“A new exposé by Mother Jones magazine may shock anyone who drinks out of plastic bottles, gives their children plastic sippy cups, eats out of plastic containers, or stores food with plastic wrap. For years, public campaigns have been waged against plastic containing bisphenol-A (BPA), a controversial plastic additive, due to concerns about adverse human health effects caused by the exposure to synthetic estrogen. But a new investigation by Mother Jones reporter Mariah Blake has revealed that chemicals used to replace BPA may be just as dangerous to your health, if not more. Plastic products being advertised as BPA-free — and sold by companies such as Evenflo, Nalgene and Tupperware — are still releasing synthetic estrogen. The Mother Jones piece also reveals how the plastics industry has used a “Big Tobacco-style campaign” to bury the disturbing scientific evidence about the products you use every day.”
This interview exposes the carefully contrived way that studies are crafted to disguise the impact of these chemicals, just as Big Tobacco did so effectively beginning decades ago. You can read Mariah Blake’s article here, and her timeline of this deception “How Industry and the Feds Suppressed Evidence That Plastics Wreak Havoc on Our Hormones”
If you are following this blog, you may recall this post where I point to the regime of chemicals that are in our food chain to reduce fertility and hence curb the growth of the human population. Those who report on these chemicals and so many other things in our world do not understand the deeply hidden agenda running behind these issues. As I’ve said several times before, unless you have listened to or read the transcripts of “New Order of Barbarians”, you have no chance of understanding what is going on in our world. Without these understandings, you remain just another piece of flotsam inside this carefully contrived consciousness.
Once again I remind you of the agenda of those who control the game to reduce the human population to 0.5BN.
Silent weapons for quiet wars is also essential reading, in my view.
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