Saw this the other day. You literally cannot argue with this
Take it from a certified scuba diver, CO2 is dangerous. It will maim and kill you. The long term effects? Ask scuba divers that are no longer able to breath and have O2 bottles, in wheel chairs, have had heart problems, failing livers, and more. CO2 will damage your heart and internal organs. It will damage your brain and lower your IQ.
Every child I see wearing a face mask, is not only child abuse, it is a crime against humanity. In Denmark and Germany, do you think they have awakened to this fact? They have taken to the streets.
In years to come we're gonna see a rash of these kids experiencing major claustrophia bc of the masks and i suspect a lot of these kids are gonna have major hang-up's in this sorta sense: I know little kids that use the classroom excuse of having to go to the bathroom so that they can pull their mask down and get a good gulp of air and what's coming in to play is the direct association of breathing & ....well a lot of things if you know what I'm getting at and it's gonna fuck a lot of kids up as a result, ie being able to breathe but having to lie so that one can do it, being able to breathe and having to sneak off to the bathroom to do it, being able to breathe and associating it with ones genitals (from having to sneak off to the bathroom to do it).... follow me?? it's hard to explain but I know i'm on to something.
Yeah I feel you. This is the angle that really gets to me and the main reason I don't want to wear a mask... Masks are physically bad, definitely, but there are huge psychological effects that few people understand.
Not to mention l. I think I recall remembering an article claiming an avg. 5% decrease in IQ for the next generation.
This is very interesting to me and I never considered that scuba was a link to this. Since the pressure of the dive is what alters the absorption of CO2, do you know how one could correlate the CO2 problem for dives vs being on land and having a lot less pressure? I don't know how to connect "high-pressure/low-temp" CO2 issues with "low-pressure/hi-temp" ones. (since the water is much cooler at depth than surface air)
I want to look into this. There may be some studies that inadvertently put the nails in the mask coffin based on CO2 alone
Yes, if you have a mishap with the regulator not functioning properly, CO2 becomes an issue. Don't confuse this with nitrogen though and the bends. 78% of atmospheric air is nitrogen. Our lungs inhale that amount, but exhales all 78% and ZERO amount is taken into the body. CO2, on the other hand, is only 0.394% (~0.4%) in the atmosphere. Our exhale consist of 10 times that amount (4%). Our lungs are able to discern the difference between O2 and CO2. However, if O2 is lacking and if there is an availability of CO2, our lungs will uptake CO2 and the red blood cells will transport it to all the vital organs in our body. This is very damaging to the organs and brain.
In scuba diving exhalation resistance is the total work of breathing and increases when you exhale through a small purge valve on a mask. That in turn inhibits CO2 elimination which exacerbates almost all hyperbaric maladies. If that doesn’t kill you mask fogging will annoy the devil out of you. Inadequate ventilation when scuba diving results in carbon dioxide build-up. This is from inadequate breathing, a tight wetsuit, overexertion, regulator malfunction, deep diving, and contamination of the air supply with exhaled gases, which often cause a carbon dioxide buildup. Carbon dioxide levels in the blood can increase, causing shortness of breath and sedation, resulting in carbon dioxide toxicity. Also, CO2 build-up causes 'Acidosis', which has been identified to causing cancer. There is many degrees of acidosis. It is essentially altering the bodies PH level that can permanently make an individual more prone to cancer, especially when this is compounded with other environmental factors.
The long term effects is astonishingly bad for the reasons I mentioned above.
T/u...sent that along to my sheeple.
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