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People are inhaling the equivalent of a credit card’s worth of microplastics every week. No more plastics for me!

Many are unaware of it, but your bottled water can contain up to 240,000 Tiny Plastic Particles. That is shameful and criminal, to treat us like this. Researchers examined samples from three different brands of bottled water using laser-powered microscopes and found that each liter contains between 110,000 and 400,000 bits of plastic.

I feel these companies need to be put out of business for exposing us to this and I know this is nothing new, but people should stop buying bottled water. We're getting ripped off. We're not getting our money's worth and we're not getting what we paid for. We're trusting the wrong people. I meant to switch a long time ago, to tap and filtered water containers, which I have now, but I got lazy about it. No more! And yes... tap water is not the best, but it has to be a whole lot better than ingesting plastics, and I've never died from drinking tap water, in all these years. 😳 Something to think about.

Their findings, published in the Proceedings of theNational Academy of Sciences, indicate that this amounts to an average of almost 240,000 tiny particles of plastic. Naixin Qian, the primary study author, told NBC News that all three of the products were well-known brands purchased from a major national retailer, although the products under examination were not identified. Ninety percent of the plastic particles were nanoplastics, which are even smaller than microplastics. According to the study’s authors, nanoplastics are thought to be more harmful because their smaller size makes them more likely to penetrate the human body than microplastics.

A study that was published in the National Library of Medicine stated that the digestive, respiratory, endocrine, reproductive, and immune systems are among the systems in the human body that microplastics can impact, based on the results of cellular and animal experiments. Microplastics can result in chemical toxicity, which is the absorption and buildup of environmental pollutants such as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and heavy metals, according to that study. The researchers have decided to reduce their use of bottled water as a result of their findings. Her coworker Wei Min, a chemist, told NBC News that he has cut back on his use of bottled water, while Stapleton stated that she is now depending on filtered tap water.

Water filtering devices have the potential to add microplastics into the water supply; thus, as chemist Beizhan Yan, a co-author of the study, explained, there’s just no win. Furthermore, microplastics were found in human cardiac tissue last August, and according to a June 2023 study published in U.S. News & World Report, people are inhaling the equivalent of a credit card’s worth of microplastics every week. Albert Rizzo, the American Lung Association’s senior medical officer, indicated that the presence of microplastics in the body is unclear, but the time of exposure is critical. Rizzo questioned whether making plastics safer would assist with this problem.

New research says that more than 64% of your bottled water is just tap water.

Millions of Americans buy bottled water because they believe it is purer, safer, and healthier than tap water. However, they frequently learn that major companies just fool consumers, putting a financial strain on them and tricking them into purchasing a product they cannot afford. According to a recent survey, municipal water supplies—the same tap water that the majority of people already have access to—provide approximately 64% of the bottled water consumed in the United States.

Additionally, some companies hardly purify this water before bottling it, and occasionally their products have levels of pollution that are too high. This presents significant questions regarding transparency and whether or not customers are receiving what they paid for.
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SumKindaMunster · 51-55, M Best Comment
Good call out Lady G.

This is the consequence of the fake "plastic recycling" boom of the 90's. We shipped all our plastic to China, and they burned it until they realized how incredibly toxic this all was for their citizens.

Not to worry! The fine people in charge of plastic recycling made deals with other countries like Indonesia.

Unfortunately they weren't equipped to do anything with it, and once monsoon season comes around it all gets washed out into the Pacific ocean.

This is why we have the massive garbage spot in the Pacific. The earth slowly breaks down the plastic and now its everywhere.

Something to remember when you hear all these experts talk about how to fix the environment.
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SumKindaMunster · 51-55, M
@LadyGrace Here's a good article that discusses some of what happened:

https://www.popsci.com/environment/recycling-lies/

From Wikipedia:

In 2015, a study reported that the debris floats eastward out of Asian countries primarily from six countries: China, Indonesia, the Philippines, Vietnam, Sri Lanka and Thailand.[28][29] The study – which used data as of 2010 – indicated that China was responsible for approximately 30% of plastic ocean pollution.[30] In 2017, the Ocean Conservancy reported that China, Indonesia, Philippines, Thailand, and Vietnam dump more plastic in the sea than all other countries combined.[31] Efforts to slow land generated debris and consequent marine debris accumulations have been undertaken by the Coastal Conservancy, Earth Day, Ocean Cleanup, and World Cleanup Day.[32][33][34][35]
@SumKindaMunster This is great! I sure hope everyone will take the time to read it. Thank you so much. 👍

Thinkerbell · 41-45, F
" This presents significant questions regarding transparency and whether or not customers are receiving what they paid for."

Likewise, I have often suspected that the temptation of some food distributors to slap an "Organic" label on their products and then charge 50 or 100% more is just too great.
akindheart · 61-69, F
true. i follow someone on youtube who stopped using her plastic cutting board
@akindheart
Well that's good to hear. That is a necessity.
gol979 · 41-45, M
Everyone is barbie 💜
DanielsASJ · 36-40, M
@gol979 only you 💐
gol979 · 41-45, M
@DanielsASJ awwww cheers Ken 😘
DanielsASJ · 36-40, M
@gol979 Get away Barbie
DanielsASJ · 36-40, M
But there needs to be a handy sized water filter to make tap water drinkable.
@DanielsASJ I don't have enough room under my sink for a water filter and they can be very expensive. I have a really good water filter type canister.
VeganYogi · 31-35
Why drink bottled water? Just use a filter.
@VeganYogi I bought a filter and where I live, they don't want you changing their drinking system so you have to hire somebody to put it in and that's what I did and that was a total nightmare. The guy used the wrong tools and just one thing after the other and it cost me a pretty penny and then I had to have it taken out because he put it in wrong and there's really no room under my sink for a filter. They ruined the piping because they didn't know what they were doing and then I had to deal with that. So that's why I don't have a filter. But I bought a special bottle that is supposed to purify the water with some type of electric thing I don't know I have to read the directions but that's what I'm going to use.
VeganYogi · 31-35
@LadyGrace Oh. I just use a jug that has a filter in it. You pour the water in at the top and it comes out at the bottom clean. Super cheap. Anywhere that sells kitchen appliances should have it.

 
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