The Scientific Link Between Masks and Effeminacy
2 min readThere is a certain irony in the fact that wearing a face mask produces many of the same general symptoms as being sick with COVID-19.
According to a recent study in the British Journal of Sports Medicine (a country where they apparently plan on integrating masks into everyday life forever), joggers wearing cloth facemasks experience claustrophobia, reduced oxygen intake, lower peak heart rate, and reduced overall endurance. This kind of breathing difficulty is almost identical to what is experienced when a person develops COVID-19.
Part of the reason COVID-19 is so pernicious is that under normal resting respiration, a person doesn’t necessarily need all of their respiratory capacity, and so they may not notice that their breathing is becoming restricted until the symptoms are debilitating. They may start to experience headaches, fatigue, and other indicators of lower overall oxygen intake – including brain fog and cardiovascular stress.
It is common to hear COVID-19 patients describe similar experiences to altitude sickness as their bodies are deprived of normal oxygen levels. These COVID-19-like effects are similarly (although not as acutely) present in people restricting their respiration with face masks.
In another frightening development, Dr. Shanna Swan, a professor of Environmental Medicine & Public Health at Mount Sinai Health System reveals in a new book that phthalates (a chemical commonly used in the manufacturing of plastics and found in surgical face masks) can shrink penises, decrease male fertility, and reduce typically male behavior in male children.
As noted in previous reports, the toll on oceanic ecosystems from mask waste has already been devastating, with an estimated 1.56 billion masks – amounting to between 4,680 and 6,240 metric tons of plastic pollution according to ecological experts – entering the world’s oceans in 2020.
Might there be a link between mask usage and emasculated men? Certainly, emasculated men are more likely to simply do what they are told, and are therefore more likely to display the provably ineffective symbol of compliance. There is likely not a chemical link (yet), but scientists have now noted both the emasculating effects of restricting respiratory function and constant contact with harmful plastic-producing chemicals may be devastating to the reproductive abilities of men around the world.
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