freedomben 3 days ago

Yes, of course. Humans do not directly eat plastic. At least nobody I know chews on plastic plates or cups.

But that does not mean that humans don't eat any plastic. Tiny pieces of plastic gets transferred to the food by contact with plastic containers. Some processes like microwave ovens, radically increase the amount transferred as well. Previously it was thought that these microplastics would just be eliminated from the body through typical waste functions, but evidence is increasingly mounting that The microplastics actually stay in the body long term and destroy cells they come in contact with. Given we have found nontrivial levels of microplastics in all of our vital organs (including testicals!), that's a scary proposition.

A crude analogy might be germs. Humans don't eat germs directly either, but by nature of their size and invisibility to us, we end up consuming plenty of them.

  • 1970-01-01 3 days ago

    Don't forget about drinking it. Plastic water bottles are insanely profitable. And nobody really knows how many people daily a hot coffee that came from a Keurig pod and went into a styrofoam cup.

1970-01-01 3 days ago

Humans constantly consume microplastic. This is a bad faith argument.

  • freedomben 3 days ago

    Just because an argument is wrong (and in this case gp is very wrong), does not mean it is in bad faith. Arguing in bad faith requires intent. I see no evidence of intent in gp's message. Ironically, if it didn't then one could say that dismissing arguments as bad faith (without evidence) of such is itself a form of bad faith, meaning your dismissal would be in bad faith. However, I see no evidence that you intended to argue in bad faith.

    • 1970-01-01 3 days ago

      I will disagree. Stating an obviously empirically false, easily observed statement immediately does set the table for a bad faith argument IMHO.

      • bigstrat2003 3 days ago

        It's only in bad faith if the poster knows the statement to be false. You can't prove that they do, therefore it's pretty rude (to say the least) to accuse them of bad faith. It's also not remotely "easily observable" that humans constantly consume microplastic.