Hit the nail on the head. After the pill was introduced, urine processing resulted in increasing amounts of estrogen being found in the water supply year after year. The feminization of the American male began. Planned event?
This is quite interesting actually, thank you for pointing this out. I'm keen to agree, and while your premise is very sound.... do you have any good sauce/studies on the relationship? I'd be very interested to look into this more and share with a family member thats a nurse and believes MedInd can do no wrong
I had read this two or so years ago and no longer have the original source. Here are a few articles discussing estrogen levels found in waste water and the environmental impact. It appears male fish in lakes contaminated with waste water have developed female organs (ovaries). Estrogen is evidenced in other species and certainly some levels of disposed waste water make it back into the ground water. Govt/Bio/Pharma say less than 1% make it back into tap water, but I am not as believing of Govt and Medical resources as I once was. You can find other evidence of countries wanting to increase filtration to address this problem. Also grey water (waste water) has become more prominent in water filtration for potable water (especially in areas having water shortage issues). As a side note, I am only an electrical engineer and do not claim to be an environmental/bio/medical expert. I am sure, as with almost any topic, you can research a variety of opinions.
What product was released in 1960 to the general public?
The birth control pill.
Hit the nail on the head. After the pill was introduced, urine processing resulted in increasing amounts of estrogen being found in the water supply year after year. The feminization of the American male began. Planned event?
This is quite interesting actually, thank you for pointing this out. I'm keen to agree, and while your premise is very sound.... do you have any good sauce/studies on the relationship? I'd be very interested to look into this more and share with a family member thats a nurse and believes MedInd can do no wrong
I had read this two or so years ago and no longer have the original source. Here are a few articles discussing estrogen levels found in waste water and the environmental impact. It appears male fish in lakes contaminated with waste water have developed female organs (ovaries). Estrogen is evidenced in other species and certainly some levels of disposed waste water make it back into the ground water. Govt/Bio/Pharma say less than 1% make it back into tap water, but I am not as believing of Govt and Medical resources as I once was. You can find other evidence of countries wanting to increase filtration to address this problem. Also grey water (waste water) has become more prominent in water filtration for potable water (especially in areas having water shortage issues). As a side note, I am only an electrical engineer and do not claim to be an environmental/bio/medical expert. I am sure, as with almost any topic, you can research a variety of opinions.
https://www.livescience.com/20532-birth-control-water-pollution.html
https://www.academia.edu/17747277/Monitoring_Estrogen_Compounds_in_Wastewater_Recycling_Systems