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David Kukkee's avatar

Thank you for this heads up Nicholas...you are the first to raise the alarm to my knowledge...as far as the issue applies to me, no one else has bothered. This is really serious, and explains why so many people seem to be cheap plastic in their understanding over the last four Covid fraud years. The emotional state of the jabbed zombies seems to be styrene instead of serene. Just sayin'.

Trying hard's avatar

So if true, would this mean that corpses will not decay as quickly because they will be partially plastic?

Patrick brant's avatar

Useful article, and serious matter, but needs revision as some information - like credit card worth of plastic…..- has been discredited and debunked. One error like this can ruin the whole article. Fyi I worked in this field for 38 years, and still do through consulting. Some of the published microplastics work is good, some not so much

Patrick brant's avatar

Follow up: The latest peer reviewed literature shows that Americans ingest an average of about 184 nanograms of microplastics per person per day. This translates to about 0.0000014 grams of plastic per week, NOT 5 grams!!! that is so ridiculous and has now been repeated far too much. Again, the best papers clearly establish that the microplastics lodging in humans and all sorts of animals is pretty shocking and worrisome, as well as being deeply interwoven with plenty of other environmental pollutant factors

Jennifer Jones's avatar

Mr. Hulscher

Do you know if there are any movements by any large scale water treatment plants to begin filtering their water in a way that will greatly diminish the concentrations of microplastics?

I realize that some home Point of Use boiling systems with distillation and condensatition capability can very substantially reduce the concentration of microplastics in drinking and cooking water, but their production of substantial microplastics-reduced water is slow -- only 1 gallon/5 hours.

Daniel's avatar

I think the plastic "pex" tubing in homes contributes to the micro plastic problems.

Daniel's avatar

One can purchase a decent reverse osmosis countertop unit for 300 or 400 dollars. Nothing like the taste of pure H2O.

100PercAcctblty's avatar

Good grief! I feel like a walking plastic bottle. My mind is becoming numb to all of this information, which is a good thing at this point since there’s nothing we can do about it. Three, four months feels like an eternity, but it is what it is.

Here’s the site for water filters I bought for under my kitchen sink and the ice/water maker in the fridge. I guess I should start drinking it. Bottled water or filtered tap water - at this point, I don’t think it matters.

https://sentryh2o.com/

For City Water:

REMOVES HARMFUL TOXINS LIKE AMMONIA, LEAD, FLUORIDE, CYANIDE, COPPER, CHLORINE, CHROMIUM, ARSENIC, SULFATES, PESTICIDES, BACTERIA, PFAS, PFOS, PHARMACEUTICAL VOCS, AND MORE

For well Water:

CUSTOMIZED WELL SYSTEM ALSO REMOVES COMMON GROUNDWATER CONTAMINANTS LIKE IRON, MANGANESE AND NITRATES

Please do your own research

Jennifer Jones's avatar

Does it remove microplastics substantially?

100PercAcctblty's avatar

Didn’t work. Here goes: https://sentryh2o.com/. I’m having no problem going in outside Substack, so just type sentryh2o.com, and hope that works. - Sorry.