DANGEROUS Secret About Face Masks Revealed

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Throughout the entire COVID pandemic, Dr. Fauci and his gang were hell-bent on convincing people that using face masks are safe and that they should be worn at all times.

Well now a new study has revealed that wearing face masks are actually not safe at all.

In fact, not only does wearing a face mask alone not protect you from COVID, the study claims that we are inhaling dangerous chemicals when a mask is worn.

The study discovered that the disposable face masks release a dangerous level of the carcinogen titanium dioxide (TiO2).

These face masks expose an individual to over four times the amount of acceptable exposure of TiO2.

Here is the report from the ‘NIH National Library of Medicine’:

Although titanium dioxide (TiO2) is a suspected human carcinogen when inhaled, fiber-grade TiO2 (nano)particles were demonstrated in synthetic textile fibers of face masks intended for the general public.

STEM-EDX analysis on sections of a variety of single use and reusable face masks visualized agglomerated near-spherical TiO2 particles in non-woven fabrics, polyester, polyamide and bi-component fibers. Median sizes of constituent particles ranged from 89 to 184 nm, implying an important fraction of nano-sized particles (< 100 nm). The total TiO2 mass determined by ICP-OES ranged from 791 to 152,345 µg per mask. The estimated TiO2 mass at the fiber surface ranged from 17 to 4394 µg, and systematically exceeded the acceptable exposure level to TiO2 by inhalation (3.6 µg), determined based on a scenario where face masks are worn intensively. No assumptions were made about the likelihood of the release of TiO2 particles itself, since direct measurement of release and inhalation uptake when face masks are worn could not be assessed. The importance of wearing face masks against COVID-19 is unquestionable. Even so, these results urge for in depth research of (nano)technology applications in textiles to avoid possible future consequences caused by a poorly regulated use and to implement regulatory standards phasing out or limiting the amount of TiO2 particles, following the safe-by-design principle.

Sources: TheGatewayPundit, NIH National Library of Medicine, NIH

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