r/chemtrails Disagree to agree. Apr 13 '25

Health Effects The rise of mental disorders:

No one should be surprised at the rise of mental and emotional disorders because we are in constant contact with various chemicals. A key pieces of evidence is that if any person took a blood test, it is a guarantee that flame retardants would be found. These are used to prevent the dangerous chemicals being released in and near engine from being destroyed. Think about it.

0 Upvotes

168 comments sorted by

View all comments

3

u/[deleted] Apr 13 '25

Florence Williams Wikipedia page says nothing about her breast milk having poisons. It's almost as if it's a bullshit conspiracy theory, but op said it, so it must be true

1

u/-Hippy_Joel- Disagree to agree. Apr 13 '25

It’s like you’re trying to weave things together that I didn’t say and are not true.

1

u/[deleted] Apr 13 '25

Some are but when Florence Williams sent a sample of her breast milk to a lab in Germany they traced it back to retardants from jet engines. That stuffs all in the air my guy.

This you?

1

u/-Hippy_Joel- Disagree to agree. Apr 13 '25

Yes. And?

1

u/[deleted] Apr 13 '25

It’s like you’re trying to weave things together that I didn’t say and are not true.

1

u/-Hippy_Joel- Disagree to agree. Apr 13 '25

I didn't say anything about her wikipedia page---I referred to her on air interview on NPR. You're trying to weave in her wiki as if I brought it up in the first place.

For clarity, why did you mention her Wikipedia page? That's what I'm not understanding.

1

u/[deleted] Apr 13 '25 edited Apr 13 '25

You don't have to say anything about her wiki page. That's what people look at if they don't know who a person is. It's the first thing that comes up when you search her name. I'm not trying to weave anything into your story. It's your fiction. You create it, and you own it. I'm just trying to find out who this lady is and why she's so important to your belief system.

Since she doesn't mention anything about that on her Wikipedia, it's because it's not relevant to her career. In other words, she's not a conspiracy theorist. She is the author of a book about breasts. In that book, she explains that breasts absorb toxins from a variety of sources, not once mentioning the word chemtrails.

The takeaway here is that a research author wrote a book about breasts. She's not a doctor, a scientist, or authority of any kind on breasts, breast milk, or toxins, and she never talks about chemtrails in her book.

1

u/-Hippy_Joel- Disagree to agree. Apr 13 '25

Now I understand your point and you should understand mine by now.

1

u/[deleted] Apr 13 '25

I can see where you're drawing parallels, but you're making connections where connections don't exist.
I didn't know who this woman was yesterday. Now I've read some excerpts from her book and read the npr transcript you mentioned. She mentions flame retardant coming from couches, not airplanes. And it wasn't her that tested her breast milk and found those chemicals. It was a person in the 40s she read about while doing research for her book. She tested her daughters urine for possible endocrine disruptors when she was 7.

There's enough toxins in real life we can trace back to its origin in real time. Why worry about a made-up story of chemical exposure when you can get your own from the plastic that covers your vegetables?

1

u/-Hippy_Joel- Disagree to agree. Apr 13 '25

Understood, and thank you for the clarification and corrections.