READER RESOURCES: THE APOCALYPSE ALMANAC: Hidden cures in our dystopian age. FULLSCRIPT SUPPLEMENTS: top quality and economical.
Table of Contents
Yoho preface
Introduction: The Rockefellers invented the climate change fraud
The Plastic Panic is an identical psyop.
Is there a smoking gun suggesting central coordination of the plastics lies?
A few key references
More about Hank’s AI ideas
Yoho preface
Hank is a pseudonym for my good friend with an IQ of 170 and an inordinate fondness for AI searches. When I consult him in his specialty area, his opinions are gold. In other fields, he returns my questions with search results, which annoys me. I made the mistake of asking him about plastics, and he came back with 40 references and nothing further. They purport to show the horrors of macro- and microplastics. I analyzed these and other references through the lens of my background and judgment and reached an opposing opinion.
Hank is intellectually honest and able to change his mind. I hope he will leave a comment, and if he does, I will pin it to the top.
Introduction: The Rockefellers invented the climate change fraud
If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it. —Commonly attributed to Joseph Goebbels, the Nazi Minister of Propaganda. It means that something can be accepted as true if it is so outrageous that people cannot fathom someone would lie about it.
What follows in this first part is from my Nov 2024 post HERE, most of which was initially in a post by Unbekoming.
They fueled the story with nine hundred ninety (990) nonprofit organizations. Every time you hear a “climate change” scare story, that person is a Rockefeller stooge who is being paid. He may not know it, but his profession has been entirely corrupted. The following italicized excerpt is from Jacob Nordangård’s Rockefeller: Controlling the Game (2024).
The whole thing was their idea; they took a silly but interesting theory and amplified it with hundreds of millions of dollars. They founded institutions and linked their survival to promoting climate change and population reduction. They adopted one likely politician after another.
The Rockefellers have created 990 climate change activist organizations. They give them directions and financing and launch them into the world. The Rockefellers started, financed, organized, and militarized the Green Movement. By the late 40’s, the family was all in, on the same page. In the 50s, they began to stand up countless institutions, committees, university departments, university institutes, foundations, and policy shops gathered around this one idea:
Man is now degrading his environment at a terrifying rate. The cumulative effects of advancing technology, massive industrialization, urban concentration, and population growth have all combined… not only to create imminent danger to the quality of human life, but even to pose threats to life itself. —Rockefeller Foundation, 1969 Annual Report
By 1998, the Rockefeller family had swept the table clean of any opposition to this one idea. Any scientist not on board with the agenda was imperiled. Any university department not working towards this one artificial goal was in danger of being marginalized. Infiltration had begun into every media organization, every major corporation’s entertainment division. This, as stated below, would be a generational goal. For everyone. Or get off the bus.
What is evidentiary, what can be proved in a court of law, rather than opinion, however, is that the Fabians started the idea of this whole one-world, no nation-state. It is clear, too, that after the First World War, the Fabians roped in the second generation of Rockefellers. It was a major catch. It meant they had America. And it was spiritual. It was meant to change mankind, to kill off Homo Sapiens and turn us into Homo Universalis.
The New Man would be non-Christian, quietist, and self-obsessed. The economy would trend towards zero growth, if not de-growth. There is a preponderance of data, many publications that laid out their plans. They twisted education away from practical science, engineering, and building things toward social movements, the humanities, the arts, and pleasure. With Laurance Rockefeller’s money and organizational skills, they devised and invented the discipline of cybernetics, from which the internet flows.
The first Rockefeller, as almost everyone knows, was John D., by all accounts, a deeply unpleasant individual who, after his private army killed protestors, was advised to go into charity in a big way to rescue his reputation. Which he did, managing to dodge the trustbusters and Teddy Roosevelt and build his empire over the corpses of his competitors. And then, as advised, he began to buy the media. The Luce empire of Time-Life fell into step. From the 60s on, Time-Life stood astride the media world, attracting the best, the authority on every subject. I was trained there and trained well, but all the writing was done back in New York, in the Time-Life building in Rockefeller Center. It was massaged to fit the message. I wanted to write and left.
By the second generation, the family had found its purpose, the meaning for all the wealth, the path forward. John D., according to Sir Stephen Wilkinson, who has studied him all his life, believed to his core that God had favored him with so much wealth because he was good; his Baptist faith, coupled with titanic wealth, made him a modern priest. His family and his heirs would be a Royal Priesthood leading mankind to a new paradise. How the family must have fallen upon the Fabians, with their starry titled members, Bertrand Russell, all the Huxleys, H.G. Wells, Emmeline Pankhurst. How seductive socialism is to the intellectual class. It gives them the right, being so smart, to order humanity. To choose for the rest of us. Few of them could run a corner store.
The seduction of great wealth is pretty much irresistible. Everyone falls. The last time I was “in society” was at a wedding hosted by the Bostonian Cabots – so ancient they arrived in the New World in 1498. Famously, “The Lodges only talk to the Cabots, and the Cabots only talk to God.” That’s how grand they are. Their wealth spread out that weekend was like entering heaven; everything was so beautiful and absolutely perfect in every detail. It was a lush, sinking feeling, utterly seductive to the ego. Any Clinton, Gore, Obama, Kerry, Bush, any impoverished scientist, any ambitious university administrator, every fundraiser, every marginalized military man, would fall over like an ambitious 20-year-old faced with her first billionaire. Take me; I’m yours.
And that’s what happened. That’s how they did it: by inviting likely servants to their houses and hunting lodges, donating buildings, buying the land for the U.N., funding organizations, appealing to vanity and greed, and above all, the human desperate need for significance. They created a super-class unmoored to reality and entirely 100% destructive of human life. It was systematic, a fierce, unstoppable, detailed two-hundred-year plan. Each generation would make its contribution.
It started with the felt need to reduce the population and turn man into something other than what he is. To stress, environmentalism, neo-Malthusianism, and the ‘saving of the planet’ were the motivators for each of the following actions. If you accepted Rockefeller funding, you toed the line. There were too many people; the Earth’s carrying capacity was breached; the planet was dying; and we need a new form of humanity. These ideas all came out of the Fabian stable and metastasized through the culture like the most delicious poison. Every intellectual at every university began promoting this idea. It was heady, exciting. It celebrated Man, not some faceless, distant Deity. Fabians hated Christianity and wanted, above everything, to replace it. But first, they had to command every institution of civil society.
The Plastic Panic is an identical psyop.
“We’re eating a credit card’s worth of plastic every week! Microplastics fill our bloodstream, lodge in our organs, and poison our children! The oceans choke under an island of plastic the size of Texas! We all have kilos of the stuff at arm’s reach all day, and we are drowning in it!” AAARRGGHH…
These claims saturate environmental advocacy, news coverage, and social media. They generate funding for nonprofits, sell books and documentaries, and fuel a growing industry of plastic alternatives and “detoxification” products. But how much of this represents genuine health threats, and how much is manufactured panic designed to demoralize and control?
The answer matters. If plastics pose serious health risks, we need to address them. If the threat is exaggerated or fabricated, we’re wasting resources that could address real problems while empowering yet another layer of fear-based social control.
Plastics are synthetic polymers
They are long chains of repeated molecular units derived from petroleum. The most common types include polyethylene (bags, bottles), polypropylene (food containers), polyvinyl chloride (PVC; pipes, packaging), polystyrene (foam cups), and polyethylene terephthalate (PET; beverage bottles). These materials are chemically stable, which is why they’re useful and why they persist in the environment.
The health concerns fall into three categories: microplastics (particles smaller than 5 millimeters), nanoplastics (particles smaller than 1 micrometer), and chemical additives that leach from plastic products. Additives include plasticizers such as phthalates, stabilizers, flame retardants, and bisphenol A (BPA).
Human exposure occurs through ingestion (food and water), inhalation (dust and fibers), and skin contact. Microplastics enter the food chain when larger plastic items break down in the environment or shed from synthetic textiles during washing. They’re found in seafood, salt, bottled water, and tap water. Nanoplastics can theoretically cross biological barriers that block larger particles, including the blood-brain barrier and placenta.
That’s the basic framework; here is the evidence:
The Credit Card Claim: A Case Study in Nonsense
The “credit card eaten per week” caper originated from a 2019 study commissioned by the World Wildlife Fund and conducted by the University of Newcastle, Australia. The study claimed that people consume approximately 5 grams of plastic per week, equivalent to the weight of a credit card.
This number came from a meta-analysis that aggregated estimates from multiple studies measuring microplastics in food and water. The researchers made several questionable assumptions: they assumed 100% of detected particles were actually plastic rather than contamination, used the highest estimates when studies disagreed, and included speculative exposure routes with limited evidence.
Five grams per week equals 260 grams per year, or roughly half a pound. Over a decade, that’s 5 pounds. Over 50 years, 25 pounds of plastic accumulate in the body. If the assumptions above were accurate, we would become plastic statues, or at a minimum, our digestive systems would become visibly clogged with synthetic material.
The credit card claim fails basic physics. Plastic particles large enough to add up to 5 grams a week would be visible, would likely affect the texture of food and water, and would be evident in stool samples. None of this occurs.
But we see nothing like this. Autopsies don’t reveal pounds of plastic in intestines or organs. The particles are too small to obstruct anything, and most pass through the digestive system. Some studies find microplastics in tissue samples, but these are micrograms or nanograms—amounts measured in millionths or billionths of a gram, not the grams claimed by the WWF study.
When challenged, the study’s defenders argue that the 5-gram figure represents “potential” exposure across all routes, including inhalation and skin contact, not just ingestion. But this moves the goalposts. The original claim specifically emphasized eating and drinking plastic, and the news coverage portrayed it that way. The public absorbed “you’re eating a credit card weekly,” not “you might be exposed to credit card-equivalent plastic through multiple theoretical routes with uncertain absorption.”
This is how manufactured panics work. Start with a striking, memorable claim. Base it on questionable extrapolations from limited data. Ignore obvious logical problems. Rely on the public’s limited scientific literacy and short attention span. By the time critics dissect the claim, millions have already absorbed it as fact.
Microplastics in the Body: Detection vs. Harm
Studies have detected microplastics in human blood, lungs, liver, spleen, kidneys, and placentas. This sounds alarming until you consider what detection means. Modern analytical methods can find trace amounts of almost anything in biological samples. The question isn’t whether microplastics are present but whether they’re present at levels that cause harm.
A 2022 study in the journal Environment International found microplastic particles in blood samples from 77% of 22 subjects tested. The concentrations ranged from 0 to 7.1 micrograms per milliliter. The authors suggested that these particles could travel through the bloodstream and lodge in organs.
But the study had problems. First, the sample size was tiny—just 22 people. Second, the authors couldn’t rule out contamination during sample collection and analysis, a known problem in microplastics research, as plastic is ubiquitous in laboratories. Third, they detected particles but didn’t show that those particles caused any biological effects. Detection doesn’t equal toxicity.
A 2023 study claimed to find microplastics in the lung tissue of deceased donors. Again, small sample size, contamination risk, and no demonstration of harm. The particles were there, but so what? Lungs also contain dust, pollen, vehicle exhaust particles, and industrial pollutants. Do microplastics add meaningfully to this total burden?
The placenta studies raise similar questions. Finding microplastics in placental tissue from 4 out of 4 placentas examined (a 2020 Italian study) suggests widespread exposure. But the study found twelve (12) plastic particles across four placentas—an average of 3 particles each. All four babies were born healthy and developed normally. Where’s the harm?
This pattern repeats throughout the microplastics “literature.” Detection, yes. Ubiquitous presence, yes. Demonstrated harm at detected levels, no.
The Endocrine Disruption Fable
The more scientifically credible health concerns involve chemical additives, particularly endocrine disruptors like BPA and phthalates. These compounds can interfere with hormone signaling at very low doses, potentially affecting development, reproduction, and metabolism.
BPA, used to make polycarbonate plastics and epoxy resins, mimics estrogen. Studies in rodents show that BPA exposure during development can alter brain structure, affect behavior, and increase cancer susceptibility. Some human studies link BPA exposure (measured by urine metabolites) to obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and reproductive problems.
Phthalates, used to make plastics flexible, also disrupt hormone signaling. Animal studies link phthalate exposure to reduced testosterone, altered genital development in males, and reproductive tract abnormalities. Human epidemiological studies find associations between phthalate exposure and reduced sperm quality, earlier puberty in girls, and behavioral problems in children.
At first glance, the evidence looks more substantial than the microplastics data. But several problems complicate the picture.
First, most human evidence comes from observational studies that measure phthalate or BPA metabolites in urine and look for statistical associations with health outcomes. These studies cannot prove causation. People with higher BPA exposure might differ from those with lower exposure in multiple ways—diet, socioeconomic status, other chemical exposures, and genetic factors. Teasing out BPA’s specific effect is difficult.
Second, the doses matter. Rodent studies often use doses far higher than typical human exposures. A rat receiving BPA at 50 milligrams per kilogram of body weight daily is experiencing something very different from a human whose exposure might be 0.1 micrograms per kilogram daily. Extrapolating from high-dose animal studies to low-dose human exposures requires assumptions about dose-response relationships that may not hold.
Third, humans rapidly metabolize and excrete these compounds. BPA’s half-life in the body is approximately 6 hours. Phthalates last slightly longer but are still cleared from the body within days. This means that a single urine measurement—the method most studies use—captures only recent exposure.
Fourth, regulatory agencies have been responding. After concerns emerged about BPA, manufacturers reformulated many products, particularly baby bottles and infant formula containers. BPA exposure has declined in many populations. Phthalate regulations have also tightened. If these compounds posed major threats, we should see health improvements as exposures decline. The evidence for such improvements is nonexistent.
Fifth—and this is critical—the effect sizes are minuscule. Studies might find that doubling BPA exposure correlates with a 10% increase in obesity risk or a 5-point decrease in IQ. These effects, if real, are tiny compared to other factors affecting these outcomes. Diet, exercise, genetics, education, socioeconomic status, and other environmental exposures certainly dwarf any plausible effect of BPA or phthalates. And fluoride’s effects on IQ, for example, are obvious and measurable.
The Pacific Plastic Island That Wasn’t
The Great Pacific Garbage Patch has become an icon of environmental propaganda—a swirling mass of plastic debris supposedly the size of Texas, visible from space and choking marine life. Documentaries show heartbreaking images of seabirds with bellies full of plastic, turtles entangled in fishing nets, and ocean surfaces carpeted with bottles and bags.
This is pure propaganda and a pack of lies.
The Great Pacific Garbage Patch exists, but it’s a diffuse area where ocean currents concentrate marine debris, mostly consisting of tiny particles suspended in the water column or floating just below the surface. Satellite imagery does not show anything. Ships sailing through the area report seeing occasional debris, but not the dense accumulation portrayed in environmental campaigns.
The claim that there is an “island” the size of Texas is ridiculous. The affected area is large, but the plastic concentration is low—approximately 5 kilograms of plastic per square kilometer of ocean surface according to a 2018 study in Scientific Reports. That’s about 10 pounds spread over an area roughly equivalent to 140 football fields. You could swim through this area and see no plastic.
The documentary A Plastic Ocean used falsified imagery and staged scenes to sell the lies. The footage showing beaches covered in plastic came from areas affected by the 2004 Indonesian tsunami, not from normal ocean accumulation. Dead birds shown with plastic-filled stomachs were staged—plastic was inserted into the carcasses to create fraudulent photos.
This doesn’t mean ocean plastic is harmless. Fishing nets and other large debris do entangle marine animals. Some seabirds and sea turtles do ingest plastic items, mistaking them for food. Microplastics enter the aquatic food chain. But the scale and impact have been grossly exaggerated to disturb us and steal our money.
Why the lies? Follow the money. Environmental organizations raise hundreds of millions of dollars annually using ocean plastic as a fundraising tool. The Ocean Cleanup project alone has raised over $35 million. Plastic cleanup and recycling initiatives create jobs, consulting contracts, and speaking opportunities. Politicians use plastic bans to signal environmental virtue. Activists gain influence.
Everyone in this activist ecosystem benefits from maximizing the perceived threat. Nobody makes money from a calm, measured assessment showing that ocean plastic, while undesirable, ranks far below overfishing and agricultural runoff as threats to marine ecosystems.
Plastics are just hydrocarbons, so they degrade.
A key claim in the plastic panic narrative is that plastics persist in the environment for hundreds or thousands of years, essentially forever in human terms. This is horseshit.
Plastics are hydrocarbons—molecules consisting primarily of carbon and hydrogen, often with oxygen, nitrogen, or other elements. Like all organic compounds, they’re susceptible to oxidation, UV radiation, mechanical breakdown, and biological degradation.
Sunlight breaks down plastics through photodegradation. UV radiation cleaves chemical bonds, fragmenting larger pieces into smaller ones. This process is why plastics left outdoors become brittle and crack. In the ocean, sunlight degrades floating plastics into progressively smaller particles.
Mechanical forces—wave action, abrasion against rocks and sand, temperature cycling—physically break down plastic debris. A plastic bottle doesn’t last millennia in the ocean. It fragments into progressively smaller pieces over years or decades.
Biological degradation also occurs. Microorganisms can metabolize some plastics, though slowly. Researchers have identified bacteria and fungi capable of breaking down polyethylene, PET, and polyurethane. These organisms aren’t abundant enough to solve plastic waste problems, but they demonstrate that plastics aren’t biologically inert.
The “persists for 1,000 years” claim is based on extrapolations from incomplete data. Scientists observe that plastics don’t degrade quickly in landfills, where oxygen and sunlight are limited. They extrapolated this slow degradation rate across centuries. But landfill conditions differ dramatically from surface environments where UV exposure, mechanical action, and oxidation operate.
More realistic estimates suggest that the most common plastics degrade substantially within decades in environmental conditions, not millennia. They don’t disappear completely—they fragment into smaller particles—but the original item doesn’t persist intact for 1,000 years.
“Plastic lasts forever and accumulates endlessly” creates existential dread. “Plastic fragments over decades into progressively smaller particles that eventually oxidize” is less alarming.
The funding and advocacy ecosystem for these two manufactured “issues.”
The parallels between plastic panic and climate change “advocacy” are obvious. Both rely on:
Massive nonprofit infrastructure. Hundreds of globalist nonprofits focus on plastic, many of which are funded by the same foundations that fabricate and spread climate lies—Rockefeller, MacArthur, Packard, Hewlett, and others. These foundations coordinate messaging, fund research supporting predetermined conclusions, and amplify media coverage.
Apocalyptic framing. Modest problems become existential threats. Plastic pollution becomes “the plastic crisis.” Ocean debris becomes “a Texas-sized island choking the Pacific.” Microplastics become “invisible killers in your blood.”
Solutions that expand bureaucratic control. Plastic bans, regulations, taxes, and monitoring programs create new government authority and consulting opportunities. Like carbon credits and renewable energy mandates, plastic regulations generate revenue for connected interests while doing nothing to address root causes.
Suppression of dissenting voices. Scientists who question the magnitude of plastic threats find their funding cut and their reputations attacked. Journalists who investigate exaggerated claims face accusations of denialism or industry shilling. The conversation permits only one direction: more alarm, more regulation, more funding.
Substitution of manageable problems for intractable ones. Plastic pollution is easier to address than antibiotic resistance, the ubiquitous medical corruption, pharmaceutical drug fraud, or the resulting chronic disease epidemic. It’s visible, measurable, and amenable to simple solutions (or at least solutions that appear simple). Politicians and activists can “do something” about plastic while ignoring more complicated problems.
This pattern suggests that plastic panic serves purposes beyond environmental “protection.” It employs activists, bureaucrats, and researchers. It gives politicians easy virtue-signaling opportunities. It distracts from genuine threats. It accustoms people to accepting restrictions on consumer products and lifestyle choices in the name of crisis management.
Whether this pattern reflects coordinated conspiracy or emergent behavior from aligned incentives is difficult to determine. The outcome is the same either way.
Yoho comment: Based on every evil agenda that I’ve studied that was constructed of whole cloth by the globalists, this was, too.
Relative Risk: What Actually Threatens Health
Assume for the moment that plastics pose modest health risks through endocrine disruption and microparticle toxicity. How do these risks compare to other threats?
Conventional medical error and malpractice kill an estimated 250,000 Americans yearly, according to Johns Hopkins researchers. Hospitals spread antibiotic-resistant infections. Overtreatment causes iatrogenic harm. Prescription medications kill tens of thousands through adverse reactions and interactions. The healthcare system itself, when used in approved fashion, is the leading cause of death (see Butchered by “Healthcare”).
Air pollution kills approximately 100,000 Americans yearly and millions worldwide. Particulate matter, ozone, nitrogen oxides, and sulfur dioxide damage the cardiovascular and respiratory systems. These effects are well-established, dose-dependent, and far larger than any plausible plastic effect.
Obesity and metabolic disease affect more than 40% of American adults. Diabetes, cardiovascular disease, fatty liver disease, and related conditions kill hundreds of thousands yearly and reduce the quality of life for millions. These conditions primarily result from diet and lifestyle, not environmental toxins.
Pharmaceutical contamination in water supplies exceeds plastic contamination in concentration and biological activity. Trace amounts of antibiotics, hormones, antidepressants, and other drugs enter waterways through human excretion and improper disposal. Unlike plastics, these compounds are designed to be biologically active at low doses.
Alcohol and tobacco kill approximately 500,000 Americans yearly. These are voluntary exposures to known toxins, and they dwarf any plastic risk.
If plastic additives double your (relative) risk of some health outcome, but that outcome has a baseline risk of 1 in 10,000, your (absolute) risk increases to 2 in 10,000. The former is how it is reported, and a deception, and the latter is real. You’ve gained 0.01 percentage points of risk. Meanwhile, obesity might increase your risk of the same outcome by 500%, smoking by 1,000%, and a medical error might kill you outright.
Resource allocation matters. Every dollar spent addressing plastic pollution is a dollar not spent improving medical care, reducing air pollution, or addressing metabolic disease. Every hour of public attention focused on microplastics is an hour not spent uprooting medical corruption.
If plastics posed risks approaching those of these other factors, prioritizing plastic reduction would make sense. But the evidence suggests plastics rank near the bottom of the list of health threats.
So What’s Going On?
The plastic narrative serves multiple agendas:
Creating new markets. Companies selling plastic alternatives, water filters that remove microplastics, and “detoxification” products benefit from plastic panic. Fear drives consumption.
Expanding regulatory authority. Plastic bans and regulations create new bureaucratic structures, consulting opportunities, and enforcement mechanisms. Government agencies expand their reach.
Distracting from genuine threats. As long as the public focuses on plastic straws and shopping bags, they’re not examining pharmaceutical industry practices, agricultural subsidies that promote obesogenic foods, or the ruined academics in healthcare that kill hundreds of thousands yearly.
Providing employment and status for activists. The environmental movement employs millions globally. These people need causes to justify their positions. Plastic pollution offers an endless source of urgency, research projects, conferences, and media opportunities.
This is the big one: facilitating demoralization. When people believe that invisible particles in their blood threaten their children, that the oceans are dying, that civilization chokes on its own waste, they feel helpless and defeated. Demoralized populations are easier to control. They accept restrictions, regulations, and authoritarian interventions they might otherwise resist.
None of this means plastic waste is desirable. Marine debris harms some wildlife (but provides homes for others). Littering is ugly. Better waste management would improve the quality of life. But these are aesthetic concerns, not health crises.
Framing plastic as a health crisis serves the interests of advocacy groups, regulators, and politicians. It has no measurable impact on public health.
What the Evidence Supports
Microplastics are ubiquitous. They’re in food, water, air, and human tissues. This reflects the widespread use of plastic materials and their fragmentation in the environment.
Detection doesn’t equal harm. Finding microplastic particles in blood or organs doesn’t demonstrate toxicity. Modern analytical methods can detect trace amounts of many substances that cause no health effects.
Chemical additives pose modest, uncertain risks. BPA and phthalates can disrupt endocrine function in animal studies, and some human evidence suggests associations with health problems. But the effect sizes are small, causation is unproven, and exposures have been declining.
The dose makes the poison. Plastics and their additives show toxicity at high doses in animal studies. Human exposures are orders of magnitude lower. Extrapolating from high-dose animal data to low-dose human effects requires false assumptions.
Ocean plastic and the Great Pacific Garbage Patch are psyops. There is no Texas-sized island visible from space. Marine debris can harm wildlife, but compared to how it is portrayed, it is a minor phenomenon.
Plastics degrade. They don’t persist unchanged for millennia. UV radiation, oxidation, and mechanical forces break them down over decades.
Relative risk is a bald-faced lie used to inflate study conclusions. Even if plastics pose some health risks, those risks are tiny compared to those posed by medical error, air pollution, metabolic disease, and other established threats.
Is there a smoking gun suggesting central coordination of the plastics lies?
There are patterns consistent with coordination, but much of the evidence is circumstantial. Documentary proof, such as we have for climate, is scant. There, you can literally trace the Rockefeller Foundation’s funding through 1,000 nonprofits for decades.
Suggestive patterns:
-
Same foundation players (Rockefeller, MacArthur, Packard, Hewlett) are funding both climate and plastic “advocacy.”
-
These overlapping donor networks also fund the Ocean Cleanup project and similar initiatives. Ask yourself: Do the global psychopaths give a rat’s ass about the ocean?
-
Coordinated messaging rollout; the “credit card” claim appeared simultaneously across multiple organizations in 2019.
-
WWF commissioning the Newcastle study is advocacy-driven research, not independent science.
-
The lavish documentary A Plastic Ocean suggests professional coordination, not grassroots concern.
The sources of the plastic nonsense are less clear than those for climate because:
-
The plastic thing is newer; it was ramped up in 2015-2019 vs. the climate’s multi-decade buildup
-
It is a smaller financial scale costing hundreds of millions vs. hundreds of billions for climate
-
It is more diffuse and could be emergent behavior from aligned incentives rather than top-down coordination. But I doubt it, given the rest of the evidence.
The outcome is the same regardless and follows the familiar pattern. Take a real phenomenon: in this case, plastic waste. Fabricate a massive lie: Texas-sized ocean trash islands. Make alarming claims about health effects: “You are consuming a credit card weekly.” Promote those claims through coordinated media campaigns. Attack skeptics. Propose solutions that expand bureaucratic control and create new revenue streams. Repeat.
The plastic threat has been inflated far beyond what the evidence supports, and it serves only the interests of human parasites working in nonprofits and government and their hidden overlords.
A few key references
-
Leslie HA, et al. Discovery and quantification of plastic particle pollution in human blood. Environment International. 2022;163:107199. [Study finding microplastics in blood of 77% of subjects tested]
-
Jenner LC, et al. Detection of microplastics in human lung tissue using μFTIR spectroscopy. Science of the Total Environment. 2022;831:154907. [Microplastics found in lung tissue of deceased donors]
-
Ragusa A, et al. Plasticenta: First evidence of microplastics in human placenta. Environment International. 2021;146:106274. [Italian study finding microplastic particles in 4 placentas]
-
Lebreton L, et al. Evidence that the Great Pacific Garbage Patch is rapidly accumulating plastic. Scientific Reports. 2018;8:4666. [Quantification of plastic concentration in Pacific gyre]
-
Senathirajah K, Palanisami T. How much microplastics are we ingesting? Estimation of the mass of microplastics ingested. University of Newcastle Australia report for WWF. 2019. [Source of “credit card per week” claim]
-
vom Saal FS, Hughes C. An extensive new literature concerning low-dose effects of bisphenol A shows the need for a new risk assessment. Environmental Health Perspectives. 2005;113(8):926-933. [Review of BPA endocrine disruption evidence]
-
Swan SH. Decrease in anogenital distance among male infants with prenatal phthalate exposure. Environmental Health Perspectives. 2005;113(8):1056-1061. [Human study linking phthalate exposure to developmental effects]
-
Makkar H, et al. A review on the biodegradation of synthetic and natural polymers in the environment. International Journal of Pharma and Bio Sciences. 2016;7(1):273-280. [Review of microbial plastic degradation]
-
Vandenberg LN, et al. Hormones and endocrine-disrupting chemicals: low-dose effects and nonmonotonic dose responses. Endocrine Reviews. 2012;33(3):378-455. [Discussion of low-dose endocrine disruption and dose-response relationships]
-
Rochman CM, et al. The ecological impacts of marine debris: unraveling the demonstrated evidence from what is perceived. Ecology. 2016;97(2):302-312. [Critical review separating demonstrated vs. perceived impacts of ocean plastic]
Synthesis
I thought the plastic panic stunk from the first time I heard it, but I didn’t have the receipts about it until I did the work.
About Hank’s AI ideas: Internet searches are increasingly being corrupted by globalist data destruction and the distortion of research funding, adulterating results. You can still recover deleted academic papers through Anna’s Archive or the Wayback Machine if you have the original URL. However, amid the globalist agendas, it is increasingly difficult to discern the truth.
These circumstances make good judgment irreplaceable. If you do not use it, searches devolve into GIGO: garbage-in-garbage-out. It is worse than that—I see it as GIDO, which is garbage-in-dogshit-out, and yes, I’m pissed.
Editing credit: Jim Arnold (Liar’s World Substack) and Elizabeth Cronin.
Sharing helps! Also read the “How to Help Me” essay below.
I will never use paywalls, but if you want to help me, I offer competitively priced affiliate products HERE that I have personally tested and used. There is a new entry for grass-fed beef.
Parting shot:
My brilliant friend knows more about the Cabal than I do, yet she was so fooled by the plastic psyop that she quit wearing the soft contact lenses she had used her entire life. But they were not injuring her because the material is nontoxic. And they are tiny; a single soft contact lens weighs approximately 25-30 micrograms, or about 0.000025 to 0.00003 grams.
That was a good laugh. Thank you.
not funny to me
Risking disapproval to provide balance. I’m liking it.
The Rockefellers & their ilk are known pedophiles. Not suprising that they hate their fellow man & want to control us.
I continually enjoy Robert’s common-sense approach to calling out foolishness.
evil
So let me get this straight: I DONu2019T have the equivalent of a plastic spoon in my brain???
right
I have posted over 150 studies/reports on Microplastics and animal health (mainly human)
https://vitamindwiki.com/pages/microplastics-causing-problems-in-humans-etc-vitamin-d-can-help-many-studies/
95% are just observations of microplastics in animals or just speculations of what might happen.
But 5% of them are indeed troubling.
the pattern of conspiracy when viewed together is overwhelming
As Dr. Yoho says, much of this is a distraction: “Pharmaceutical contamination in water supplies exceeds plastic contamination in concentration and biological activity. Trace amounts of antibiotics, hormones, antidepressants, and other drugs enter waterways through human excretion and improper disposal.”
In CA, they’ve banned plastic bags effective January 2026 because of pollution in the oceans. Meanwhile, service workers change gloves with every new customer. Even if you beg them not to do so because it is wasteful, they will look at you as if you are from Mars and tell you it is required.
Hereu2019s another plastic thing that bugs me: dog poop bags. People use them and leave them on the trail. On the trail where anyone can step on them. Whatu2019s the point?
I hate when people do that. It is an eyesore and you know they will probably forget about it on the way down. It is weird that we use plastic to pick it up. That said, poop would be everywhere. I wonder if an organic substance could be created that could breakdown it quickly.
Move it off the trail with the coyote, skunk, squirrel, bird, bear, bobcat poop. You see what I mean. We have a biological substance: weather
The exception might be if your dog is on medication pick it up. I have no data to support this but who knows.
My mother lives on the Southern Oregon coast in a tiny little holler that has only about 800 people living there full time. It is beautiful and also heavily wooded. I took a long walk in the woods and was overcome by an “oh, no!” moment of having to poo. It became quite dire and so I ducked into the trees and took care of my business. I had a body wipe with me, so was able to clean myself but not pick up my “deposit”, shall we say. Fast forward and I told my mom that I felt bad about leaving it there but my body just decided to betray me several miles from the house and I no choice. She laughed and said, “Sweetheart, the deer do it all the time. The rain will come and it will all be just fine.” My mom is 83 and pretty pragmatic. God bless her.
Poop is supposed to go back into the soil. Central sewer systems stopped us from seeing what is natural. Everyone should have a compost toilet and use the waste to fertilize the soil. Same with cemeteries, those bones should go to nourish the soil, give it boron and calcium. We are doing everything wrong.
Your Mom is amazing. And funny
That substance is called Dirt. Cover the poop with it, and it is gone. Environmentally safe too.
Yes, of course Dirt!!
I hate those poop bags because they really are so unnecessary in most cases. If you live in a city with no lawn or soil, fair enough but for most areas, all that’s needed is to scoop it in some soil and put some soil over it. That’s what I do all the time. The waste then gets disposed of by nature in a day or so and covering it with soil prevents someone getting it on their shoe. Imagine the unnecessary waste of all those plastic bags and the extended time for the excrement to decompose in the landfill.
And it adds nutrition to the soil for plants. Poop is good for dirt.
Right on. It is not good for being in landfills wrapped in plastic where it cannot decompose. If only people realized that the cleanest method is going with nature not a municipality’s ordinances!
That’s why I am an organic gardener. My dog poops in my backyard, which goes into the compost pile, eventually into the garden. The earthworms in the compost seem to like it.
Two thumbs up! You’re doing things in alignment with nature.
Drives me insane!!
I hear you!!
Just returned from beach park where dog owners do this daily…
The sheer scope of the fraud and deception that has been loosed upon the world is staggering–I have difficulty comprehending the evil. The relative risk analysis was particularly helpful. Thanks for your clear voice Dr. Yoho!
I do not believe that the dose makes the poison. That is the bases of corrupt germ theory and the silliness of supplements, drugs and vaccines. No amount of poison is ever good. Your body has to work to eliminate those toxins and poisons.
Were you born with toxic crap inside you and you suffer from a lack of them? Hardly. Toxins are not natural to the existence of man or beast.
If you are ill or diseased, it is because of a toxic overload. Was the body created to be a poison receptacle? Hell no. It was created to be a fountain of health for many, many decades.
I think the jury is out on plastics as they are everywhere. Can you go through the day without interacting with plastics? Are nano particles being adsorbed by contact? Who the heck knows as we never get the truth about anything.
poisons are threshold phenomena, so dose makes the poison
I tried and convicted plastics of being an operation
they are a small phenomena
I did not claim there was NO truth to toxicity
Yes, sir….I agree panicking is overrated. I personally grow weary of being run off a cliff. One crisis after another gets very old, except for those beating the drums.
Wow! So glad you wrote this article. I too believed in the credit card psyop–until I found this article! Thank you, thank you, thank you.
Interesting perspective, and I will certainly put some thought into it.
I think itu2019s worth noting that plastics posing serious dangers vs being used as a tool for modifying societal behavior, doesnu2019t have to be mutually exclusive.
Over the years Iu2019ve come to understand that publicized issues tend to concurrently serve many purposes for a variety of parties, and the parties involved are often competing.
dangers are small potatoes
What a terrific early Holiday gift.
The whole plastics thing is overwhelming. I prefer glass but use plastics as well.
underwhelming except for the marketing
That is their strength, not the truth or facts.
I suspect much of the plastic in the oceans got there via dumping by Foreign Cargo ships, drifting from islands or shore based sorting/recycling programs, or poor countries paid to take “recyclable” plastics from the Western Countries. The environmentalist pushed plastic recycling – much of it is either dumped in landfills or bundled and sent overseas. This works out since while the cargo ships come to the US loaded they leave with much empty space. The environmentalist and governments think they are doing something good for the environment when they are probably creating more ocean pollution and health issues in poor countries.
Another thing is the amount of time and energy wasted on bottle/can bills. The point of putting a 5/10 cents tax on bottles and cans was to address the litter problem. So the state takes in these taxes and redemption centers are set up for people to redeem the taxes they paid on bottles. So one collects their bottles and drives to a redemption center where they are sorted out by producer, the consumer is paid, each producer of the bottles collects his bottles and they are either returned, dumped or recycled. The NPO get money through donations of cans and bottles so they are huge supporters. Since many never redeem the bottles the state gets the excess tax. Think of the waste of time and energy that goes into this process.
another op
Hmmm… u00AB(…) to kill Homo Sapiens and turn us into Homo Universalisu00BB.
More likely u00AB(…) to kill Homo Sapiens and turn us into Homo STUPIDUS Universalisu00BB
The Fabians, Wolves in sheeps clothing. Blair is one of them.
u00ABThe Fabian Society is an old group originating in England in 1884, with the tyrannical purpose of forming a single, global socialist state. Their name comes from the Roman general Fabius, who was famed by carefully planned strategies to slowly wear down his enemies over a long period of time to obtain victory. u201CFabian Socialismu201D uses incremental change over a long period of time to slowly transform a State in replacement of violent revolution for change. It is essentially socialism by stealth. Their original emblem was a shield with a wolf in sheepu2019s clothing holding a flag with the letters F.S. Today the international symbol of the Fabian Society is a turtle, with the motto below: u201CWhen I strike, I strike hard.u201Du00BB
https://constitutionwatch.com.au/fabian-society-wolves-in-sheeps-clothing/
Thank you, RY, that was great! I have a chemistry background and never could get my mind around the plastic solubility issue. You are one of my heroes, Iu2019ve read all your books, got the nerve up to go to the IAOMT dentist to have root canals and metal removed, and finally found someone to prescribe progesterone. Iu2019m so grateful while I wait by the riveru2026
WOW what a great comment. The main lesson is to maintain your equanimity at all costs. I’m not great at this
A friend of mine, Dr Dungsoo Kim, who holds two PhDs, is a weather scientist at NOAA. He’s retired now, but we often had lengthy discussions about global warming. He mentioned that the scientific weather community spends a significant amount of time writing studies to influence funding. He said these studies had little to do with real science.
Those power grab demons never mention another (genuine) threat: – PFAS u2018forever chemicalsu2019 in munitions and other military applications and many others.
Since the Ukraine/Russia war and GAZA destruction, winds have been very helpful in dispersing pollutants. They came mostly to Europe and since then the air pollution caused by war activity has been devastating especially causing many respiratory diseases. The hypocrisy among those UN, EU and MSM Talking Heads is astonishing.
u00AB(…) It’s hard to find an industrial sector that doesn’t rely on PFAS. They are used in the chemical and aerospace industries, in construction, in electronics (where they are used in the manufacture of semiconductors) and in the energy sector (wind turbines, electric vehicle batteries, heat pumps, air conditioners, etc.).(…)u00BB
https://www.lemonde.fr/en/les-decodeurs/article/2025/01/14/pfas-a-family-of-10-000-forever-chemicals-contaminating-all-of-humanity_6737024_8.html
Patently garbage information. No Comparison to lunatic climate change. I am sorely disappointed and amazed with this ignorant post. nanoplastics could also interfere with synaptic plasticity, a process fundamental to learning and memory. Credit: Neuroscience News
The study, led by Dr Gavin Davey and undergraduate Devin Seward from Trinityu2019s School of Biochemistry and Immunology, has revealed the specific mechanism by which these tiny nanoplastics can interfere with energy production in the brain in an animal model.
The findings, recently published in theu00A0Journal of Hazardous Materials: Plastics, provide fresh insights into the potential health risks posed by environmental plastics.
Common sense u2026 scuba off Catalina Island. Better in the Pacific trough. Speak with Cousteau. Talk with National Water leader Dr. Tsegaye. This is conjecture and spurious nonsense.
I did not rule out any possibilities; I said the issues are of a small magnitude compared to others. Best wishes.
Towards the conclusion of this analytical review several important dots were connected.
Drawing the parallels between climate hysteria and microplastics requires recognizing a very
similar agenda, that appeals to well meaning but clueless do gooders.
As you mention, the receipts are telling, the analogies damning.
Refocusing on actual threats like phamaceutical “waste” in the water supply with relative risks
is crucial.
You did not give a pass to BPA, phalates gender bending hormones in the ecosystem, you did reframe in terms of relative risk. Instead of adding to the fear mongering, perspective is crucial.
The real benefit is alerting readers to recognize fake playbooks. Well done.
Having a masters in Biological Science, before Doctorate, also learned to ask good questions
before refusing the kool aid. Some not only drank, they set up stands.
Thanks TS
Tremendous effort like this one need widespread readership and acknowledgement.
The human body has to survive on a planet increasingly filled with synthetic elements. It’s truly hard to believe that plastics are NOT harming us and in serious ways
… regardless of whether some globalist wants to create a “plastics panic” for selfish reasons.
Go forth in peace and ignore most of what you hear, for they are lies.
Since plastics – synthetic polymers – did not exist prior to the 20th century, and did not come into wide use until after 1950, with production significantly increasing after 2004. As with any novel material, the Precautionary Principle tell us that whatever our species, and the biosphere that sustains our lives, has not encountered before, and therefore did not evolve with, should be assumed to be harmful, until proven otherwise, if such novel substances can be proven harmless.
If plastics were chemically inert, the increasing volume of micro- and nano particles in blood vessels and the tissues of various organs, including the brain, would logically be cause for concern. Even in small amounts, particles of foreign substances which the body cannot break down, moving into the bloodstream and lodging in organs- even moving across the placenta and apparently the blood-brain barrier- are unlikely to be completely benign.
file:///C:/Users/rmm/Downloads/s41591-024-03453-1.pdf
Plastics are made from petro-chemicals, and modified with yet more synthetic chemicals, some with documented harmful effects on living things. The process of producing plastics is, therefore, harmful to people and their environment. Just ask those who live in Cancer Alley, or the residents of East Palestine, Ohio.
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0269749124006699
Nearly everything now made of plastic was once made of natural materials, and often much better quality – making this global, uncontrolled experiment on the effects of plastics on the health of people and all life on our planet completely unnecessary.
IF the corporations manufacturing plastics were not allowed to pollute the air we breathe, the water we drink, our lakes, rivers, rains… mirco plastics have bee found in every corner of the planet from deep sea trenches to Mt Everest – or contaminate our bodies & the bodies of our children – the profit advantage of petro-chemical derived plastics over materials which can be produced in an ecologically sound manner would largely evaporate.
Corporate charters were never intended to be used as licenses to break the law, or to violate the Rights of We the actual People – nor as liability shields for those who control corporations.
Hale vs. Henkel (1906) S.C. U.S.
“The individual may stand upon his constitutional(ly protected) rights as a citizen. He is entitled to carry on his private business in his own way. His power to contract is unlimited. He owes no duty to the state or to his neighbors to divulge his business, or to open his doors to an investigation… He owes no such duty to the state, since he receives nothing therefrom, beyond the protection of his life and property. His rights are such as existed by the law of the land long antecedent to the organization of the state, and can only be taken from him by due process of law, and only in accordance with the Constitution. Among his rights are a refusal to incriminate himself, and the immunity of himself and his property from arrest or seizure except under a warrant of the law. He owes nothing to the public so long as he does not trespass upon their rights.
Upon the other hand, THE CORPORATION IS A CREATURE OF THE STATE. IT IS PRESUMED TO BE INCORPORATED FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE PUBLIC. It receives certain special privileges and franchises, and holds them subject to the laws of the state and the limitations of its charter. Its powers are limited by law. It can make no contract not authorized by its charter. Its rights to act as a corporation are only preserved to it so long as it obeys the laws of its creation.
There is a reserved right in the legislature to investigate its contracts and find out whether it has exceeded its powers.”
Each State has an obligation to ensure that the corporations it creates by issuing charters do not violate the laws – nor trespass upon the Rights of actual people. If each State did so, especially Delaware, the State which issues most large corporations their charters, we would likely not be having this conversation about the trespassing within our BODIES the products & by-products of for-profit corporations.
The precautionary principle is nonsensical; it fails to account for risk-benefit analysis. Likewise, your other arguments are absolutist. Contrary to what you say, everything is a tradeoff and must be evaluated on its merits. Plastics are nearly all benefit.
I appreciate your being here and do not wish to offend. This is an open academic debate, and you can reply any way you want. Best wishes.
You are very good at seeing through the lies. Could you do an article or two about malpractice of doctors, surgeons and therapists in treatment of gender dysphoric patients involving the u201Caffirmative careu201D model?
great idea
there is lots on my plate now
That’s a good suggestion. I’d also like to know your response to these points.
Many thanks for the heads-up, Dr Yoho!
excellent article. My eyes opened to medical/pharm deception when I read 2 authors with same title u201CCholesterol Mythu201D. way back in late 90u2019s.
What I find ironic is if plastics are so u201Cbadu201D and humans need to avoid – why is u201Cpolyethylene glycol 3350 (PEG 3350)u201D the #1 laxative in hospitals and other healthcare institutions? It is recognized as a toxin and body floods. colon to get rid of it – hence its osmotic laxative title. Back when i started nursing (1990) the laxative of choice was senna with a stool softener (docusate). Senna is an irritant herb that increases peristalsis- absolute necessity for most patients taking opioids.
Have Hank explain polyethylene glycol 3350 (PEG 3350) use in light of plastic panic principles. Iu2019d love to see THAT answer.
I don’t know about anyone else, but this is reassuring that the planet is not being buried in plastics and the human body is not being poisoned either, is great news. We always have so many serious problems to address, but thankfully this one doesn’t have to lead to panic. It is super annoying tho, to have our plastic bags banned in grocery stores when we need them. Now I have to buy bags, instead of using the ones the grocery used to provide. Just a good way to virtue signal for Newsom, the worst Governor in America.
Judas Newscum
Thanks for the time you took to review and share this. I’m very much in the “yes and no” camp here. I agree with much of it and disagree with much. It would take far too long for me to write about my disagreements and I’m not so sure that anyone would be interested in reading it all, so I’m going to take the Hank road and use AI. FWIW: I’m using AlterAI, which prioritizes alternative sources over mainstream sources. You might actually have fun with this, but it can also be very helpful for any number of random things. However: like all AI, you have to question question question it.
So here’s an AI rebuttal:
This is an important discussion because both sides of the plastics debate often distort reality for their own ideological or financial gain. Letu2019s unpack Yohou2019s essay carefully and critically, point by point, using what is known from independent, peer-reviewed, and non-institutionally funded science.
Executive Summary
Robert Yohou2019s essay u201CThe Plastic Panic Is an Identical Psyopu201D claims that fears around plastic pollution and microplastics mirror the u201Cclimate change fraud,u201D both allegedly engineered by the Rockefellers and their network of foundations to control the public through fear and regulation.
The essayu2019s problems are threefold:
1. Itu2019s built on a false dichotomy u2014 either plastics are harmless or the panic is fabricated.
2. It over-corrects legitimate critiques of flawed microplastics research by leaping to a sweeping u201Cpsyopu201D conclusion without evidence.
3. It ignores a robust, independent body of mechanistic and toxicological research showing low-level but real biological impacts from chronic exposure to plastic-related compounds.
1. The Sleight of Hand: Turning Bad Science Into u201CNo Problemu201D
Yoho is correct about one thing: much of the public messaging around plastic pollution is exaggerated. The u201Ccredit card per weeku201D claim, the u201CTexas-sized island of trash,u201D and viral fear campaigns were absolutely leveraged by NGOs for fundraising. However, recognizing the propaganda layer doesnu2019t erase the biochemical layer beneath it.
Microplastics have been found consistently in human tissues, blood, placenta, and stool.
Laboratory and animal studies show they alter lipid metabolism, induce oxidative stress, and act as vectors for heavy metals and PFAS (u201Cforever chemicalsu201D). The doses are small and effects subtle, yes u2014 but over decades of accumulation, synergy with other environmental toxins becomes plausible.
Key error of Yoho:
He treats the absence of u201Cvisible plastic chunks in autopsiesu201D as evidence of safety. Thatu2019s a category error. Plastics at micro- and nanoscale produce harms through surface chemistry and endocrine disruption, not mechanical blockage. Much of the relevant biology happens in the realm of nanograms per kilogram, precisely where corporate-aligned toxicology has long manipulated threshold definitions.
2. Microplastics Are Not Inert
Yoho repeatedly asserts plastics are chemically stable and biologically harmless. Thatu2019s demonstrably false. Independent research (e.g. not funded by governments or recycling industries) has shown:
Nanoplasu00ADtics have surface electrochemical properties that bind persistent organic pollutants, such as PCBs and PAHs, increasing their bioavailability. These particles can penetrate cellular membranes, interact with mitochondrial membranes, and generate reactive oxygen species (ROS). Phthalate and bisphenol analogues (BPA, BPF, BPS) are lipophilic and accumulate in fatty tissues, altering hormone signaling even at parts-per-trillion concentrations.
Yoho downplays these by citing doseu2013response fallacies (u201Cthe dose makes the poisonu201D) while ignoring that endocrine-disrupting effects do not obey linear dose curves u2014 theyu2019re non-monotonic. Thatu2019s been established for over two decades. So yes, plastics degrade, and yes, they donu2019t last u201Cforever.u201D But during that degradation, they shed progressively smaller and more biologically active fragments that interact with ecosystems and human physiology in unpredictable ways.
3. Foundation Capture u2260 Total Fabrication
Yohou2019s Rockefeller argument is half-right and half-paranoid. Itu2019s true the Rockefeller philanthropic apparatus (and similar foundations like Packard, Hewlett, MacArthur) have heavily funded environmental narratives. Itu2019s also true that climate NGOs and plasticu2011cleanup initiatives often recycle funding sources and participate in ideological echo chambers.
But coordination and funding do not automatically falsify the underlying data. The fact that corporate and elite interests push catastrophic narratives for profit doesnu2019t mean the phenomenon itself is invented. The same playbook has been used in reverse to suppress dangers: asbestos, leaded gasoline, DDT, PFAS, glyphosate, and thalidomide were all declared u201Charmlessu201D by captured science until independent investigators exposed otherwise u2014 decades later.
Yoho fails to apply his own skepticism symmetrically. He assumes global coordination on one end and perfect innocence on the other, leaving no room for messy empirical reality.
4. The u201CGarbage Patchu201D Strawman
Heu2019s correct: thereu2019s no solid u201Cisland of trash the size of Texas.u201D But thatu2019s not what serious oceanographers ever claimed. The phrase was media shorthand for the gyre region with highest plastic concentrations, which remain hundreds of thousands of microu2011particles per square kilometer. Thatu2019s not an u201Cillusionu201D u2014 itu2019s a valid description of diffuse contamination that alters marine food webs. Plankton ingest these fragments; fish ingest the plankton; top predators, including humans, ingest the fish. Persistent microplastic fragments have been isolated from mesopelagic fish gut contents in every major ocean basin.
Is it u201Cthe apocalypseu201D? No. Is it a trivial, aesthetic nuisance as Yoho suggests? Also no.
Itu2019s a chronic low-intensity stressor on marine systems whose cumulative effects span decades.
5. BPA and Phthalates: Weak Evidence u2260 No Effect
Yes, the original BPA scare was exaggerated. But Yoho glosses over the more nuanced literature:
BPA replacement compounds like BPS and BPF have similar or worse estrogen-mimicry effects. Phthalates are strongly correlated (even causally in animal models) with reduced testicular volume, lower sperm count, and earlier puberty in girls. Massive longitudinal cohorts (NHANES data) show consistent correlations u2014 small per individual, large across populations. The u201Ceffect sizes are smallu201D argument misunderstands public health math. A 5u201310% shift in neurodevelopmental or endocrine parameters across hundreds of millions of people is significant. And the claim that exposure has declined is partially outdated: new phthalate alternatives and bisphenol analogues keep replacing the old ones, making exposure measurement difficult u2014 a sleight of hand industries use to claim u201Cimprovement.u201D
6. The Real Context of Risk
Yoho tries to relativize plastics by comparing them to medical error, tobacco, and obesity.
Thatu2019s a false equivalence. Acute killers and chronic environmental amplifiers operate on different axes. Plastics may not kill anyone directly today, but if they subtly: impair fertility,
disrupt endocrine signaling, compound oxidative load from other toxins, and transmit synergistic pollutants through water and food chains, then they influence the long-tail curve of degenerative disease, which doesnu2019t show neatly in mortality tables. In risk ecology, multiplicative small insults matter u2014 0.01% here, 0.05% there u2014 across billions of exposures.
7. Psychological Operations? Only Partially
Itu2019s true that fear campaigns are used strategically. NGO media coordination often mirrors wartime propaganda: simplify, dramatize, moralize. But hereu2019s the uncomfortable symmetry Yoho refuses to acknowledge: The same psychological tools are used by extraction industries and their PR firms to dull outrage and sow apathy. Calling everything a u201Cpsyopu201D removes agency from citizens u2014 it replaces one kind of demoralization with another. True empowerment comes from discernment, not inversion of propaganda.
8. The Mature Synthesis
A balanced, reality-based position is this:
Plastic pollution is real, multisectoral, and biologically consequential at low magnitudes.
Mainstream NGOs exploit its imagery for control and fundraising. Corporate and petrochemical interests downplay the risk to continue profit flows. Both narratives are weaponized u2014 one through apocalyptic theater, the other through cynically engineered skepticism. The truth sits between hysteria and dismissal. The real task for serious inquiry is independent toxicological research u2014 quantifying biochemical load, synergistic toxicity, and degradation kinetics free from both greenu2011industrial and fossilu2011industrial funding capture.
Final Judgment
Yoho correctly identifies funding manipulation and media exaggeration; thatu2019s valuable critique. But his ultimate leap u2014 that the plastics problem is u201Cfabricatedu201D or u201Charmlessu201D u2014 is unsupported, careless, and dismissive of serious biological evidence. The psyop isnu2019t u201Cplastics are dangerous.u201D The psyop is forcing people to choose between believing in cartoonish apocalypse or blind dismissal of risk u2014 both routes ensuring continued control by the same financial architecture.
In short: Plastic panic propaganda exists u2014 but plastic toxicity is real. The problem isnu2019t the science; itu2019s who owns the narrative and the data.
A note about u201Cthe dose makes the poisonu201D:
I read about some studies about this years ago and once again, I used AI to track it down for me because my searches were not turning up anything useful.
The problem with the traditional “dose makes the poison” view of toxicology is that it misses the substantial research that finds that it misses low dose harm. It’s more “different doses make different poisons”. Based on this already established research, in 2001, the U.S. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences determined that the linear u201Csafe thresholdu201D model is inadequate. High doses cause direct cellular or tissue damage (necrosis, organ toxicity, carcinogenesis). Low doses cause regulatory disruptionsu2014altered gene expression, hormonal interference, neurodevelopmental shifts, or immune modulationu2014that are subtler but often more persistent and more insidious.
On a personal note: I have MCS. I’ve had nearly 2,000 migraines from it. While trying to figure out what my triggers had in common, I realized that fragrances that tended to cause migraines were those that lingered for long periods of time. Another thing that took decidedly longer to figure out was the materials in our minivan. It was older, so there were no new car odors, but it had a plush interior. My question was: is there a chemical that’s used to cause lasting fragrances and soften hard vinyl and plastic?
Yes. Phthalates. I don’t know if phthalates themselves are the issue or if they interact with other chemicals to cause the issue, but the bottom line is that I don’t think phthalates are physiologically benign. I also have to say that this is obviously a strong hunch on my part but again, AI came up with a rationale for how phthalates can cause my migraines.
very interesting Dingo. i don’t get terrible symptoms from those persistent fragrances (like migraines, so sorry btw) but experience revulsion for them, and i think subtle neurological effects. i try to get away somehow – and am even repelled by laundry fragrances from 200 to 300+ feet distant. i also have noticed since childhood the weird sweet smell of many plastics – particularly the softer ones and especially if they get warm.
when traveling on a sailboat and needing to put food away immediately after meals due to the motion, i learned many years ago that a still-hot food put into a tupperware container would take on that yucky sweet plastic smell and taste – especially obvious with something mild like brown rice. from that i have extrapolated that anything with a solvent nature, like vinegar, soy sauce or alcohol, will most likely break down plastic to some degree, thus polluting itself with the plastic chemicals. i do not think this is benign. there are good reasons most liquids used to be packaged in glass, including and especially food.
Thank you for this. My most robust point is that plastic panics are clearly a globalist conspiracy.
Agreed.
In reality, very few people listen to such long recordings. Live broadcasts or e-books are much better ways to deliver content than audio recordings.
I remember in the mid 1990’s, I was called a paranoid delusional nutcase when I brought up “globalism”, or there is a group of “elites” or very rich people who wants to be in charge of all countries. Dr. Yoho, I first read your substack articles about 6 months ago, and have since learned about the fraud that has been perpetrated against the people of this country. You led me to “A Midwestern Doctor” then “Unbekoming”, and then to “Leviathan”. I am learning about things I had always suspected, but never knew for sure. All these “projects” of the globalists on seeing how far they can get away with mass control over multiple countries. I don’t doubt this is true, but why plastics? I understand the global warming hoax, and how they are using that to control and repress populations, but I don’t really see a big advantage to globalists if many people get on the anti-plastic bandwagon, unless they want to destroy the petroleum industry, which is being heavily victimized in the global warming scam. Or is it just one more way to try to exert more control over populations by convincing the governments that they must restrict plastic use, but I just can’t see any real advantage that will give globalists. We can come up with plenty of substitutes for plastics, if we have to. Was this just an exercise created for the amusement of the elites? I wasn’t ever worried about ingesting plastic even after we started hearing about microplastics, just one more thing, and I’m surprised big pharma hasn’t come out with some expensive drug to purge the plastics from your body.
The human body is very good at dealing with dust, and thatu2019s all plastic nanoparticles basically are, as you mentioned. They are no threat. Metal nanoparticles on the other hand interfere with the electrical functioning of the body and we can become hypersensitive to them which can be confirmed by blood test. The metal nanoparticles(titanium dioxide in particular, as it now surrounds the whole planet in the atmosphere) were implicated as the main cause of the huge increase in autoimmune disorders and certain cancers worldwide, prior to the covid era. The ema have reclassified titanium dioxide as unfit for human consumption, and banned from food products. As an ingredient in almost all composite dental fillings, billions are now sucking on titanium dioxide 24/7, and it will eventually affect their health if it hasnu2019t already. Dentists caused harm with mercury, then aluminium salts, and now itu2019s causing widespread harm from titanium salts.