Doomsday shortages
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Get rid of the polyester. They sell stretch and comfort, but it comes at a cost. Spandex-heavy activewear suppresses progesterone and has been linked to fertility issues, especially with tight leggings and sports bras worn daily. Add endocrine disruptors like BPA and PFAS in constant contact with breast tissue and lymph, and the impact compounds. Choose natural fibers. Protect your hormones.

⚠️👗👕
Another really great point to consider by Laura Aboli. I’m honored she tagged me in this.

Everyone seems to be losing their mind over Trump’s phosphorus and glyphosate executive order, so let’s look at this logically…

President Trump has invoked the Defense Production Act to secure domestic production of elemental phosphorus and glyphosate-based herbicides.

At first glance, that feels like a betrayal of everything MAHA stands for. RFK Jr. has spoken clearly about its health risks and we all dream of chemical-free agriculture, but this was not a health endorsement, it was a national security decision.

Elemental phosphorus is not just used in agriculture, it is essential for defense manufacturing, munitions, industrial processes and fertilizers. The United States imports millions of kilograms every year. If that supply is disrupted by hostile nations, trade wars or global instability, both military readiness and food production are hit at the same time.

Food security is national security.

Right now, whether we like it or not, American agriculture is built on chemical infrastructure. Glyphosate is embedded in that system. If it vanished overnight, crop yields would fall sharply, livestock feed chains would destabilize and food prices would spike dramatically.

If the US relies on foreign adversaries for critical materials like phosphorus, there is no leverage, no sovereignty and no safe path to transition. Securing domestic production does not mean endorsing long-term chemical dependency, it means ensuring stability while alternatives are developed and scaled responsibly.

You cannot dismantle a 40-year agricultural infrastructure in one executive order without causing shockwaves. That does not mean the current system is healthy, it means you do not detonate it before you have built the alternative.

Invoking the Defense Production Act allows the government to prioritize domestic production and reduce vulnerability to external pressure in an increasingly unstable world.

This may not feel ideal, but if we want regenerative agriculture, soil restoration and a reduction in chemical dependency, those shifts must be phased in strategically. They cannot be forced through sudden scarcity.

There is a difference between entrenching a system and securing it long enough to reform it.

I think we must trust the sequence; stability, sovereignty and then transformation.

https://x.com/mjtruthultra/status/2024520147210268768
American tested the popular brand Tom's Toothpaste

- Lead tested nearly 50x higher than what’s considered safe by the FDA
- Arsenic tested 81x higher
- Cadmium tested 9x higher

We are being poisoned in America

‘In cosmetics, the FDA has set an allowable threshold for lead of 10 ppm. The Toms toothpaste I was giving to my children tested for almost 50x that limit’

Arsenic (244 mg/kg = 244 ppm):

Using the strictest relevant FDA benchmark for color additives = 8,033% above (or about 81x higher)

Cadmium (27 mg/kg = 27 ppm):

Using a typical strict reference from color additive or international cosmetic guidelines = 800% above (or 9x higher)

~WallStreetApes

https://x.com/i/status/2024484120315740567
Ditch the Lululemons and the TOXIC TIGHTS and ATHLETIC BRAS at the gym!

The more you sweat, the more these chemicals SINK IN.

Think about it.

# Ditch The Toxic Tights
# Ditch The Toxic Leggings

KIDS TOO! 🥺
Consumer Reports just went through the data and found the cheapest and most expensive places to get groceries. They used Walmart as a baseline

The most expensive places are: (In order)

Trader Joe's
Albertsons
Tom Thumb
Big Y
Vons
Mariano's
Jewel-Osco
El Rancho
Shaw's
Whole Foods

The cheapest place are: (In order)

Costco Wholesale
BJ's Wholesale Club
Lidl
Aldi
WinCo
H-E-B
Walmart


My one grocery store isn't listed, but I do like Aldi. Always read the labels.
Do you shop at these stores?