Research: masks have chemicals that cause penis shrinkage or lead to a human existential crisis

The National Archives reported Thursday that Dr. Shanna Swan, professor of Environmental Medicine & Public health at Mount Sinai Health System in New York City, has written a book Countdown: How Our Modern World Threatens Sperm Counts, Alters Male and Female Reproductive Development, and Jeopardizes the Future of Humanity. The book warns that the microplastics used to make anti-CCP virus masks, which contain a number of toxic chemicals including phthalates that shrink the penis, will cause most men to be potentially infertile by 2045, with the result that humanity will face an existential crisis.

Dr. Swan’s conclusions come from a study by chemical and environmental engineering researcher Tadele Assefa Aragaw. 2020 researcher Aragaw, who studied microplastic contamination in surgical masks during the Communist virus Epidemic, most damagingly found that microplastics have “additives of toxic chemicals such as phthalates, organotins, nonylphenols, polybrominated BDE and triclosan”. These toxic chemicals can be released into the environment during the degradation process.

The study is in the government archives and is managed by the National Center for Biotechnology Information at the National Library of Medicine (NLM). The National Library of Medicine is an institution within the National Institutes of Health.

WebMD, a leading healthcare website, reported in 2009 on Dr. Swan’s research that mothers exposed to high levels of phthalates gave birth to boys who were more likely to exhibit non-masculine behavior. Dr. Swan also found that “male human infants who were exposed to phthalates in utero had a shorter distance from the anus to the genitals, and this distance was related to penis size.” Dr. Swan’s study also found that rats that had been exposed to phthalates experienced genital atrophy after birth.

The National Archives says U.S. health officials, and members of the Biden administration who support people wearing masks, have yet to clearly explain to the public the link between the effects of phthalates on male fertility, and the wearing of masks.

The masks produced during the communist virus epidemic have taken a staggering toll on the environment, with an estimated 1.56 billion masks produced in 2020, which ecologists say “amounts to 4,680 to 6,240 metric tons of plastic pollution” dumped into the world’s oceans.