Summary

Childhood lead exposure from leaded gasoline caused 151 million additional psychiatric illnesses in the U.S. between 1940 and 2015, according to new research.

Peak exposure occurred for Generation X (1966–1986 births) due to widespread use of leaded gasoline before its 1996 ban.

The study links lead exposure to higher rates of depression, anxiety, ADHD, and altered personality traits, including increased neuroticism and reduced conscientiousness.

Lead pollution also caused a collective loss of 824 million IQ points in Americans.

  • TimeSquirrel
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    118 days ago

    I like to think a good way to tell if someone is one is asking if they’ve ever heard of or played the original Oregon Trail, or know what Pogs are.

    • @fluxion
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      7 days ago

      I was early 80s and grew up with those things too, but really I think if your childhood internet experience was “wtf is that” or BBS boards, then that’s the GenX cut-off, whereas millennials got the full WWW/AOL+ experience.

      Millennials were the “Information Age” generation, and being a part of that, when there was some thought that free access to information and true knowledge would connect us all and bring us all into a new world… Before that was all completely crushed by corporate/government manipulation… that really feels like the defining aspect of being a millennial to me.

      It becomes a far more defining characteristic to me as I see where the world is heading. That’s probably why a lot of us “older” folks are here, escaping enshittification and weaponized social media platforms, searching for some semblance of what we grew up with. It’s making me a bit emotional to be honest… another “millennial” thing i suppose.

      • @[email protected]
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        27 days ago

        Unless you were early eighties baby and introduced to BBS at a remarkably young age like me. Oregon Trail generation FTW.