https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2024/08/240801004050.htm
Researchers found that incidence rates increased with each successive birth cohort born since approximately 1920 for eight of 34 cancers. In particular, the incidence rate was approximately two-to-three times higher in the 1990 birth cohort than in the 1955 birth cohort for pancreatic, Kidney, and small intestinal cancers in both male and female individuals; and for liver cancer in female individuals. Additionally, incidence rates increased in younger cohorts, after a decline in older birth cohorts, for nine of the remaining cancers including breast cancer (estrogen-receptor positive only), uterine corpus cancer, colorectal cancer, non-cardia gastric cancer, gallbladder cancer, ovarian cancer, testicular cancer, anal cancer in male individuals, and Kaposi sarcoma in male individuals.
the biggest one: stress.
not regular "i have things to do" stress...
I mean the stress that comes from living in a spiritually dead society, in which very few people can fathom real hope for the future.
Agree. It's a compartmentalized mass murder and poisoning. Any one of these on its own is probably only slightly toxic, so scientists can do their tests and not have to cheat too much to say they're not a major threat, but put them all together and basically the majority of the population is chronically ill with something or other.