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BPAs in plastics and drinking water are a concern, but printed receipts are the most enriched source. Online research about phthalates is important, referencing Dr. Shana Swan's website. Phthalates, according to NIH-funded research, can dramatically alter male fertility if exposure occurs before birth, impacting sperm and testosterone. Androgens like DHT and testosterone converted to estrogen play a powerful role in masculinizing the brain and body during puberty.

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Pesticides can increase aromatase, the enzyme converting testosterone to estrogen. Atrazine, banned in Europe, is sprayed in the US at 70 million pounds per year. Atrazine increases aromatase, which converts testosterone to estrogen. The US buys this chemical from countries like China and Germany. 70 million pounds of this chemical are spread on US food, which upregulates aromatase and converts testosterone to estrogen.

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Research shows that almost every major ocean and waterway is dangerously polluted. This pollution is causing issues like delayed puberty and weakened immune systems in young men due to high levels of estrogens in our food supply. The chemicals used in farming, particularly pesticides, are a major source of these estrogens. There are three primary classes of pesticides: neurogenic, which attack the nervous system and are derived from pesticides used in biological warfare; estrogenic, which disrupt the reproductive cycle of insects by elevating their estrogen levels; and glyphosate, also known as Roundup, which kills bacteria and microlife wherever it is sprayed, including the microbiome.

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Atrazine in water can feminize frogs in a lab. 10% of male frogs become fully viable females. This chemical may affect humans too.

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Speaker 0 expresses a fear that we are on the cusp of not being able to fall pregnant naturally, describing it as absolutely terrifying and noting that there has been something extra in the last couple of years contributing to this trend. Speaker 1 adds that probably everyone knows somebody now who has had difficulty conceiving, underscoring the pervasiveness of infertility concerns in society. Speaker 2 makes a striking claim about male physiology, stating that “The average 21 year old man has a testosterone level that's lower than what a World War two veteran would have in his sixties.” This line is presented as a factual observation within the discussion. Speaker 1 attributes the broader infertility and health decline to “an explosion of chronic diseases.” The speaker suggests that one can only assume there’s “a brilliant business model involved in making people sick and driving them to their doctors and putting them on medications for life.” The assertion continues that all these things are having a negative impact, and that there isn’t more done about it. The speaker advocates for simpler and natural methods that people can be trained in, implying that these approaches could address fertility and health issues more effectively than current systems. Speaker 0 then contends that if alternative methods to fall pregnant are offered, such as IVF, there is a lot of profit to be made with that, indicating a belief that IVF represents a lucrative avenue within the fertility industry. Speaker 1 concludes by proposing that the discussion “has to start with question everything,” encouraging a mindset of inquiry about conventional explanations, treatments, and the broader system. Overall, the conversation centers on concern about rising infertility and declining male testosterone, the idea that chronic diseases and a perceived profit-driven medical-industrial complex contribute to these problems, the suggestion of pursuing simpler and natural methods as alternatives to conventional treatments like IVF, and a closing call to adopt a mindset of questioning established narratives.

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Testosterone levels are half of what they were in middle-aged men in the 1940s, and women's levels are also lower. The cause is estrogenics, or hormone disruptors, which fit hormone receptors but don't function like real hormones, effectively blocking them. These estrogenics are pervasive and unavoidable, found in drinking water, fragrances, food, weed killers, soaps, sunscreens, and plastics. They allegedly cause weight gain, illness, disinterest in sex, and infertility. The speaker advises viewers to eliminate these estrogenics and subscribe for more information.

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Body fat reduces testosterone levels because testes-produced testosterone must be transported to receptor sites. Body fat converts testosterone into estrogen and disrupts testosterone transportation. Therefore, being fat turns men into women. Improving physiology improves psychology.

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Drinking out of plastics containing BPA, which is a chemical known as an EDC. EDC stands for endocrine disrupting chemical. When they make the plastic, it's in there. It leaches into whatever you're drinking. You drink it, and your testosterone level plummets. Guys, if you wanna be healthier, limit the beer and also make sure you're drinking out of metal or glass.

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The US population has lower testosterone than previous generations due to obesity, poor sleep, endocrine disruptors, blue lights, and a departure from natural environments and robust training. Fertility levels have also decreased. A long-held belief that testosterone replacement therapy causes prostate cancer is not true. This idea remained unchallenged for decades until andrology experts like Abe Morganteller and Doctor Mohay Kara studied it. Low testosterone levels may worsen certain cancers, suggesting potential protective effects from testosterone. While the effect may depend on the type of cancer and other factors, testosterone replacement does not cause cancer and can be protective.

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Atrazine, a chemical found in our water supply, has the ability to feminize frogs. When atrazine is added to a tank of frogs in a lab, all the frogs become feminized. This means that around 10% of male frogs can transform into fully functional females capable of producing viable eggs. The impact of atrazine on frogs suggests that it may have similar effects on other organisms.

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Being fat destroys your testosterone levels. Your testes produce testosterone and that testosterone needs to then be transported around the body to receptor sites just like this. It turns out that body fat converts testosterone into estrogen, and it disrupt the testosterone transportation process. In other words, being fat turns men into women. So next time you hear someone say that you should feel good no matter what body composition you're in, you gotta take that with a bit of a grain of salt because physiology is physiology. And if you improve your physiology, you will also improve your psychology.

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Turning a male into a female requires three times less than the acceptable amount in our drinking water.

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In twenty years, the entire male population could be impotent and infertile if the current path is not changed. Three massive longitudinal studies in the US and Europe show a drop in testosterone. A 45-year-old man today has half the free testosterone level of a 45-year-old man twenty years ago. Testosterone levels continue to drop about 1% every year.

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Conservatives had more children, according to studies from 2002/2003, and twenty years later, there are more conservative people than liberal people as a result. Irrespective of that, among Gen Z, there's been a rightward ideological shift among men, which has to do with contemporary politics, movies, games, and culture. Men feel that they were targeted unfairly. There is a lot of toxicity in being maleness. Boys are going to be more rambunctious in school, harder to discipline, and have more excess energy. Maleness itself was on trial.

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Pesticides can increase aromatase, the enzyme converting testosterone to estrogen. Atrazine, banned in Europe, is sprayed in the US at 70 million pounds per year. Atrazine increases aromatase, which converts testosterone to estrogen. The US buys this chemical from countries like China and Germany. 70 million pounds of this chemical are spread on US food, which upregulates aromatase and converts testosterone to estrogen.

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"Plastics, personal care products, sunscreens, food containers, pesticides, and even many plant based health foods like soy and flax seeds all contain chemicals that act as potent endocrine disruptors in the body, lowering your testosterone levels and increasing your estrogen levels unnaturally." "Pervasiveness of endocrine disrupting chemicals in our modern society has become rampant and disturbing." "For example, pesticides sprayed on our food supply have all been known to cause chemical castration." "In this study, the researchers tested 37 widely used pest icides to see if any of them had any anti androgenic effects in vivo." "Out of the 37 tested chemicals, 30 were shown to be anti androgenic."

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atrazine. What is atrazine? It's in the water. It's a pesticide. They took atrazine, and they put it in a tank with 40 frogs. They put below the exposure levels that EPA considers acceptable to humans. They're all male frogs, and 30 of those frogs were chemically castrated. Four of them turned into females and produced fertile eggs. Here it is. Report toxic herbicide found in many Texans drinking water. That's from February. And we're subjecting our children to exposure to that every day. What does this do to sexual development in children? We know what it does to frogs. It's terrifying.

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Of the 80,000 chemicals in use, 85% have never been tested for their impact on the human body. Coating the northern hemisphere with these chemicals can affect the development of offspring and lead to widespread dysfunction among the human population. The regulatory system is broken, and our choice of chemicals is permanently altering the sexual development of male children. The idea of global warming took a long time to be accepted, and there are still deniers. However, when it comes to our own kids and grandchildren, it becomes a different story. It's difficult to win a case against a billion-dollar chemical company with FDA-approved products. This is part of social control and engineering, like eugenics.

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Most household kitchen taps release estrogen from birth control pills and natural hormones excreted by people. Water treatment plants can't remove these pharmaceutical estrogens, which end up in bodies of water worldwide. Filtering water with activated charcoal or reverse osmosis systems can help reduce estrogen exposure. Different regions have varying levels of estrogen in water, but any amount can contribute to overall estrogenic exposure.

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"So I know this was this made the press recently or over the last year because of declining testosterone rates." "Number one, we're checking testosterone levels at a younger age and more commonly." "So the frequency of testosterone testing has gone up." "Number two, I think our lifestyle as we become more sedentary, we become more you know office jobs, desk jobs, spending more time indoors, not doing the things that are important to normalizing testosterone levels, getting outside vitamin D levels, getting good sleep." "I think with the constant blue lights everywhere with phones and TVs, Netflix, everyone's you know, you're constantly being stimulated." "Our sleep is getting disrupted as a result of it." "Food. We're eating more and more processed foods just because of the ease and convenience of of things." "So, maintaining normal testosterone levels aren't difficult, but our current lifestyle just it doesn't promote normal healthy testosterone levels."

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Atrazine, found in 63% of US water, may be linked to gender dysphoria. Studies show male frogs exposed to atrazine became chemically castrated or turned female. Endocrine disruptors like PCBs can affect sexual development. It's not a conspiracy theory, but a well-documented concern. Research on atrazine's impact on gender dysphoria is needed.

American Alchemy

Why American Sperm Count Dropped 41% in 50 years
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Before COVID, there was another virus—the delusional optimism virus. Its vectors were voices like Stephen Pinker and Bill Gates who say things are getting better. Western society is sick: wealth disparity is at an all-time high, younger generations are assetless, and fertility is below replacement at 1.78. Male sperm count is 59% of the 1970s level, and testosterone has fallen about 1% per year; Dr. Shauna Swan links this to phthalates and pesticides, beginning in early gestation. Phthalates are plasticizers found in soaps, perfumes, packaging, and pharmaceuticals. They are linked to developmental problems, including lower IQ. In humans, phthalate exposure during early pregnancy can affect fetal testosterone, contributing to the so-called phthalate syndrome: shorter anogenital distance, smaller penises, and more undescended testicles. A 2011 study notes average sperm count at 47 million per milliliter, with 40 million as the fertility baseline. Regulation differs between regions: the EU bans about 1,100 chemicals from personal care products, while the US bans far fewer. The discussion includes lifestyle choices—organic foods, less processed, and avoiding microwaving in plastic—and the potential of egg or sperm freezing, and emerging ideas like gamete technologies and assisted reproduction to counter declining fertility.

Modern Wisdom

Why Men’s Testosterone Levels Are Plummeting - Dr Shanna Swan
Guests: Dr Shanna Swan
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Dr. Shanna Swan discusses the concerning trends in testosterone levels and sperm counts in men, indicating a potential decline in testosterone, particularly among young men. While there is substantial data on sperm count, testosterone levels have not been studied as extensively. The rise in testosterone use among young men raises questions about whether it's due to low testosterone symptoms or societal pressures related to body image. Testosterone is critical for male development, influencing everything from fetal genital differentiation to libido in adulthood. Swan highlights the impact of endocrine disruptors like phthalates, which lower testosterone levels in both men and women, potentially affecting sexual satisfaction and fertility rates. She notes a global decline in fertility rates, particularly in East Asia, and discusses social phenomena like "rent a family" and self-marriage as indicators of reduced libido. Swan emphasizes the role of lifestyle factors, such as diet, stress, and exposure to chemicals, in fertility and hormone levels. She also points out the importance of prenatal exposure to chemicals, which can lead to developmental issues in offspring. The conversation touches on the future of fertility, predicting increased reliance on artificial reproductive technologies due to declining sperm counts and changing societal desires regarding relationships and reproduction. Swan advocates for awareness and action against harmful chemicals affecting reproductive health.

Philion

The End of Testosterone
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Testosterone, the male sex hormone, has become one of the most controversial and talked about topics on social media. The piece starts off with a weird Eastern belief about vanishing masculinity known as Koro, which translates to the retraction of a turtle's head. It then questions Western manhood in the era of science. a 2007 study published in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism on over 1500 men concluded that testosterone had been declining roughly 1% per year for the previous 50 years. 'The youngest man was 45 years old and the oldest was 79.' The cross-sectional design and Massachusetts sample are criticized as weak evidence. On the counter-evidence side, a Guardian (2019) piece says there's 'little solid evidence of a testosterone decline in men,' and The New York Times (2019) asks, 'Is Low Testosterone Hurting Your Libido, or Are You Just Aging?' A JAMA Internal Medicine (2013) study found that 'half the men taking prescription testosterone aren't even tea deficient.' Testosterone functions as a comprehensive biomarker of health, with decreasing levels potentially indicating health issues from aging to environmental exposure. A 2022 Baylor–UTSA study linked lower T to higher mortality, and Shanna Swan’s Countdown notes that 'sperm counts in the West had fallen by an astonishing 59% between 1973 and 2011.'

Mind Pump Show

Improve Your Drive, Confidence, & Build Muscle By Focusing On This | Mind Pump 2123
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The hosts emphasize the importance of checking testosterone levels, noting a consistent decline in testosterone and fertility rates over the past five decades. They highlight that modern men have half the sperm count of their grandfathers, linking low testosterone to various health issues, including decreased drive, confidence, and cognitive function. The discussion touches on potential causes for this decline, including lifestyle factors and exposure to chemicals, particularly estrogenic substances like atrazine, which is banned in Europe but still used in the U.S. The hosts debate the top factors affecting testosterone levels, with chemicals and sleep being prominent. They agree that strength training significantly boosts testosterone levels and enhances the effectiveness of existing testosterone in the body. They encourage listeners to optimize their testosterone through lifestyle changes, including diet and exercise. A recent study is discussed, which suggests that testosterone administration may influence political views, particularly among those with moderate beliefs. The hosts caution against politicizing such findings, emphasizing that testosterone is linked to confidence and empowerment, which can affect decision-making. The conversation shifts to broader societal issues, including the manipulation of public health narratives and the promotion of unhealthy lifestyles. They argue that a healthy, fit individual is less likely to be manipulated and more resilient against societal pressures. The hosts conclude that the removal of unifying belief systems, such as spirituality, has contributed to societal fragmentation and confusion, leading to a culture that often promotes unhealthy behaviors.
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