“Toxic masculinity” is not as advertised
Micropoisons have drastically reduced male fertility.
Casual observation of fecundity
My family, friends and I have a running contest: Can you spot a woman in late pregnancy anywhere, in any public place? Whether in supermarkets or in large public events, I say they’re not around much anymore. Please prove me wrong. I remember protruding a very obvious - can’t miss it - beach ball in front of me during late pregnancy. Consider that pregnancy generally has a different weight distribution than non-pregnant weight gain, a much more distinctly, even exclusively, forward distribution. But I just don’t see anyone fitting that description anymore. I for one liked to get out for work, walks and errands all through even late 3rd trimester, because walking made me feel better during that time, and other pregnant moms I’ve known over the years often enjoyed the same. So we should be seeing some pregnant women if they are around. But the last time I saw an obviously pregnant woman in the Phoenix area was about a year ago in a supermarket and then again about three months ago. Granted, I don’t spend my days going around looking. But the contrast with the past is stark to this casual observer.
In another era, 3 and 4 decades ago, I traveled through a few continents. I remember getting on buses that hold about 100 or so people, and seeing at least one or two obviously pregnant woman on every bus ride, without fail, marveling at the fecundity. What trains you to notice pregnancy is that, at least in some cultures, people know to offer their bus seat (especially those of us who were seated at the aisle) to a woman in late pregnancy.
Now, we just got back from an event in the Phoenix area the other day, with tens of thousands of people, a home show, and did not see even one pregnant woman. You would think the stereotypical nesting instinct in pregnancy would bring at least a few expectant parents to a home show.
In fairness, if one does see an obviously pregnant woman anywhere, multiply times three (roughly) to assume all three trimesters represented among the people around you.
A similarly casual observation is that protests following the Supreme Court’s Roe v Wade reversal seemed to disperse quickly, possibly as protestors looked around and realized that nobody they knew was getting pregnant anymore. Is abortion becoming a moot topic? Did infertility obviate that blistering controversy that has troubled people at least back to the time of Aristotle?
Where have all the babies gone?
It’s not just me noticing the absence of pregnancies and babies. While state vital statistics are years behind in reporting births, the obstetricians know what’s happening. Here, in this 30-second video, Ob-gyn doctor Kimberly Biss MD notes a 50% decrease in fertility and a 50% increase in miscarriages in her group practice, since the rollout of the COVID vaccines. https://rumble.com/v1o5nc2-post-vax-miscarriage-rates-up-50-fertility-down-50.html Anyone who does not find this alarming has not stopped to think about the magnitude of this change.
In the video below, James Thorp MD, also an obstetrician, talks of tragedies such as miscarriages and fetal malformations in his medical practice since the onset of COVID vaccination. Steve Kirsch interviews Dr. Thorp here:
https://rumble.com/vru732-dr.-james-thorp-on-medical-censorship.html
Dr. Thorp starts to talk about his patients’ experiences around minute 34:00, and then around minute 50 he gets into the VAERS data on pregnancy loss and fetal malformations.
I warned of this risk to fertility way back in February 2021, before peak uptake of COVID vaccines in the US and abroad. https://www.primarydoctor.org/covidvaccine
Unfortunately, I was later proven correct in my further warning of a year ago, that the COVID vaccines likely rival or exceed the 80-90% effectiveness of the "morning-after pill" in ending a pregnancy:
More recent estimates are an 87.5% miscarriage risk from COVID vaccines. Dr. Pierre Kory shows that here:
Population trends
Over the last half century, the world has added about a billion people per 12 year period, roughly. That is,
From 1975 to 1987, we went from 4 billion to 5 billion.
From 1987 to 1999, we went from 5 billion to 6 billion.
From 1999 to 2011, we went from 6 billion to 7 billion.
From 2011 to 2022 or 2023 (projected) we are going from 7 billion to 8 billion. This data is from Our World In Data. https://ourworldindata.org/world-population-growth
Today, the world population is 7,982,000,000, roughly. The UN estimates that the earth will reach 8 billion people next month, in November 2022.
So from these data, which represent net population of births minus deaths, no decrease is apparent yet, and we are still in net growth of births minus deaths. However, the rate of total increase has stabilized, and rate of increase per capita has been declining for the last century. That is, a new one billion per eight billion people is a lower rate of increase per capita than a new one billion per two billion people, as the earth had in 1928. This means that we humans are steadily and continuously less fertile. At least, that was steady until the COVID vaccine rollout. The fertility drop is now likely to be more precipitous.
Reported vital statistics have two and three year lag times in US state databases, but observations of much reduced fertility, such as from the above-cited doctors, are more recent.
Let’s look at some other causes of male infertility.
Here are some of the other pollutants involved in sperm destruction or immobility.
PFAS, aka perfluorinates, aka “forever compounds” are common in carpet, paint, plastics and non-stick cookware. But they are also common in food such as fish and seafood, which account for up to 86% of our dietary exposure. PFAS so potently deplete sperm number and viability, that a man’s mom’s exposure to these chemicals while she carried him in pregnancy can later depress his sperm count permanently. They are called forever chemicals, because the half-life is 35 years in men, and the only known way to eliminate these is either phlebotomy or the drug cholestyramine, neither of which is an overnight fix by any means.
This study from University of Virginia, Impact of environmental toxin exposure on male fertility potential lists many common compounds in daily use, and not known to be especially or strictly avoided by soon-to-be fathers.
Sperm counts have been declining in European men for about fifty years, down by about a third, even prior to the COVID vaccines, as seen in this 2017 study. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28413887/
I once heard a lecture on fecundity by the renowned Greek homeopath George Vithoulkas. His advice to those of us with expectant parents in our medical practices was to ask them to ‘stay clean’ of pesticides and other pollutants for two years prior to conception. This strategy might have worked for those who find themselves infertile today, but, for those who hope to conceive, perhaps it is not too late to begin.
Whatever the term “toxic masculinity” is intended to disparage seems much less of a concern than the toxic chemical assault on the reproductive capacity of masculinity.
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Another topic for another day is the damage to female fertility, by specific injury to human ovaries from the COVID vaccines, as well as from other micropoisons.
It looks like all of the Bill Gates and the WHO’s work in India and Africa testing for the best additive to add to their vaccines to sterilize and kill wasn’t in vain.
Satan hates children.