• Wilco@lemmy.zip
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    7 hours ago

    Boomers had/have microplastics and lead poisoning. This is not a conspiracy, it is just a fact.

  • 🇰 🌀 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 🇮 @pawb.social
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    12 hours ago

    Except that microplastics have been a major problematic thing since basically plastic become a popular thing, we just didn’t know it yet back then. It’s not like millenials invented plastic or popularized its use.

  • SonOfAntenora
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    12 hours ago

    Boomers also have them, or do you think they intentionally target millennials?

  • Scott_of_the_Arctic
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    13 hours ago

    My dad’s car ran on 4 star right up until the mid 90s. I was exposed to plenty lead in my formative years as well as micro plastics.

  • KarlHungus42
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    14 hours ago

    Luckily, for the younger generations, we’ll probably just get cancer instead of becoming massive malleable assholes

  • morto@piefed.social
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    15 hours ago

    Everyone has microplastics, even newborn babies, and we have no sign of decrease in its use.

    • Aitolda
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      13 hours ago

      We must become one with the plastic. It’s the only way.

  • starlinguk
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    19 hours ago

    The pipes in the US still contain plenty of lead. Also, Covid brain damage. Tons of it.

    • blujan@sopuli.xyz
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      16 hours ago

      Most lead intoxication in boomers comes from leaded gasoline, lead in other presentations is less bio-available

    • bean
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      8 hours ago

      Right? Haha 😂 Oh did we suddenly clean up the entire Earth from free roaming microplastics?

    • make -j8
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      23 hours ago

      why the alpabet suddenly changes after Z? it should either be “omega & alpha” or “z & a”

      • Fedegenerate@lemmynsfw.com
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        22 hours ago

        They’re just place holders until the generation gets a shared experience to refer to. Millennials saw the millennium. Boomers were products of the baby boom but they also saw their economy boom. Gen X are missing, their letter was fitting.

        My prediction is one of them will become gen algorithm, as they never knew a time when their media wasn’t decided for them. Maybe, gen android, few of them know how to use a file system after Chromebooks became ubiquitous. Or they’ll be the second greatest generation due to ww3. This stuff is entirely unpredictable.

        • CheeseNoodle
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          21 hours ago

          What name does GenZ get? Born just in time to be power users, born too late to have any power to stop the enshitification. Same non-existent economic prospects as GenX.

          • pleasestopasking@reddthat.comOP
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            17 hours ago

            They really aren’t power users though. Tech is a) generally more reliable and b) so locked-down that so many young people never learned how to troubleshoot

          • Fedegenerate@lemmynsfw.com
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            13 hours ago

            I dunno, the second silent generation? Born into hard times, don’t know any better. Defined by their fiscally conservative ways and “none of my business” outlook?

            They haven’t been too silent though, and more power to 'em. The un-silent generation? Seems a bit disrespectful to riff off of their great/grandparents though.

        • WhyJiffie@sh.itjust.works
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          22 hours ago

          Boomers were products of the baby boom but they also saw their economy boom.

          I though boomers were the producers of the baby boom

  • Iceman
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    22 hours ago

    I wonder what our neurosises will be.

  • Fleur_@aussie.zone
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    1 day ago

    Honestly I don’t think we’re socially responsible enough to end something like lead poisoning these days.

    • etherphon@midwest.social
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      23 hours ago

      Imagine trying to stop the hole in the ozone today. We’d have people spraying CFCs in the air just to spite the effort.

      • MrMcGasion
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        20 hours ago

        As someone just old enough to remember, we did have that with CFCs. Might not have been super mainstream, and nobody who would have done it out of spite really had the disposable income to actually do it.

        I grew up in a Fundamentalist Christian “cult” and I remember the adults around me “joking” about it all the time. I remember a Missionary to northern Canada visiting our church (in rural America) to try to raise support talking about the temperatures and joking that it’s so cold that he wanted to stand outside with an aerosol can in each hand to try to bring on some global warming, and that getting a laugh from the congregation. You might think that maybe it was a “harmless” joke that maybe as a child I didn’t pick up on the sarcasm, but there were absolutely adults there who fully believed that there was nothing humans could do to damage the earth, because God takes care of it. “And how dare the government and these evolutionists try to tell us how to live.”

    • Aitolda
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      13 hours ago

      If it was more in the zeitgeist, kids would be huffing it on tiktok.

    • rem26_art@fedia.io
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      1 day ago

      for the past few months ive started to think we’re like a couple years away from putting lead back in the gasoline

      • bigfondue
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        5 hours ago

        Leaded gas is still used in small airplanes with internal combustion engines. If you live near a General Aviation airport you are being showered in lead so some rich guy can play pilot.

      • Coelacanth@feddit.nu
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        23 hours ago

        Trump deregulating gas and paint to put lead back in both would be so unsurprising it won’t even garner a reaction from me.

    • 🔍🦘🛎
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      17 hours ago

      There’s actually a lot of work going into documenting and replacing lead service lines in the US. EPA required every state to make sure every waterworks submitted an inventory by last October, with grant money through the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law to pay for it.

      • visikde@lemmings.world
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        12 hours ago

        Is plastic really better? PVC, ABS,polyethylene and the rest get brittle after some time depending on conditions. All the degradation byproducts are in the water

  • reddig33
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    1 day ago

    Millennials? More like GenX. We’ve been eating out of microwaved tupperware since the sixties.

      • idiomaddict
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        1 day ago

        The worst part: postpartum women have lower levels of microplastics than other adults.

        • Headofthebored
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          7 hours ago

          I was reading somewhere you can lower the level of PFAS in your blood by donating it.

        • dickalan
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          21 hours ago

          So you’re saying the baby took some of the plastic out of them, that’s horribly depressing at least they got 10 to 15 point IQ boost in return

          • silasmariner@programming.dev
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            20 hours ago

            Might be that. Although your body goes into absolute overdrive during pregnancy, and it’s not beyond the realms of possibility that some of the immune system reactions that kick in manage to eject some level of plastic microparticulates

            • dickalan
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              19 hours ago

              Seems Like something people should be definitely looking into to find out why, with the state of science in America It’s probably not going to be here

              • Alaik@lemmy.zip
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                12 hours ago

                Most likely its the same reason blood donation lowers microplastic levels in blood. Production of new cells that aren’t tainted with it. A woman’s blood volume increases by 40% during pregnancy. Of course ill freely admit thats just a hypothesis and you’re probably right, there would be benefit into studying it.

  • RonnieB
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    1 day ago

    Nah, because every future generation will have it too.

  • roofuskit
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    1 day ago

    Microplastics cause neurological damage and anti social violent behavior?

    • pleasestopasking@reddthat.comOP
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      1 day ago

      We don’t know about the longer term consequences yet, just like we didn’t about lead.

      Not saying it’s a definite but I wouldn’t be surprised.

      • MotoAsh
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        1 day ago

        No, people knew lead was poisonous even back near Roman days. Though just like how humans constantly do stupid things for some benefit, they kept using it as a sweetener for ages.

        Also mercury in relation to, “as mad as a hatter”. It’s just mercury was very good for the job.

        • CommanderCloon@lemmy.ml
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          22 hours ago

          To play devil’s advocate, we always knew lead was toxic, but we didn’t know the only healthy dose was 0

          • MotoAsh
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            12 hours ago

            Natural in no way what so ever should imply more healthy. Especially in the context of lead and mercury.

            In a similar vein, asbestos is “all natural”, especially compared to fiber glass and foam, but it’s still unhealthy as fuck.

              • MotoAsh
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                12 hours ago

                It’s existed long enough that serious effects would’ve been obvious by now. Multiple generations have already passed. Multiple. It is already clearly not as serious as lead or mercury regardless of what effects are found.

      • chunes
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        21 hours ago

        Plastic has been around for 80 years. Shouldn’t we know something by now

        • MotoAsh
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          12 hours ago

          If it was going to be as bad as fearmongers want it to be, absolutely.

      • Auli@lemmy.ca
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        1 day ago

        But we know plastic is inert and we knew about lead.

    • ChonkyOwlbear
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      1 day ago

      We are just beginning to understand how much the chemical Imbalances that lead to depression, anxiety, and other mental health disorders originate in the digestive tract and how microplastics from food may disrupt the processing of these chemicals.

    • supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz
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      1 day ago

      I don’t think the impacts of microplastics are quite as catastrophic, they can’t be or we would already know.

      Which isn’t to say they aren’t bad just damn lead is realllly bad.

      • piecat
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        1 day ago

        The concentration of them is rising exponentially, that’s the part that terrifies me.

        It’s possible we just haven’t crossed a threshold yet.

    • Carvex
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      1 day ago

      My non-professional guess is that microplastics will eventually sterilize us by disrupting our sperm’s ability to function properly. Only the wealthy can afford the medical procedures to bypass this.

      • MalReynolds@slrpnk.net
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        19 hours ago

        'Twould be sweet irony and a blessing for the earth.

        Although the best method for removing it I’ve found is donating plasma (PFAs down 30% in 6 months of regular donation, the hope is nanoplastics are also removed…) so it might be the poors (in USA) and generous that get to have kids, so that’s nice…

      • bear@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        1 day ago

        Maybe kids will need to be carefully sheltered from plastics until they are old enough to freeze their sperm.

      • Kühlschrank
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        1 day ago

        It’ll end up blocking vital neurotransmitters leaving us zombified and giving us an insatiable craving for brains