I'm starting to feel as though the last sentence is one of the biggest problems in our society. Most doctors who truly understand modern processed food and metabolic function call the whole thing a science experiment. The problem is the system that has been based around it, the $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$, and they negative effects on the food supply among other things if everyone wakes up and wants to eat right overnight.No more decent wheel weights and none to cast into bullets.
Lead, lead paint, mercury, asbestos . We used it and played with it .
So did our grandparents.
The crap they put into food now
is worse than any of the stuff we dealt with.
Uh huh…..but how does that translate to alarm and banning materials used in boots, jackets etc? Do we really think me walking in the woods with gore tex in my boots is killing fish in rivers, contaminating wells, etc? Doesn’t pass the sniff test man.No real human cancer links, it’s the fact it’s a forever chemical meaning it has a very long half life.
Yes, i absolutely need proof before i lose my mind, panic, and support banning anything suspected to be the culprit of causing mass mania.So you want proof, but "We found a shit ton of carcinogens in the drinking water" and "the manufacturing plant is dropping off pallets of water to folks with contaminated wells" doesn't count?
This shit's a chemical (actually an enormous knot of related chemicals), not a person. We're not going to find a manifesto, "I gave little Timmy cancer! Yours truly, PFAS."
So yeah, I think it's safe to say there's no bona fide proof that would convince you. But I don't think there could be.
Sorry, but at the end of the day I care more about my balls than your shoes.
I've already said my piece on Page 2, but your response made me jump back in as someone who works in this field and follows the data religiously.Yes, i absolutely need proof before i lose my mind, panic, and support banning anything suspected to be the culprit of causing mass mania.
You ever think that, yeah, it’s there but in a level that causes zero harm? Same as every other of the countless chemicals you and wildlife are exposed to on a daily basis. Ban my boots but go on pumping fuel in your truck weekly. Talk about hypocrisy man.
Benzene Exposure and Cancer Risk from Commercial Gasoline Station Fueling Events Using a Novel Self-Sampling Protocol - PMC
Tens of millions of individuals go to gasoline stations on a daily basis in the United States. One of the constituents of gasoline is benzene, a Group 1 carcinogen that has been strongly linked to both occupational and non-occupational leukemias. ...pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Better support banning gasoline man if you support banning the Gore Tex in my boots.
Ban EVERYTHING man made then?I've already said my piece on Page 2, but your response made me jump back in as someone who works in this field and follows the data religiously.
Multiple states have already (for years) been issuing "do not eat" advisory's for multiple-species of animals taken within heavily PFAS contaminated areas. For now, this is mostly related to organ meat like the Liver, which many of us prize and eat first thing, but PFAS contamination is starting to be discovered in the muscle (meat) of animals as well.
This will only continue to get worse as articulated in my previous response, and is why some of the more progressive states are taking preemptive measures to ban products containing these chemicals early.
Here are a few states pre-existing advisories, for reference:
Michigan: https://www.michigan.gov/pfasrespon...b28d7a4&hash=27FBE6857598F252502F249E7E20C99B
Maine: https://www.maine.gov/ifw/hunting-trapping/hunting/laws-rules/pfas-related-consumption-advisory.html
New Hampshire: https://www.wildlife.nh.gov/hunting-nh/deer-hunting-new-hampshire/deer-meat-safety-precautions
Wisconsin: https://dnr.wisconsin.gov/topic/PFAS/Advisories.html
This is a very real issue and not some granola conspiracy. All of us as sportsmen and conservationists should be highly concerned with ANYTHING that is contaminating our natural landscapes and the residents (human, deer, turkey, bear, elk, etc. etc.) within them. None of us can, in good faith, say we are hunting for good, clean, pure protein as a hunter, while ignoring the impact and slow build up of toxic contaminants within our herds and landscapes for the sake of our boots and rain gear, sorry.
This issue will only continue to grow. Mark my words, the anti's will come for us one day saying "the meat isn't safe to eat, so you have no legs to stand on justifying hunting these animals".
If you don't want to believe it, that's cool too. Not here to argue with anyone.
Some people just can't think past their own front door.egocentrism will destroy us as a county, if it already hasn’t.
Of course it won't kill us, what the data is showing is negative repercussions to our reproductive ability and the health of those fetus' and infants exposed, in addition to further negative repercussions primarily for those who are already "unhealthy". Reproductive health is paramount to the continuation of our species on the whole, and fertility rates are already declining dramatically. Maybe there's a correlation, maybe there isn't.Ban EVERYTHING man made then?
They’re in Iphones too, ban em!
Medications, in them too, ban em.
Look, i understand your point of view but the reality is the Gor Tex in your boots isn’t the problem. The drinking water is most likely contaminated by wastewater treatment plants NOT some guy hunting elk or a hippie walking around in the woods with a rain jacket on.
If you’re serious about this what’s your stance on Iphones, medications, etc? How about the benzene in gasoline people are exposed to pumping gas? Ban it all?
Wisconsin has been telling me CWD is going to cause the extinction of whitetails too yet there are more than ever.
But man, gotta get rid of those boots and rain coats NOW! Come on man you gotta take everything you read nowadays and inject some good old fashioned common sense into it. Particularly if it’s from a Govt source or university “expert” whose very job is dependent on scaring you.
Me, i’ll gladly keep wearing gor tex i guarantee it isn’t going to kill me, you, or the river.
How about their own island, I would prefer an ocean, or at least a sea between me and those peopleConfine those states to moccasins and breechcloths.
I have some OG Tibets barely worn. Wonder if they'd sell easily.For anyone that loves Lowa Tibets like me and is affected by this, my assumption is the original Lowa Tibet GTX will be discontinued by the amount of crazy sales they had this fall and limited stock all over, and the new Lowa Tibet EVO GTX will be replacing them.. with “No intentionally added PFAS” bootsView attachment 822116
This is an incredibly informative post. Thanks!I have worked in the Single-Use Plastics and Chemical industries for two decades now in sectors such as BioPharma, BioTech, Chemical Manufacturing, Refining, and Food & Bev, and currently work for a company that manufactures single-use plastics. Virtually every drug, vaccine, sauce, shampoo, water bottle, snack, etc. that goes into or is consumed by anyone, is produced using heavy PFAS materials in the fluid-systems or paths during manufacturing, or are packaged in PFAS materials.
Why? Because PFAS are incredibly durable, and phobic to essentially any type of liquid, be it water, oil, ketchup, glue, you name it. It is also infinitely faster and more profitable to use PFAS for production and packaging.
PFAS are progressively more well-studied, but still in the early stages of "science" and "medicine" understanding their impact. The data on just the handful of the PFAS family of chemicals that have been studied, is alarming. The vast majority of PFAS chemicals have not been studied at all yet, as there are thousands of chemicals within the family. Based on what we do know, they should ban them all*, everywhere, in everything, as quickly as possible.
* (This is not physically possible in our lifetime or probably ever due to their absolute prevalence in virtually every meaningful industrial process or manufacturing sector, and the immense lobbying power of industries that rely on these chemicals to hit profit numbers, kickback to politicians, etc. etc. etc.)
One semi-frequently cited study in our circles for reference: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7906952/
Environmentally, the concern is as already described prior -- leachability into the water supply, and the long-term accumulation of PFAS in said water supply, rising to the surface, etc. PFAS have been shown to impact animals outside of humans. I have not heard of any data or seen any studies (outside of locations adjacent, downwind, or down-stream of chemical plants) that indicated any meaningful build up in natural landscapes yet. But it is inevitable if the manufacture and usage of PFAS continues.
Practically speaking, the risk of PFAS shedding and absorption from clothing through the skin is minimal compared to how much exposure we have from nearly anything we eat and drink these days. Talk to any compliance officer or chemist involved in the design and manufacture of outdoor gear, and they will tell you your risk of PFAS exposure from clothing is largely limited to the presence of moisture (sweat) combined with friction, directly on the skin. This goes for most synthetic materials that are against your skin in those conditions. This is why you see a big push in media and marketing back to natural fiber underwear, and away from synthetic underwear. Because PFAS have shown clear impacts on reproductive organs in both men and women. DWR is pure PFAS, but is external to your body, so almost exclusively an environmental concern as it degrades on your rain gear. When you wash your rain gear in the washer, then you are introducing those PFAS to your ground water and water supply as well.
Largely, precaution is the key here and what states are going for. Early studies are showing clear and concerning negative health impacts of PFAS to humans and animals, and the half-life's range all the way up to 40 years in the human body for some of these chemicals. In the ambient environment, PFAS once again have varying half-life's, with some reaching up to 1,000+ years. The continued accumulation of them, combined with early warning signs of their impact, are why folks are raising the flag and banning them early. Again, this is all preliminary findings with very strong correlations.
PFAS are in virtually everything these days, there is no escaping them in your day-to-day life anymore.
This is really a case of "hey, this is for sure bad for us, maybe we should do what we can to mitigate it now instead of later", or not making it our children's problem and destroying future generations biology and food/water supplies.
In the end, if you are a younger adult with health and longevity in mind, you may want to invest the time into researching the already known effects on the human body from PFAS. The best you can personally do, is to eliminate sources of PFAS in your personal life ranging from your clothing, food and water storage, cooking utensils/pans, cleaning chemicals, etc.
Ultimately, though, unless you live in an extreme remote and untouched location, with your own stable food and pure water supply, you aren't escaping PFAS no matter what you do.
It’s more stop it at retail sales level, then consumer. It’s a law that will never really be enforced…Uh huh…..but how does that translate to alarm and banning materials used in boots, jackets etc? Do we really think me walking in the woods with gore tex in my boots is killing fish in rivers, contaminating wells, etc? Doesn’t pass the sniff test man.
For anyone that loves Lowa Tibets like me and is affected by this, my assumption is the original Lowa Tibet GTX will be discontinued by the amount of crazy sales they had this fall and limited stock all over, and the new Lowa Tibet EVO GTX will be replacing them.. with “No intentionally added PFAS” bootsView attachment 822116
Add your cellphone and medications to the list. Most of these are getting into the water supply via wastewater management not rain coats. Though Apple has an exemption because PFAs are “necessary for manufacture” so they get a pass. Guess they are only harmful when in Gor Tex or DWR?PFAS clothing is a drop in the bucket next to food wrappers/boxes, paper plates/cups, wax paper etc.
There are so many more common items literally designed to be thrown away that come in contact with our food daily.