Dangerous Chemicals in
Personal Care Products Compromise Health
by Mike
Adams
Researchers are now finding that the
active ingredient in antimicrobial
soaps
and personal care products causes nerve damage. This really isn't
surprising: I've
been warning readers about this for years. The ingredient
is called MIT (methylisothiazolinone), and it is found in antimicrobial
soaps, hand soaps, dish
soaps and a surprising number of personal care products. People buy these
personal care products thinking they're protecting themselves from
infectious microbes. They think it makes them immune to viruses and
bacteria that might be found in their bathrooms or
kitchens, and thus they believe in the mythology of using antimicrobial
soaps to create a sterile environment in their own homes.
This mythology has been promoted by the manufacturers of these products
who, through clever advertising, propagate the distortion that bacteria on
the kitchen counter and in the bathroom are responsible for making people
sick. But the reality is that we don't live in a sterile environment
anyway: the only thing that prevents you from getting sick is a healthy
immune system. We are exposed to bacteria and viruses literally hundreds
of thousands of times each day. It is our immune system that takes care of
these threats and keeps us safe, not antimicrobial soap.
But many consumers don't understand this. They think that they can make
their homes spotless; that they can create a level-4 biohazard clean room
in their kitchen by using this antimicrobial soap, and that this will
somehow protect them from getting sick. But the reality is that they're
giving themselves nervous system disorders while actually promoting the
breeding of resistant strains of bacteria. And thanks to the nervous
system damage caused by these antimicrobial ingredients, people are
probably accelerating Alzheimer's disease by using these products. No
doubt, they are impacting the learning ability of their children by
poisoning their nervous systems, too.
It turns out that this active ingredient is chemically similar to Agent
Orange. That's right, this was the Weapon of Mass Destruction used in
Vietnam. And while it's not accurate to say that there's Agent Orange in
your antimicrobial soap, there is indeed a chemical compound that's
similar in its function, purpose, and molecular structure. Is this
something that you want to be coating your dishes with? How insane is
that?
Yet it's precisely what millions of Americans are doing each and every day
that they use these products. They are literally placing a thin film of
nerve agent chemicals on their dishes, and then drinking and eating from
those dishes. Here, Johnny, be sure to clean up your plate! We washed 'em
in something special: nerve toxins!
There are a great number of dangerous poisons in the average American
home. The typical pantry is loaded with toxic chemicals. This is something
I've been warning about for years, but most people just laugh it off and
say "If these things were dangerous, they wouldn't be legal!" Yet they
remain perfectly legal and quite dangerous at the same time.
For example, most people still use dryer sheets in their dryer. These
sheets really serve no function other than to spread perfume all over your
clothing. They're perfume sheets. And these perfumes are not essential
oils harvested from flowers out in a wild field somewhere, they are
synthetic chemicals, manufactured in a chemical plant, and many are highly
carcinogenic. So after washing their clothes to get out all the dirt,
people are then coating their clothes with a product that deposits a thin
film of toxic chemicals onto their clothes. In other words, the clothes
were cleaner before they went through the washer and dryer. And now that
they come out of the dryer, they are dangerous to your health, because now
they have been soaked in a toxic chemical cocktail. And people put these
clothes on every single day, then walk around and produce sweat which
moistens the clothes, and that accelerates the diffusion of such chemicals
into their bloodstream through their skin. They do this and then they
wonder why they are diseased. They think their laundry is clean because it
smells like perfume.
The average American household is a toxic chemical dump. People have
antimicrobial soaps, dryer sheets with toxic chemicals, and then there are
people using all sorts of personal perfumes and fragrance products that
are also loaded with cancer-causing chemicals. You've got people putting
deodorant in their armpits, and that deodorant contains aluminum which
promotes dementia and Alzheimer's disease. And if that's not enough
toxicity, you can buy air fresheners that will release a mist of toxic
chemicals into the very air that you breathe so that you can inhale
carcinogenic chemicals directly into your lungs. Beyond all that, we have
the shampoos which are also loaded with all sorts of toxic chemicals, and
we have the cleaning products that contain solvents which directly promote
cancer as well as birth defects. And this isn't even to mention the food
supply yet, because the food supply in the average American household
contains yet more toxic chemicals. But of course, that's for another
article altogether.
So what do you do about all of this? Some people say to me "Mike, you sure
are paranoid about all these products." Not really, only the ones that
cause cancer and other chronic diseases. I'm fine with all the other
products. The thing is, you can't find those healthy products at your
regular convenience store or grocery store. You have to go to a health
food store or a natural grocer, and you have to know the sources for these
products. You have to be smart enough to read ingredient labels and figure
out what's in these products. And then you have to educate yourself by
reading articles like this so that you know what belongs in your body and
what doesn't. It's not that difficult to understand; it isn't rocket
science to figure out that the human body is not a toxic waste dump
(regardless of what the consumer products companies try to convince you to
believe).
The vast majority of these chemicals I'm talking about are considered
environmental hazards by the EPA. And yet it's perfectly legal for
manufacturers to put them in their products and indirectly allow consumers
to put them into their bodies. You could be arrested if you dumped these
same chemicals into a stream -- that would be a violation of federal law.
And yet, you put them into your body every single day, and that's not only
legal, it's actually encouraged by media coverage, advertisements,
department stores, and retailers.
It is perfectly possible, by the way, to live a life free of these toxic
products. All you have to do is stop buying the toxic products, throw them
out, and start buying products that actually protect your health. You
could start with your laundry detergent. Go to the health food store, or
natural grocer, and get yourself some laundry detergent that isn't made
with all these fragrance chemicals.
Switch out all your soap: get rid of all that antimicrobial soap and
switch to products that are only scented with natural oils like peppermint
and almond oil. Throw out all those ridiculous brand name shampoos that
are loaded with garbage ingredients that actually promote dandruff and
hair loss because of all the toxic chemicals they contain. A lot of these
products actually cause the very problems they claim to be solving. Throw
those out!
And throw out all those perfumes and colognes, please, people, you are
polluting the air for everyone else who actually has olfactory senses
remaining. Maybe you can't smell yourself because your nose has been
dulled from years and years of use of these products, but I tell you what
- everybody else can smell you! And we're tired of it. Take those
products, throw them away and try to live a day without smelling like an
artificial fragrance factory, for God's sake.
And while you're at it, throw out the antimicrobial soap. Er, wait a
minute, that might be an EPA violation. Better call a chemical waste
processing facility and see if they can take it off your hands in an
environmentally responsible way. Just don't be foolish enough to coat your
skin with it.