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How Modern Chemicals May Be Changing Human Biology

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http://www.worldandi.com/public/2001/October/sax.html

 

How Modern Chemicals May Be Changing Human Biology

Leonard Sax, M.D.

 

In ancient times--by which I mean, before 1950--most scholars agreed that women were, as a rule, not quite equal to men. Women were charming but mildly defective. Many (male) writers viewed women as perpetual teenagers, stuck in an awkward place between childhood and adulthood. German philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer, for example, wrote that women are "childish, silly and short-sighted, really nothing more than overgrown children, all their life long. Women are a kind of intermediate stage between the child and the man." 1

Psychologists in that bygone era devoted considerable time and energy to the question of why women couldn't outgrow their childish ways. The Freudians said it was because they were trapped in the pre-Oedipal stage, tortured by penis envy. Followers of Abraham Maslow claimed that women were fearful of self-actualization. Jungians insisted that women were born with a deficiency of imprinted archetypes. Back then, of course, almost all the psychologists were men.

Things are different now. Male psychologists today are so rare that Ilene Philipson--author of On the Shoulders of Women: The Feminization of Psychotherapy--speaks of "the vanishing male therapist as a species soon to be extinct.2 the gender of the modal psychotherapist has changed from male to female, the standard of mental health has changed along with it. Today, Dr. Philipson observes, the badge of emotional maturity is no longer the ability to control or sublimate your feelings but rather the ability to express them. A mature adult nowadays is someone who is comfortable talking about her inner conflicts, someone who values personal relationships above abstract goals, someone who isn't afraid to cry. In other words: a mature adult is a woman.

It is now the men who are thought to be stuck halfway between childhood and adulthood, incapable of articulating their inner selves. Whereas psychologists fifty years ago amused themselves by cataloging women's (supposed) deficiencies, psychologists today devote themselves to demonstrating "the natural superiority of women."3 Psychologists report that women are better able to understand nonverbal communication and are more expressive of emotion.4 ,5Quantitative personality inventories reveal that the average woman is more trusting, nurturing, and outgoing than the average man.6 The average eighth-grade girl has a command of language and writing skills equal to that of the average eleventh-grade boy.7

As the influence of the new psychology permeates our culture, women have understandably begun to wonder whether men are really, well, human. "What if these women are right?" wonders one writer in an article for Marie Claire, a national woman's magazine. "What if it's true that some men don't possess, or at least can't express, nuanced emotions?"8 More than a few contemporary psychologists have come to regard the male of our species as a coarsened, more violent edition of the normal, female, human. Not surprisingly, they have begun to question whether having a man in the house is desirable or even safe.

Eleven years ago, scholar Sara Ruddick expressed her concern about "the extent and variety of the psychological, sexual, and physical battery suffered by women and children of all classes and social groups ... at the hands of fathers, their mothers' male lovers, or male relatives. If putative fathers are absent or perpetually disappearing and actual fathers are controlling or abusive, who needs a father? What mother would want to live with one or wish one on her children?"9 Nancy Polikoff, former counsel to the Women's Legal Defense Fund, said that "it is no tragedy, either on a national scale or in an individual family, for children to be raised without fathers."10

The feminization of psychology manifests itself in myriad ways. Consider child discipline. Seventy years ago, doctors agreed that the best way to discipline your child was to punish the little criminal. ("Spare the rod, spoil the child.") Today, spanking is considered child abuse.11 You're supposed to talk with your kid. Spanking sends all the wrong messages, we are told, and may have stupendously horrible consequences. Psychoanalyst Alice Miller confidently informed us, in her book For Your Own Good, that Adolf Hitler's evil can be traced to the spankings his father inflicted on him in childhood.12

 

THE NEW MEN'S MAGAZINES

 

t isn't only psychology that has undergone a process of feminization over the past fifty years, and it isn't only women whose attitudes have changed. Take a stroll to your neighborhood bookstore or newsstand. You'll find magazines such as Men's Health, MH-18, Men's Fitness, Gear, and others devoted to men's pursuit of a better body, a better self-image. None of them existed

fifteen years ago. The paid circulation of Men's Health has risen from 250,000 to more than 1.5 million in less than ten years.13 Many of the articles in these magazines are reminiscent of those to be found in women's magazines such as Glamour, Mademoiselle, and Cosmopolitan: "The Ten Secrets of Better Sex," "The New Diet Pills--Can They Work For You?" or "Bigger Biceps in Five Minutes a Day." (The women's magazine equivalent might be something like "slimmer thighs in five minutes a day.")

Men didn't use to care so much about their appearance. Psychiatrists Harrison Pope and Katharine Phillips report that in American culture today, "Men of all ages, in unprecedented numbers, are preoccupied with the appearance of their bodies."14 They document that "men's dissatisfaction with body appearance has nearly tripled in less than thirty years--from 15 percent in 1972, to 34 percent in 1985, to 43 percent in 1997."15 Cosmetic plastic surgery, once marketed exclusively to women, has found a rapidly growing male clientele. The number of men undergoing liposuction, for instance, quadrupled between 1990 and 2000.16

 

THE FEMINIZATION OF ENTERTAINMENT AND POLITICS

 

his process of femininization manifests itself, though somewhat differently, when you turn on the TV or watch a movie. Throughout the mid-twentieth century, leading men were, as a rule, infallible: think of Clark Gable in Gone With the Wind, Cary Grant in North by Northwest, or Fred McMurray in My Three Sons. But no longer. In family comedy, the father figure has metamorphosed from the all-knowing, all-wise Robert Young of Father Knows Best to

A mature adult nowadays is someone who is comfortable talking about her inner conflicts, someone who values personal relationships above abstract goals, someone who isn't afraid to cry. In other words: a mature adult is a woman.

the occasional bumbling of Bill Cosby and the consistent stupidity of Homer Simpson. Commercially successful movies now often feature women who are physically aggressive, who dominate or at least upstage the men. This description applies to movies as diverse as Charlie's Angels and Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon. In today's cinema, to paraphrase Garrison Keillor, all the leading women are strong and all the leading men are good-looking.

A transformation of comparable magnitude seems to be under way in the political arena. Military command used to be considered the best qualification for leadership--as it was with Ulysses Grant, Theodore Roosevelt, Charles de Gaulle, and Dwight Eisenhower, to name only a few. Today, the best qualification for leadership may be the ability to listen. The feminine way of seeing the world and its problems is, arguably, becoming the mainstream way.

In 1992, Bill Clinton ran against George Bush p?e for the presidency. Clinton was an acknowledged draft evader. Bush, the incumbent, was a World War II hero who had just led the United States to military success in Operation Desert Storm. Clinton won. In 1996, Clinton was challenged by Bob Dole, another decorated World War II veteran. Once again, the man who had evaded military service defeated the combat veteran. In 2000, Gov. George W. Bush and Sen. John McCain competed for the Republican presidential nomination.

McCain was a genuine war hero whose courageous actions as a prisoner of war in Vietnam had won him well-deserved honors and praise. Bush, on the other hand, was alleged to have used family influence to obtain a position in the Texas National Guard, in order to avoid service in Vietnam. Once again, the man who had never experienced combat defeated the military veteran. Moral of the story: It's all very well to be a war hero, but in our modern, feminized society, being a war hero won't get you elected president. Conversely, being a draft dodger isn't as bad as it used to be.

A number of authors have recognized the increasing feminization of American society. With few exceptions, most of those acknowledging this process have welcomed it.17 As Elinor Lenz and Barbara Myerhoff wrote in their 1985 book The Feminization of America, "The feminizing influence is moving [American society] away from many archaic

ways of thinking and behaving, toward the promise of a saner and more humanistic future.... Feminine culture, with its commitment to creating and protecting life, is our best and brightest hope for overcoming the destructive, life-threatening forces of the nuclear age."18

I think we can all agree on one point: there have been fundamental changes in American culture over the past fifty years, changes that indicate a shift from a male-dominated culture to a feminine or at least an androgynous society. The question is, what's causing this shift? Some might argue that the changes I've described are simply a matter of better education, progressive laws, and two generations of consciousness-raising: an evolution from a patriarchal Dark Ages to a unisex, or feminine, Enlightenment. I'm willing to consider that hypothesis. But before we accept that conclusion, we should ask whether there are any other possibilities.

 

FEMINIZED WILDLIFE

 

e have to make a big jump now, a journey that will begin at the Columbia River in Washington, near the Oregon border. James Nagler, assistant professor of zoology at the University of Idaho, recently noticed something funny about the salmon he observed in the Columbia. Almost all of them were--or appeared to be--female. But when he caught a few and analyzed their DNA, he found that many of the "female" fish actually were male: their chromosomes were XY instead of XX.19

Nagler's findings echo a recent report from England, where government scientists have found some pretty bizarre fish. In two polluted rivers, half the fish are female, and the other half are ... something else. Not female but not male either. The English scientists call these bizarre fish "intersex": their gonads are not quite ovaries, not quite testicles, but some weird thing in between, making neither eggs nor sperm. In both rivers, the intersex fish are found

downstream of sites where treated sewage is discharged into the river. Upstream from the sewer effluent, the incidence of intersex is dramatically lower. The relationship between the concentration of sewer effluent and the incidence of intersex is so close that "the proportion of intersex fish in any sample of fish could perhaps be predicted, using a linear equation, from the average concentration of effluent constituents in the river."20

It's something in the water. Something in the water is causing feminization of male fish.

And it's not just fish. In Lake Apopka, in central Florida, Dr. Louis Guillette and his associates have found male alligators with abnormally small penises; in the blood of these alligators, female hormone levels are abnormally high and male hormone levels abnormally low.21 Male Florida panthers have become infertile; the levels of male sex hormones in their blood are much lower (and the levels of female hormones higher) than those found in panthers in less-polluted environments.22

 

WHAT'S GOING ON?

 

ur modern society generates a number of chemicals that never existed before about fifty years ago. Many of these chemicals, it turns out, mimic the action of female sex hormones called estrogens. Plastics--including a plasticizer called phthalate, used in making flexible plastic for bottles of Coke, Pepsi, Sprite, Evian water, and so forth--are known to have estrogenic effects.23 Many commonly used pesticides have estrogenlike actions on human cells.24 Estrogenic chemicals ooze out of the synthetic lacquer that lines the inside of soup cans.25 These chemicals and others find their way into sewage and enter the rivers and lakes. Hence the effects on fish, alligators, and other wildlife.

 

EFFECTS ON HUMANS?

 

odern chemicals may have a feminizing effect on wildlife. That's certainly cause for concern in its own right. But is there any evidence that a similar process of feminization is occurring in humans?

Answer: there may be. Just like the Florida panther, human males are experiencing a rapid decline in fertility and sperm count. The sperm count of the average American or European man has declined continuously over the past four decades, to the point where today it is

The quaestion is, what's causing this shift? Some might argue that the changes I've described are simply a matter of better education, progressive laws, and two generations of conciousness-raising.

less than 50 percent of what it was forty years ago.26 This downward trend is seen only in industrialized regions of North America and western Europe. Lower sperm counts are being reported in urban Denmark but not in rural Finland, for example.27 Of course, that's precisely the pattern one would expect, if the lower sperm counts are an effect of "modern" materials such as plastic water bottles.

Male infertility, one result of that lower count, is now the single most common cause of infertility in our species.28The rate of infertility itself has quadrupled in the past forty years, from 4 percent in 1965 to 10 percent in 1982 to at least 16 percent today.29

 

WHAT ABOUT GIRLS?

 

o far we've talked mainly about the effect of environmental estrogens on males. What about girls and women? What physiological effects might excess environmental estrogens have on them? Giving estrogens to young girls would, in theory, trigger the onset of puberty at an earlier than expected age. In fact, in the past few years doctors have noticed that girls are beginning puberty earlier than ever before. Just as the environmental-estrogen hypothesis would predict, this phenomenon is seen only in girls, not in boys. Dr. Marcia Herman-Giddens, studying over seventeen thousand American girls, found that this trend to earlier puberty is widespread. "Girls across the United States are developing pubertal characteristics at younger ages than currently used norms," she concluded.30

Rather than labeling all these pubescent eight-year-olds as "abnormal," Dr. Paul Kaplowitz and his associates recently recommended that the earliest age for "normal" onset of puberty simply be redefined as age seven in Caucasian girls and age six in African-American girls.31 Dr. Kaplowitz is trying, valiantly, to define this problem out

Many of these chemicals, it turns out, mimic the action of female sex hormones called estrogens.

of existence. If you insist that normal puberty begins at age six or age seven, then all these eight-year-old girls with well-filled bras suddenly become "normal."

But saying so doesn't make it so. Last year, doctors in Puerto Rico reported that most young girls with premature breast development have toxic levels of phthalates in their blood; those phthalates appear to have seeped out of plastic food and beverage containers. The authors noted that Puerto Rico is a warm island. Plastic containers that become warm are more likely to ooze phthalate molecules into the food or beverages they contain.32 These authors, led by Dr. Ivelisse Col?, reported their findings in Environmental Health Perspectives, the official journal of the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (a branch of the National Institutes of Health). On the cover of the issue in which the report appeared, the editors chose to feature the picture of a young woman drinking water from a plastic bottle.

Premature puberty in girls has become so widespread that it has begun to attract the attention of major media. This topic made the cover of Time magazine on October 30, 2000. Unfortunately, few of these high-profile articles show any understanding of the possible role of environmental estrogens. The Time article barely mentioned the Environmental Health Perspectives study, nor did it link the phenomenon of early puberty in girls with declining sperm counts, intersex fish, or tiny penises in alligators. Instead, it featured a picture of a short boy staring at a taller girl's breasts.

What effect might extra estrogen have on adult women? Many scientists have expressed concern that exposure to excessive environmental estrogens may lead to breast cancer. The rate of breast cancer has risen dramatically over the past fifty years. Today, one in every nine American women can expect to develop breast cancer at some point in her life. But this increase is seen only in industrialized countries,33 where plastics and other products of modern chemistry are widely used. Women born in Third World countries are at substantially lower risk. When they move from a Third World country to the United States, their risk soon increases to that seen in other women living here, clearly demonstrating that the increased risk is an environmental, not a genetic, factor.34

 

CONNECTION?

 

t this point, you may feel that you've been reading two completely disconnected essays: one about the feminization of American culture, and the second about the effects of environmental estrogens. Could there be any connection between the two?

There may be. If human physiology and endocrinology are being affected by environmental estrogens--as suggested by lower sperm counts, increasing infertility, earlier onset of puberty in girls, and rising rates of breast cancer--then there is no reason in principle why human psychology and sexuality should be exempt. If we accept the possibility that environmental estrogens are affecting human physiology and endocrinology, then we must also consider

If human physiology and endocrinology are being affected by environmental estrogens then there is no reason in principle why human psychology and sexuality should be exempt.

the possibility that the feminization of American culture may, conceivably, reflect the influence of environmental estrogens.

The phenomena we have considered show a remarkable synchrony. Many of the cultural trends discussed in the first half of the article began to take shape in the 1950s and '60s, just as plastics and other modern chemicals began to be widely introduced into American life. There are, of course, many difficulties in attempting to measure any correlation between an endocrine variable--such as a decline in sperm counts--and a cultural variable, such as cultural feminization. One of many problems is that no single quantitative variable accurately and reliably measures the degree to which a culture is becoming feminized. However, we can get some feeling for the synchrony of the cultural process with the endocrine process by considering the correlation of the decline in sperm counts with the decline in male college enrollment.

We've already mentioned how sperm counts have declined steadily and continuously in industrialized areas of North America and western Europe since about 1950. Let's use that decline as our endocrine variable. As the cultural variable, let's look at college graduation rates. Since 1950, the proportion of men among college graduates has been steadily declining. In 1950, 70 percent of college graduates were men; today, that number is about 43 percent and falling. Judy Mohraz, president of Goucher College, warned not long ago that if present trends continue, "the last man to graduate from college will receive his baccalaureate in the year 2067.... Daughters not only have leveled the playing field in most college classrooms, but they are exceeding their brothers in school success across the board."35

Plot these two phenomena on the same graph. Use no statistical tricks, no manipulation of the data--simply use best-fit trend lines, plotted on linear coordinates--and the two lines practically coincide. The graph of declining sperm density perfectly parallels the decline in male college graduation rates.

Of course, the correlation between these phenomena--one endocrine, one cultural--doesn't prove that they must derive from the same underlying source. But such a strong correlation certainly provides some evidence that the endocrine phenomenon of declining sperm counts may derive from the same source as the cultural phenomenon of declining male college enrollment (as a percentage of total enrollment).

 

THE DECLINE AND FALL OF THE MALE AMERICAN EMPIRE?

 

have suggested that the feminization of American culture and endocrine phenomena such as declining sperm counts are both manifestations of the effects of environmental estrogens. To the best of my knowledge, no other author has yet made such a suggestion. If this hypothesis is ultimately shown to be at least partly correct, it would not be the first time that items of daily household life contributed to the transformation of a mighty civilization. A number of scientists, most notably toxicologist Jerome Nriagu, have suggested that one factor leading to the decline and fall of the Roman Empire was the lead glaze popular among the Roman aristocracy after about 36 Bowls and dishes were glazed with lead, which was also widely used in household plumbing. (Our word plumbing comes from the Latin plumbum, which means lead.) The neurological symptoms of lead toxicity--mania, difficulty concentrating, and mood swings--were not recognized as manifestations of poisoning. No Roman scientist conducted the necessary controlled experiment: a comparison of families that used lead-glazed pottery with families that did not. The scientific worldview necessary for such an experiment did not exist at the time. It is thought-provoking to consider that something as insignificant as pottery glazing may have brought down the Roman Empire.

Could anything of comparable magnitude be happening right now, in our own culture? Testing the hypothesis I have proposed will be difficult. It is probably not possible to randomize humans to a "modern, plasticized" environment versus a "primitive, no-plastics, no-cans, no-pesticide" environment--and even it were possible, it would not be ethical to do so. (It should be noted, however, that one careful study has already been published demonstrating that men who consumed only organic produce had higher sperm counts than men eating regular, pesticide-treated produce.37 Measures of the degree to which a culture is "feminized" would be controversial, and only seldom would such measures be objectively quantifiable.

Nevertheless, the world around us is changing in ways that have never occurred in the history of our species. It is possible that some of these changes in our culture may reflect the influence of environmental estrogens, an influence whose effects are subtle and incremental. To the extent that human dignity means being in control of one's destiny, we should explore the possibility that our minds and bodies are being affected by environmental estrogens in ways that we do not, as yet, fully understand.

 

============================

 

Unfortunately, what is true for the Americna empire is true for the rest of the Wordl :(

 

Thank you.

Gigu

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Tashi Delek.

 

Every society is divided into women and men, ever since. And every gender need a space to express itself. It is not a privilege of the single gender. Through the history women expressed themselves among the four walls and men in the spaces beyond the four walls. Nowadays, to the both genders are given the same spaces to express. Which could lead to think that a society is getting feminized. There are many wars going on right now, started by men and their testosteron in which people are being injured and dying. There is also 2/3 of women blood donators, whos blood is given to those injured by men. I just wait for someone to say that the ambulance drivers are mainly men, the members of the mountain rescue services and fire brigades are mainly men, the space shuttles launched in the space are assembled from men mainly. You see, we could also talk this way. Which, I don`t like to.

It is the responsibility of each individual in which spaces, in which ways do and will express itself. To have more estrogen or testosteron, it might make someone to be more woman or more man, yet it does not make someone to be more human.

 

Best regards,

 

Simona

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It is not the point. The article is not entering in any bitterness between genders. It talks about chimical changes induced by chimicals we eat, in food and water.

 

The world need men and women. The pesticides are creating a kind of third gender, a body man with a women brain. And a body man which tends to be less and less fertile, less and less man...

 

That is what this article is talking about.

 

Thank you.

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Tashi Delek,

 

Three more interesting links regarding the subject. First one especially interesting for parents of small children http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/4585603.stm (quite shocking to see how completely ignorant we are about side effects of many chemicals in things around us, not to mention multiplied effects of different chemicals, which mix in our environment :(= ). Second link is an inside view from a deputy of the European parliament, who was unable to have children due to chemical disruptors http://www.iht.com/articles/2004/04/14/edevan_ed3_.php

 

Just a few days ago it came out that a sort of cancer, which attacks young people is rapidly growing in Slovenia – also due to usage of pesticides. In Slovene it is called “maligni limfom”, I am not sure about the correct translation :<, perhaps “malign lymphoma”. 300 new patients/year and the number increases for 4% each year :crunch:. Here is a link about it (in Slovene only) http://www.dnevnik.si/clanekb.asp?id=141132 .

 

It is good to know that now it is possible to have a “biopsy” made (like in the story of the deputy) – a test of chemicals in hair, blood and urine. It’s quite expensive (about 150.000 tolars = 625 euros), it can be done in Maribor (for Slovene people). Perhaps now lawyers will finally wake up and start court actions against the state, which allows pesticides and enterprises, who make them :censored: ...

 

Half of the budget of the EU went for subsidies to European farmers even a few years ago :what!:, the African agriculture is still in deep crisis because of this unfair competition ;-} and African people are starving. And what for? So, that vast amounts of pesticides can be poured on our soil…:loco:

 

Best regards,

 

Draftsman

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Tashi Delek.

 

I read somewhere that the best blood of the body is directed to form the elements of reproduction and it is the case for both gender. Women and men are equaly exposed to the polluted environment, yet the consequences are different. Women are getting more and men less fertile. Does this mean that polluted environment makes women to get more good blood or that men`s blood is directed to some other organ in theirs bodies, which maybe seem to them from more value? I also read that among the animals in the case that there are too many beings born, they start to mature later. Are the men those who actually balancing the overpopulation of the human race?

 

All the very best,

 

Simona

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I read somewhere that the best blood of the body is directed to form the elements of reproduction and it is the case for both gender.

I'm sorry, but this is a complete non-sense. What is "good blood"? There is just blood, and it is circulating each minute in the whole body, through the heart.

 

The problem of contamination is connected mainly with the hormonal system, and its direct influence on the creation of the body during the development of the embryo and baby. You can read also this link: here.

 

The mother eat and drink negative elements such as pesticides, this goes in her circulation system, pass through the placenta gate, and infect the embryo, disturbing its normal development.

 

Why boys are more affected then girls? You should read the various article which links are above. In brief, because most pesticides contain an element which is close to female hormons.

 

But it also affect the development of boys after birth, during their whole puberty, as stated here or here

 

But it's not all about pesticides. "Drugs and personal care products that are excreted from or washed off the body naturally end up in the sewage that flows into sewer systems and septic tanks, but where do they go from there? Scientists are beginning to monitor the extent of pharmaceutical and personal care products (PPCPs) in the aquatic environment and their consequences. What they're finding is that, through leaching from septic tanks and escaping intact through sewage treatment processes, some of these substances are ending up back in the drinking water.". The rest here.

 

This is something really serious, even though socities, politicians, and pharmaceutic industries do not emphasis on it at all (because it's their fault mainly). In few decades, it will have terrible consequences, already started now...

 

Thank you.

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Tashi Delek

 

The female and male body are more similar than one would expect. To a large degree, the differences arise from the different mode of action of our sexual hormones. These hormones bind snugly onto certain receptors in our cells by which they instruct the cells what to produce. Often we compare the hormone-receptor relationship to the key and the keyhole. In the same way one key only suits one keyhole, in the same way only one molecule (the hormone) can stimulate one specific receptor.

 

But is it really so? Not quite. Sometimes a similar key (or a needle, a paperclip, a hairpin) can do the job. In the same way a molecule that mimics the action of the hormone can also bring about the same effect. The article above talks about phthalates, certain pesticides and other molecules from our daily life that have this effect. When they bind to the receptor, they trigger a body response that has no reason to occur. Phthalates, particularly, may mimic the function of the female sexual hormone resulting in man acquiring female characteristics and girls getting their period at an earlier age than normal.

 

Disclaimer: I never used a needle, a paperclip or a hairpin for unlawful deeds.

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The female and male body are more similar than one would expect. To a large degree, the differences arise from the different mode of action of our sexual hormones.

Which is a huge difference! As under the influence of these hormones, the brain itself will develop in a way or in an other, and consequently our behaviour will also be affected.

And we already can see a large difference in our societies since few decades: we have less and less "man", and more and more "boys". The "boy" behaviour is getting dominant in our "civilised" societies, probably more exposed to all kind of intoxicants.

"Boy behaviour" being psychologically more 'apathic', less inner impulses, softer, and physically less body hairs and beard, fatter, ...

A kind of third gender: a male body with female attitudes, unable to procreate properly... (00)

 

Thank you.

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Tashi Delek.

 

I am a woman. It is just a role, which is playing, it is the consciousness, which is conscious of it as a woman. Why I am a woman and not a man or the third gender in this life? It is something that my consciousness have to deal with. And what I have to deal with, it was my consciousness that revealed, when I was ready for it.

Everyone is what is ready for. It reminds me on one of the Marcus Aurelius sayings: "Tell yourself today, that you`ll meet a fool, an envious person and an ungrateful one. Tell yourself too that they don`t know any better."

 

Best regards,

 

Simona

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Tashi Delek,

 

I am not a chemist and don't really have the proper knowledge about the subject. But I happen to know someone, who does and who deals with the subject for years. He claims that we have to differentiate between 3 different consequences of the chemicals on humans.

 

First, the damage done to embryos and children during their development in the process described by Jigme. This is probably irreversible (speaking on the scientific not karmic level :wink: )

 

Second, there are adults, who are already developed and can get cancer or some disease because of the exposure.

 

Third and most important, there is genetic damage. Here I will surely make some mistakes in the description, since I forgot a bit, but the main point remains the same. Human body can fight against genetic damage, with mutations etc. (dominant v. recessive genes), but this defence is just temporary and cannot sustain in the long term. So, it has been established by experiments that in 5 generations, genetic damage shows (one generation being approximately 30 years). 4 generations will have hormonal, health etc. problems, but the fifth will be completely degenerated, full of cripples etc. This is theory, in practice everything could be faster.

 

One more thing: in Slovenia it is possible to buy pesticides regardless of the m2 of land and what one grows on it. So, in principle you can buy 1000 hl of pesticides and pour them in your own back garden. And we all know, how farmers think: better a bit more, to make sure that it does the job. Pesticides are of course like bio-chemical weapons from the point of view of all of the animals, which happen to be in the field at the time of spraying. And sooner or later they penetrate through the soil and into the water...

 

Best regards,

 

Draftsman

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Tashi Delek,

 

Are we living in a perfect world nowadays?? I am very sad to say it, but, no... Nothings permanent, everything changes, even men and women, as evolution has showed us... So maybe, thanks to those chemicals and their effect on the human body, human beings of this earth will be going towards a more sensitive world, less ruled by testosterone, geopolitics and strategies for world domination, cash, sports cars, cigars and machine guns (we can regroup all these into one single category : very profound ignorance), maybe it will be a world with less wars, a softer world, less harsh, with less ego, much less violent, where people will be more sensitive and caring towards one another, like women can be, because we all know women don't make wars but men do, right? Stupid men! Always trying to show off and have the last word and impose their views and occupy as much territory as possible... There, that should cool'em down... So maybe that won't be so bad after all! If that's how it's going to be then I say, "let it be"...

 

Regards,

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Tashi Delek.

 

Stupid men!

 

Men are not stupid. :wink: It is just that the things don`t come through as they want. The same case with the women. Here is one example. When Dwight Eisenhower was born, his mother decided to give him a name that could not be shorten (Americans have the obsession to shorten the names) and she invented a name Dwight. Anyway, the society managed to shorten it into Ike.

We wanted that things run as we imagined in order to be what we are, to get to used what we are. And each time we might think we succeeded in that, we find out, that we fail and that there is something more to get used to it, as ourselves. It is just that we are getting used to be alive.

 

Best regards,

 

Simona

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Tashi Delek,

 

"Unborn children are being exposed in the womb to potentially harmful man-made chemicals, according to new research commissioned by WWF and Greenpeace Netherlands.

 

Babies feeding through the umbilical cord are exposed to toxic chemicals from products like vinyl plastics, cleaning products, electronics and perfumes. ... The chemicals in question are contained in countless items ranging from food tins and electrical goods to pesticides, deodorants, and toothpastes.” More about it here.

 

And more about the attempts to water down REACH, the new EU chemical legislation, You can find here (4th of October will be an important day).

 

Best regards,

 

Draftsman

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Tashi Delek,

 

At this web page here you can sign a petition against chemical contamination and send a prepared (but ready to be modified) email to the president of the EU commission Barroso and two more EU commissioners, urging them to enforce a strong chemicals legislation, not weakened by the influence of the industry...

 

An interesting article, comparing the level and spectre of various chemicals in the blood of different generations (grandparents, parents, children) can be found here.

 

Just a sneak preview:

Results from WWF's first European-wide family bloodtesting survey released today found a total of 73 man-made hazardous chemicals in the blood of 13 families (grandmothers, mothers and children) from 12 European countries.

 

The highest number of chemicals was detected in the grandmothers' generation (63). However, the younger generation had more chemicals in their blood (59) than their mothers (49), and some chemicals were found at their highest levels in the children.

 

Best regrads,

 

Draftsman

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Tashi Delek,

 

An interesting news about the chemicals found in new cars is available here.

 

Zanimivo novica o kemikalijah, ki se nahajajo v novih avtomobilih je mo? najti tukaj.

 

Best regards, lep pozdrav,

 

Draftsman

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