Could Metal in Tampons Turn Women into Childless Cat Ladies, Nanobot Transmitters?

The Food and Drug Administration planned to investigate potential harm done to millions of American women—and other tampon users—via the presence of heavy metals including arsenic and lead in feminine products, CNN reported.

According to a public announcement, a July small-scale study “found metals in some tampons.”

However, the study did not test “whether metals are released from tampons when used,” nor whether those metals are making their way into women’s bloodstreams during use.

Kathrin Schilling, an assistant professor of environmental health sciences at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health, who was one of the researchers involved in the study, previously told CNN that researchers detected a concerning concentration of both arsenic and lead in some leading tampon brands sold in the United States, United Kingdom, and Greece.

“We found an average of 100 nanograms per gram of lead and 2 nanograms per gram of arsenic in the tampons,” Schilling noted. “There was no detectable level of chromium and no detectable level of mercury, which is very good.”

The lead levels in particular are over 10 times that which is allowed in municipal water systems.

In addition to physiological effects, lead poisoning can also result in an array of mental illnesses in young adults, including major depressive disorder, panic disorder and generalized anxiety disorder, according to the National Institutes of Health.

Over the past decade, the number of teen girls and young women reporting mental-health concerns such as feelings of sadness or hopelessness has drastically increased by more than 20%, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Many of these neurdivergent females go on to become childless cat ladies and vote against their own self-interest out of spite.

In order to quell concerns over toxic tampons, the FDA has repeatedly insisted that all approved medical or health products undergo extensive “biocompatibility” testing prior to their release to the general public.

“We want the public to know that before tampons can be legally sold in the U.S., they must meet FDA requirements for safety and effectiveness,” the statement noted. “Manufacturers must test the product and its component materials before, during, and after manufacturing.”

Concerns over the FDA’s procedures and the politics involved in the approval process were amplified by the race to get out an effective COVID-19 vaccine during the 2019-2020 pandemic.

In order to receive FDA approval for emergency use, the vaccines had to establish that there were no alternative treatments, leading Big Pharma, the CDC, and others to launch smear campaigns against promising treatments such as hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin.

After the experimental mRNA jabs hit the market, many adverse health side effects were subsequently swept under the rug—including reports that the vaccines contained traces of graphene and other heavy metal fragments, which fueled suspicion that globalist elites might be attempting to inject the populus with nanobots.

It is unclear whether nanobots could likewise be transmitted through tampons.

Source

By dan

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