I appreciate your skepticism. I do not pretend that corn is the only thing causing the problem. I am merely offering the information for people to have. You can take it or leave it, or do some research yourself. I have read enough over the last ten years to know that what I posted does have an influence upon fertility, in addition to how many people I know that have required fertility treatments in order to get pregnant even though they are in their early 20's and have no known health problems. I'll leave you with this:
epidemiologists, clinicians, and researchers that culled data from 185 studies, which examined semen from almost 43,000 men. It showed that the human race is apparently on a trend line toward becoming unable to reproduce itself. Sperm counts went from 99 million sperm per milliliter of semen in 1973 to 47 million per milliliter in 2011, and the decline has been accelerating.
Thanks for the discussion on this. While I remain skeptical, it is good to get other points of view on these sorts of things. We definitely have a decline in fertility and this will continue to be a problem if we don't get to the "hard times make strong men" part of the cycle soon. We'll get there one way or another but who can say exactly when? Humans won't go easy into the night so we still have a chance to fix things.
I am always happy to have opposing points of view. Variety is the spice of life.
Hormone disruption is the key component in all of this. The chemicals in everything are decimating our quality of life in all sectors. I've been trying to reduce how much of these kinds of things are in my household, as I have three beautiful children that I wish to have a full life, including children if they so desire. With all of the political globalism theater, I think a lot of people aren't focused on the things they can change and do have immediate power over. Choosing non GMO when possible is an important choice but it's often overlooked because the effects aren't immediately seen, and in a lot of cases are never connected to the damages rendered years later.
These are the hard times, but our men can't be stronger if they can't identify the enemy.
(post is archived)