure already. even when cooking at home, most kitchen appliances and containers are made of or at least contain parts that are made of plastics.

so what is the escape? do we have to go full ted kaczinski?
 
I responded to this woman pretty thoroughly in another thread about another story covering this but:
In some parts of the world
Yeah shit is rough in Chernobyl.
I have a paper from 1912 that looks at AGD
A paper. One paper. From 1912. This makes me more skeptical of her work than I was previously.
 
Realistically it's probably a mix of a lot of things. We see T increasing in areas where it would not normally, and falling where it should not. We seem to be undergoing a very polarising event where humans are being changed very quickly, and very dramatically by our environment (as in, how we live, not just where we live) and chemical additives.

Sloth, obesity, lack of competition, long term low amounts of stress, etc; combined with chemical additives are not good for us. Like, at all. These things are basically a selective pressure since it's not penis size that's the real issue; it's the level of sperm production which is falling as well in many men.

There is no way to avoid pollutants entirely, but you can reduce them, and you can blunt their effects with good lifestyle and avoiding food based plastics, additives, etc. Unironically work out, reduce stress, eat well and have a big family. Otherwise any kids you might have will join the small pp gang.
 
the question is, how can you avoid this
like, it's damn near impossible to completely avoid plastics coming in contact with your food. if you eat anything that has been processed or even simply comes packaged, there's your plastics exposure already. even when cooking at home, most kitchen appliances and containers are made of or at least contain parts that are made of plastics.

so what is the escape? do we have to go full ted kaczinski?
Don't live in the city. Plastic really isn't the problem*. The problem is breathing in noxious fumes 24 hours a day for years on end, including while pregnant. The air in even the cleanest city is toxic. There's really nothing that can be done about that. It's what happens when you cram as many people into as tiny of cubes as they will physically fit in.

The reason people always focus on plastic and "chemicals" is because they're in denial. They live in the city, so they have to rationalize. To admit that choking down car exhaust and combustion byproducts with every breath is unhealthy would be to admit that their trendy modern lifestyle is poison, and that's never going to happen. So instead they find other shit to worry about, like your anogenital distance. Because that's the important thing here, apparently.

*In America. Most of the issues you see with ingesting microplastics comes from hellhole countries where they just dump all their garbage into a river and then immediately start chugging water from that same river. And to be honest, those countries could use some lowered sperm counts.
 
Don't live in the city. Plastic really isn't the problem*. The problem is breathing in noxious fumes 24 hours a day for years on end, including while pregnant. The air in even the cleanest city is toxic. There's really nothing that can be done about that. It's what happens when you cram as many people into as tiny of cubes as they will physically fit in.
but thats all down by massive amounts.
 
but thats all down by massive amounts.
Yes, it is now. But this study ended in 2011, and I'm guessing they're not taking semen samples from underaged boys, which means that the most recent birth involved in this study was in 1993. And given that the average American is roughly 30 years old, that means the average birth year for men involved in this sample ranges from 1943 to 1981.

Also, while yes it's down, it's still not what I'd consider "low".

Patterns for all three air-quality measures suggest that air quality improves as areas become more rural (or less urban). The mean total number of ozone days decreased from 47.54 days in large central metropolitan counties to 3.81 days in noncore counties, whereas the mean total number of PM2.5 days decreased from 11.21 in large central metropolitan counties to 0.95 in noncore counties. The mean average annual PM2.5 concentration decreased from 11.15 μg/m3 in large central metropolitan counties to 8.87 μg/m3 in noncore counties.
This was from a 2008-2012 study, which is about as recent as I could find. 12.5x the number of ozone days and 12x the number of PM2.5 days is pretty stark. It's actually worse than I thought it would be.

There are surprisingly few studies about this, probably because any study that says "living in a population-dense area is bad for you" is going to get its funding pulled immediately, if it receives it to begin with.
 
Ah so thats why woke folk consoom so much. More pollution to reduce the size of competitive penises. If they cant get some Chad shouldn't be allowed to either!
 
Hahaha you have to be a tinfoil hat wearing flat earther to believe that thousands of different extremely potent chemicals that they frivolously pump into your food, water and air have any impact on human health. Just make sure to wash your teeth with fluoride toothpaste after you eat that free aspartame-glazed soybean oil-fried titanium dioxide donut that you got for free when you showed your vaccination experimental gene therapy certificate to the cashier

PS If you feel sad about being chemically castrated just ask the good doctor to prescribe you some SSRIs, you will feel better (side effects include erectile dysfunction and suicide)
 
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