Dr Joe Schwarcz discusses toxic clothing

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  • Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024

Комментарии • 13

  • @mytrickpeony
    @mytrickpeony 2 месяца назад +4

    Great video with lots of interesting information!
    People usually forget to mention the CUMULATIVE effect of toxic chemicals, which makes everything more complicated. If you wear mostly clothes with PFAS right against your skin such as leggings and you sweat in them, AND if you also cook mostly in non stick pans, AND if you use a yoga mat that picks up PFAS from your carpet, AND if you drink tap water that contains PFAS, well… even if it’s a small amount of toxic chemicals for each product it can add up to dangerous levels that can trigger health issues.
    Another concern is the COCKTAIL effect, when many different toxic chemicals create strange sets of symptoms and illnesses when they accumulate in a person’s body.
    This is very difficult to study because every person reacts differently and scientists don’t know how this mix of chemicals is truly affecting our body. Since there are endless possibilities regarding the type of chemicals, their toxicity level, their concentration and the way they interact with other chemicals in our blood, organs etc… there really is no way to study the effects all these toxic chemicals have on our body.
    The future doesn’t look good though, as we use more and more plastics including silicone cooking molds and a million other products that are supposed to make our life easier.
    People don’t realize that they are ingesting very unhealthy particles and feeding them to their kids too 😢
    If we could just wake up and go back to simpler products made of healthier materials like linen for our clothes, and cast iron or glass for our cooking molds, now that would be a good start.
    When people want to exercise they go play soccer or softball on an athletic field covered with Astroturf filled with crumb rubber, which is made of tiny pieces of old car tires 🤮
    Nobody seems concerned about the heavy metals and other toxic chemicals found in this recycled rubber, it’s really puzzling.
    Then they take their kids to a playground that has a soft ground cover made of rubber pellets glued together aka PIP (“Pour In Place” rubber flooring) which is also from old car tires. Nobody seems worried about their kids crawling all over this type of flooring with bare hands then eating a snack without washing or even wiping their hands to avoid ingesting too much rubber dust, no problem!
    Only a few counties in the US have banned these rubber pellets but most towns are now installing a PIP rubber flooring in their kids playgrounds and Astroturf on their athletic fields.
    No wonder kids who play several times a week on those fields have such a high rate of leukemia or other cancers, especially the goalies who are in contact with the toxic rubber pellets…
    Our homes are filled with toxic stuff, and people have no problem putting pieces of furniture like IKEA in their kids room, not realizing that the glue in these particle boards releases toxic airborne formaldehyde particles that are very unhealthy, especially for youngsters.
    Even smart people are still heating up their food in a microwave in a plastic container or worse in a cardboard box from the restaurant, not realizing that there are PFAS in the lining of the box.
    I have a friend who’s all about clean living, healthy lifestyle etc… but she has no problem putting her kids’ plastic lunch boxes in the dishwasher everyday, it’s disheartening…She doesn’t want to hear the fact that BPAs and other toxic chemicals get released because of the heat in there 🙄
    I have another friend who’s an environmentalist but she mostly wears synthetic fabrics and doesn’t care about the tiny pieces of nylon or polyester that her clothes shed during each wash in her machine. Where does she think all these microplastics end up if not in the ocean?
    It’s really sad because we now have access to lots of information about this stuff online but most people don’t want to change their bad, lazy habits.
    I’m afraid the force of inertia is far too great, and people love their stretchy clothes, silicone cooking molds, cheap furniture and stain resistant sofas way too much to give them up.
    How can we remain hopeful when even smart people don’t want to hear the truth about toxic chemicals in their clothes, homes, playgrounds etc…?

  • @CamElRodriguezSnrJnrIII
    @CamElRodriguezSnrJnrIII 7 месяцев назад +2

    Nahhhh it would be more to do with the washing detergent they are using to wash those jeans

  • @Zeeboklown
    @Zeeboklown Год назад +3

    Yeah I'm sorry but when it's summer time I'm wearing shorts no matter what. .you try wearing pants in 112 weather

    • @helenalaney
      @helenalaney 3 месяца назад +2

      There are linen and organic cotton shorts

    • @helenalaney
      @helenalaney 3 месяца назад

      My son's name is Daniel 🤍🫶🏼great name

  • @strongwomanguidance5322
    @strongwomanguidance5322 Год назад +9

    My first thought when I opened the video was that your rubber ducky collection would be out gassing phthalates. I'm sensitive to smells and I would be really aware of the volatile compounds in the room.

  • @stormrunner0029
    @stormrunner0029 Год назад +9

    And then, as a society, we have been conditioned to 5-10 scents which our brains register as a “clean” scent. They are all produced with chemicals.
    When you smell one of those smells, you know its clean, no matter how dirty it is. LOL.

  • @helifynoe9930
    @helifynoe9930 Год назад +7

    What is freaking me out at the moment, is my new STG keyboard that came with the computer I had purchased. It stinks of a horrible burning like smell. I experimented with it a bit, and found that the emission of the nasty smell stops if the plastic material that it is composed of is brought down to 50 F (10 C), or less. I also dismantled it and tossed all of the plastic parts into the bathtub with very hot water, in an attempt to bleed some of the toxins out of the plastic. I left it in hot water for quite some time, then dried off the parts and reassembled the keyboard. It made a significant difference. But a few days later, it was right back to being its old stinking self again.

  • @timdowney6721
    @timdowney6721 Год назад +1

    Jeans are typically cotton, at least the ones I wear. Did the research test any other fabrics?

  • @Finellers
    @Finellers 5 месяцев назад

    Can you link the referenced research article?

  • @glorialowy3342
    @glorialowy3342 Год назад

    Thank you!