Microplastics and Vaccines: A Globalist Plot Against Health, By Mrs. (Dr) Abigail Knight (Florida)

The global elite are waging a silent war on our bodies, and white communities across the West are in their crosshairs. Microplastics, tiny, toxic particles infiltrating our air, water, and food, are driving chronic diseases like heart attacks, strokes, and infertility, emerging as a top predictor of these conditions. This environmental poison, combined with the lies of the Covid-19 vaccine narrative exposed in Senator Ron Johnson's May 21, 2025, Senate hearing, reveals a chilling agenda: to undermine the health, fertility, and survival of populations.

Research presented at the American College of Cardiology's Annual Scientific Session (ACC.25) exposed microplastics as a major health threat. Analysing 555 U.S. coastal and lakeside communities from 2015 to 2019, scientists found:

High Microplastic Exposure Drives Disease: Areas with over 40,000 microplastic particles per square meter of sediment showed significantly higher rates of high blood pressure, diabetes, stroke, and cancer. The risk climbed with plastic concentration, a clear dose-response effect. Microplastics increase heart attack risk by 4x and disrupt metabolism with chemicals like BPA.

Plastics in Our Arteries: A New England Journal of Medicine study detected microplastics, including PVC, in artery plaque of 150 out of 257 patients with carotid artery disease. Those with plastic-laden plaque were over four times more likely to suffer heart attacks, strokes, or death within three years. Nanoplastics, smaller than a red blood cell, were found embedded in immune cells, triggering chronic inflammation and plaque rupture.

Systemic Damage: Microplastics, ranging from 1 nanometre to 5 millimetres, don't biodegrade. They lodge in tissues, circulate in blood, and cause hormone disruption and inflammation, linked to insulin resistance, heart disease, and dementia. A 2025 study found 221 microplastic particles per bird lung, suggesting similar inhalation risks for humans.

Lead researcher Sai Rahul Ponnana stated, "Taking care of our environment means taking care of ourselves." Yet, global health authorities ignore this crisis, pushing vaccines instead.

This mirrors the microplastics crisis: both involve untested, pervasive interventions pushed by globalist entities like the WHO, whose May 20, 2025, Pandemic Agreement seeks "greater international coordination and surveillance." The vaccine-injured are dismissed as "anti-vaxxers," just as microplastic concerns are buried under environmental rhetoric. Both threaten communities, whose health and fertility are critical to preserving Western culture.

For communities in the U.S., Europe, and beyond, microplastics and vaccines are existential threats. X posts highlight falling fertility rates (1.62 in the U.S., an all-time low) and microplastics in unborn babies, raising fears of a sterile future. White populations, already shrinking due to low birth rates and cultural erosion, face disproportionate harm from these toxins. Rural white communities, reliant on local water and food, are especially vulnerable to microplastic contamination, which compounds cardiovascular and reproductive risks. The vaccine push, with its suppressed risks, further erodes trust in institutions that seem hell-bent on weakening our people

This feels orchestrated. The WHO's treaty, backed by globalists, values control over health, much like the vaccine cover-up ignored myocarditis and miscarriages. The 1986 National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act shields Big Pharma, just as lax plastic regulations protect polluters. Figures like Trump, who exposed vaccine harms, and Musk, who champions truth on X, are rallying points for white communities to resist this agenda.

Some X users call microplastics and mRNA vaccines "depopulation bioweapons," pointing to fertility declines and chronic disease spikes. The pattern is suspicious: suppressed risks, abandoned victims, and centralised power. The WHO's push for global health control, coupled with inaction on microplastics, suggests a deliberate blind spot. Why value vaccines with known harms while ignoring toxins in our arteries? For white communities, this double standard feels like a targeted assault on our health and heritage.

Mercola's solutions are a blueprint to resist:

1.Filter Water: Use reverse osmosis filters to remove 99% of microplastics. Choose glass bottles over plastic.

2.Avoid Plastic Packaging: Store food in glass or stainless steel. Never microwave plastic containers.

3.Choose Natural Materials: Use wood cutting boards and cotton clothing. Wash synthetics with microfibre-catching bags.

4.Supplement Strategically: Consider natural progesterone to counter hormone disruption, protecting fertility.

5.Reject Globalism: Demand transparency on microplastics and vaccines. Support leaders like Trump who challenge the narrative.

Microplastics and vaccines are twin assaults on our survival, poisoning our bodies and eroding our future. The globalist elite, through the WHO and Big Pharma, push control over health, ignoring the toxins in our blood and the injuries from their shots. We must protect our communities, preserve our legacy, and fight for truth.

https://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2025/05/21/microplastics-chronic-disease.aspx

Research links microplastic exposure to chronic diseases like high blood pressure, stroke, and diabetes, ranking among the top 10 predictors of these conditions

Communities with higher microplastic levels experienced significantly more chronic diseases, with risk steadily increasing alongside higher plastic concentrations

A study found microplastics embedded in artery plaque, and affected patients were over four times more likely to experience heart attacks, strokes or death

Plastic particles trigger inflammation and immune responses when lodged in tissues, raising disease risk even in people without conventional risk factors

Effective ways to reduce exposure include filtering your drinking water, avoiding plastic food packaging, using glass containers, choosing natural fiber clothing and considering natural progesterone supplementation to address related hormone disruption

You're absorbing plastic through the air, food and water daily. These microscopic plastic particles are being detected inside living tissue — lodged deep within organs, absorbed through your gut and circulating through your bloodstream.

Emerging research has uncovered strong connections between this plastic exposure and conditions like high blood pressure, stroke and metabolic dysfunction. Studies now link even low-level, everyday exposure to a higher risk of cardiovascular events. This is no longer just about reducing waste. It's about protecting your heart, your brain and your long-term health.

Microplastics Rank Among Top Predictors of Chronic Disease

Recent research presented at the American College of Cardiology's Annual Scientific Session evaluated the concentration of microplastics in seafloor sediment across 555 U.S. coastal and lakeside census tracts between 2015 and 2019.1 The goal was to compare plastic exposure levels with disease rates in those same communities.

Using data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, researchers examined the prevalence of high blood pressure, diabetes, stroke and cancer and used machine learning to assess how microplastic pollution stacked up against 154 other environmental and socioeconomic factors.

•People living near high-microplastic zones had more chronic illness — Communities exposed to higher microplastic levels experienced notably higher rates of noncommunicable diseases such as stroke, high blood pressure and diabetes. Researchers emphasized that these plastic particles were inhaled or ingested — not from unusual behaviors, but from basic day-to-day activities like drinking water, eating food or simply breathing air.

•Microplastics ranked in the top 10 predictors of chronic disease — The study found that microplastics were among the top risk factors for chronic illness. For instance, microplastic exposure showed a strong correlation with stroke, placing it on par with other high-risk variables like racial minority status or lacking health insurance.

•More plastic meant more disease, showing a clear dose effect — The study revealed a dose-response pattern, meaning disease risk climbed steadily alongside higher plastic concentrations. Regions with very high microplastic levels — defined as over 40,000 particles per square meter of sediment — had the worst disease outcomes, while areas with under 200 particles had the lowest.

Plastics Create Long-Term Biological Stress

The researchers were surprised by how high microplastics ranked in the data. This finding pushed microplastics into the spotlight as a credible, under-recognized driver of modern disease — something your body could be reacting to daily.

•Plastic particles stay in your body — Microplastics are defined as fragments between 1 nanometer and 5 millimeters across. They come from common products: food packaging, building materials, clothing and even cosmetics.

Unlike biodegradable materials, these particles don't break down in your body. Instead, they can lodge in tissues or circulate in your blood, where they trigger immune responses, hormone disruption or low-grade inflammation — conditions tied to heart disease, insulin resistance and more.

•The researchers urged immediate steps to reduce environmental plastic load and minimize personal exposure — As lead study author Sai Rahul Ponnana, a research data scientist at Case Western Reserve School of Medicine in Ohio, put it, "Taking care of our environment means taking care of ourselves."2

Plastics Buried in Your Arteries Silently Raise Your Heart Risks

A related study published in the New England Journal of Medicine found microplastics lodged in human artery plaque.3 Researchers analyzed plaque removed during surgery from patients with advanced carotid artery disease.

•They confirmed the presence of plastic compounds — This included varieties common in food containers, pipes and packaging. Out of 257 participants, 150 — over half — had detectable levels of these plastics embedded in their plaque.

•Those with plastic-laden plaque had far worse health outcomes — Patients who had plastics in their plaque were more than four times as likely to experience a heart attack, stroke or die from any cause within the three-year follow-up period than patients with no detectable plastics.

•The researchers found jagged, foreign plastic fragments inside immune cells — The study also showed that these plastics had embedded deeply into tissue. Electron microscopy revealed sharp-edged particles wedged inside foam cells — immune cells that gather in artery walls during plaque formation.

Most particles were smaller than 1 micron — smaller than the width of a red blood cell — suggesting they were nanoplastics, which are even more dangerous because of their ability to penetrate cells.

Plastics Quietly Inflame Your Arteries

Researchers also found that the presence of plastics correlated with higher levels of certain inflammatory markers that are known to worsen vascular inflammation and increase the risk of sudden plaque rupture. This is what causes many heart attacks and strokes. Plastics also coincided with greater immune cell presence, meaning the body was actively responding to the foreign material like a chronic infection.

•Plastic particles were confirmed using chemical fingerprinting — Some particles gave off distinct chlorine signatures, confirming the presence of polyvinyl chloride (PVC). PVC is found in everything from plumbing pipes to credit cards — and its breakdown products are known endocrine disruptors.

•Even with no conventional risk factors, plastics still raised disease risk — The researchers adjusted for cholesterol, age, diabetes, body mass index and blood pressure. Even after accounting for these common risk factors, plastics still predicted who got sick. This means even if you're eating well and exercising, your exposure to plastic pollution could quietly undermine your heart health.

•Your daily environment is the source, and the damage adds up — The plastics detected in this study were the same types found in water bottles, food containers and many household products. The study didn't find them in just one region — they appeared across multiple areas. This means plastic pollution is a widespread problem with personal health consequences. If it's in your air, water and food, it's likely getting into your bloodstream — and staying there.

How to Reduce Your Microplastic Exposure

If you're leading a healthy lifestyle but dealing with high blood pressure, blood sugar problems or early signs of cardiovascular stress, it's time to look beyond diet and exercise. Plastics are showing up in arteries, and no one really knows how to get them out. The most effective way to protect yourself is to cut your exposure at the source. You won't eliminate every particle, but you can drastically lower how much enters your body each day. Here's where to start:

1.Upgrade your water filtration and ditch plastic bottles — Drinking contaminated tap water or buying plastic bottled water exposes you to microplastics every single day. I recommend switching to a certified water filter designed to remove microplastics. If your water is hard, boiling it before use dramatically reduces microplastics.4 Always choose glass bottles when buying bottled water.

2.Make smart food packaging choices — Heat and plastic are a dangerous combo. Stop microwaving food in plastic containers, and avoid plastic wraps touching your meals. Store leftovers in glass, stainless steel or ceramic. When you're shopping, choose products in glass jars over plastic packaging whenever possible. These changes are simple but powerful — they reduce direct ingestion of plastic particles.

3.Re-evaluate your kitchen essentials — Plastic cutting boards shed tiny fragments every time you chop. Over time, those bits wind up in your food. Switch to wood and glass boards instead. Also swap out plastic utensils for stainless steel. These swaps lower your exposure while making your kitchen more durable and clean.

4.Choose natural fibers and rethink how you wash clothes — If you're wearing polyester, acrylic or nylon, you're wearing plastic. These synthetic fabrics shed microfibers into the water system during every wash. Choose cotton, wool or linen instead. For synthetic clothes you already own, wash them less often and use a microfiber-catching laundry bag or filter. This one step protects your body — and the planet. 

 

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Saturday, 31 May 2025

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