Monday, January 4, 2010

ENVIRONMENT POLLUTION MOVES INSIDE

Chemicals polluting our environment are having a greater effect upon the males of the species than upon females. Males are becoming weaker genetically, and their gender qualities are trending toward the feminine, endangering reproduction. Every class of vertebrates (including humans) has shown more damage to the males of the species than to the females. One study demonstrated that sons of mothers who had high exposure to common household chemicals during pregnancy were born with smaller penises and feminized genitals.

Chemicals in food wraps, baby powder, and cosmetics for example, are known to be “gender-benders,” affecting the hormones of fetuses, creating endocrine imbalances and a trend toward the feminization of each species. An examination of fish in Britain, for example, determined that many of the males were developing eggs in their testes. One source of such a gender-bending effect in the residue of contraceptives states that they are passed through the body, into the sewer system, and finally into the water supply. Assembled by the charity CHEMTrust, these findings report from more than 250 scientific studies from around the world.

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