Amazing. Say, are you going to link to proof of me being wrong about any specific topic whatsoever? You know, to humiliate me in front of these people?
No one’s going to believe that. Imagine being so pathetic and worthless that you abandon a website entirely simply because you saw truth that hurt your feelings. You don’t come here anymore because you know I’m right. That’s all.
20 hours ago4 points(+0/-0/+4Score on mirror)1 child
We’ve found microplastics at the bottom of the Mariana trench. We’re beginning to find glyphosate in the Olagalla aquifer. The damage jews have done to us is inescapable now, but it can be at least partially mitigated by making conscious (hard) decisions about where you source your food and how you prepare it.
20 hours ago3 points(+0/-0/+3Score on mirror)2 children
I suppose, and particularly because we don’t know what materials are used in the equipment of *industrial* scale food processing. But the thing is, *all* plastics begin to break down when heat is applied to them (or under the UV rays of sunlight). So that plastic tub of macaroni and cheese you’re meant to throw in the microwave to heat; that’s leeching into the food as it cooks.
Glyphosate isn’t just used to spray on crops in the ground, too. It’s used as a desiccant once they’re harvested.
Agreed, food should not be stored, cooked or eaten out of a lot of plastics. Heating accelerates the leeching of the ones containing phenols but it still happens at room temp.
And yes, these compounds do break down in sunlight and even in water. Obviously they break down in the body too so not an accumulitive poison at least. Just constantly produced industrially and we are constantly exposed.
HDPE and LDPE contain no phenols when new but may contain them if made from recycling, especially LDPE.
Plastics like PP, TPU and PTFE contain no phenols at all.
PTFE is so inert that it wont even breakdown in sulight and reacts with practically nothing near room temperatures making it essentially a 'forever chemical'. I wonder if this is the plastic they find everywhere as small particles.
Edit: nope, lots of the bad ones are found as microparticles too
I don't know much about glyphosate so I will have to do some research.
16 hours ago3 points(+0/-0/+3Score on mirror)1 child
I’m away from my desktop right now, but I can get you started. When [even jewish media](https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/02/climate/glyphosate-roundup-retracted-study.html) is admitting that there are problems—and when the rest of the world already bans it for being a carcinogen—that should get people thinking. [This page](https://thetruthaboutcancer.com/glyphosate-dangers/) has its citations at the bottom and is a primer on the topic.
21 hours ago1 point(+0/-0/+1Score on mirror)1 child
@TallestSkil come take a peek at your fanclub.
3/4 posters here (prior to my post) have a posting history consisting entirely of one singular sentence fragment (with no punctuation either) per post. It not even low effort shilling, they are similar enough that it is most likely botting.
You like digging through posting history? Let's look at yours. You show up roughly once a month, from your past 20 posts.. 15% of them mention "tallest_skil".
2) whine when nobody take the bait
3) literally literally the end of the world
Amazing. Say, are you going to link to proof of me being wrong about any specific topic whatsoever? You know, to humiliate me in front of these people?
Why can’t you do it?