Mycotoxins: The Hidden Hormone Danger In Our Food Supply

Over 30 years ago, scientists observed mycotoxin contaminated animal feed (grains) interfering with normal sexual development in young female pigs, resulting in estrogenic syndromes and precocious puberty.

More recent human research in the U.S. is confirms that the contamination of our food supply with fungal toxins is adversely affecting the sexual development of young girls.

Grains, once considered the foundation of the USDA’s “food pyramid” (and still a key component of its updated “food plate”), have recently come under scrutiny due to their purported evolutionary incompatibility (e.g. Paleo and/or ancestral diets), their co-option by biotech and agricultural corporations (e.g. Monsanto/Bayer’s Franken-Corn), as well as the fact that they convert to “sugar” within the body, to name but a few of a growing list of concerns.

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Comments (5)

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    Joseph Olson

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    For a brief moment in time, humanity enjoyed a free, open and honest internet of ideas. Then the tyrants, who have ruled humanity for eternity realized the danger to their feudal plutocracy and completed monopolizing the web.

    Imagine the Eden on Earth we could all enjoy, if only we had the Freedom to share Truth.

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      Dev

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      Indeed. Were we able to garner all the potential resources that the globalists have to hand then our potential woud be limitless.

      The only chains we carry are those in our minds.
      Energy re-direction via central banking fiscal monopolisation – a true pandemic of the mind.

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    Michael Clarke

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    But who you going to trust, there are so many half truths out there most of which believed are by multitudes so that discerning the truth is no easy matter.

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    Rad1

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    An article from the journal Nutrition and Health (Vol 5, #1/2 pp 95-97, 1987) entitled “The Effect of Fungal Toxins on the Sexual Behavior of Rabbits” describes the effect of feeding male rabbits food contaminated with Fusarium roseum prior to their reaching sexual maturity. Instead of a normal behavior of fighting each other when mature, “these males cuddled with one another and repeatedly mounted one another as in copulation.” When placed with females, the males “reacted to this with fear and withdrew.” The authors speculated that exposure to zearalenon produced by the fungus might be the cause of this usual behavior.

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