Penis are being cut because of climate, a new study points out

Strange as it sounds, the climate crisis is causing penis contractions. Dr. Chana Swan, an epidemiologist and environmental scientist, has published a book entitled “Cont Down: How Our Modern World Is Building Sperm Counts, Alternative Male and Religious Development, and Imperaging the Future of the Human Race” which aims to [...]
Strange as it sounds, the climate crisis is causing penis contractions.
Dr. Chana Swan, an epidemiologist and environmental scientist, has published a book entitled “Cont Down: How Our Modern World Development, and Imperaging the Future of the Human Race”, which aims to show how the modern world is threatening sperms by changing the reproductive development of men and women and endangering the future of humanity.
In the book Dr. Swan describes how pollution is leading to higher levels of extreme dysfunction, declining fertility, and an increasing number of babies born with small penises. Its research presents a grim portrait of humanity's life span and ability to survive.

In some parts of the world, the average of 20 years today is less fertile than their grandmother when she was 35, writes Dr. Swan. “Crimics in the environment and unwholesome practices of life in our modern world are ruining our hormonal balance, causing different levels of reproduction destruction. ”
According to her research, these problems are caused by ftata, chemicals used in plastic production. She points out that these chemicals can be passed on from parents to their offspring, affect the sexual desire of women, and ultimately the length of the penis.
One of the studies, she examined the connection between the number of sperm and pollution in 2017. After observing 185 studies involving almost 45,000 healthy men, Dr. Swan and her team concluded that the number of sperms in men in Western countries had dropped by 59% between 1973 and 2011.
However, according to the European Environment Agency, European citizens are exposed to 41% less particles pollution than two decades ago, but hard work is still needed.










