• @andrewth09
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      536 months ago

      The food you consume to produce the blood also has micro plastic. Nothing changes.

      • @glitch1985
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        586 months ago

        Yeah buts it’s fresh micro plastic and not this stall stuff I’ve had in me for years.

      • @[email protected]
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        96 months ago

        That should depend on how the chemicals accumulate though. If all the plastic ends up in your blood and never gets naturally filtered out, it could make sense. Maybe it builds up in your fat/muscles instead though, or gets filtered over time and the amount in your system is the same as the amount in what you have recently eaten, idk

    • MxM111
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      196 months ago

      That’s animal cruelty. (Feeding plastic-laden blood to leaches)

      • @[email protected]
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        6 months ago

        Somehow I don’t think they’d mind too much, provided you give them a nice leech habitat.

        Until Socraleech comes along and they force him to suck hemlock.

        • MxM111
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          6 months ago

          That’s a special type of cruelty when victim does not mind. Like when you give a drug addict tons of heroin.

    • @[email protected]
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      46 months ago

      It isn’t. Blood donation reduces PFASs and iron buildup (too much iron in the blood is bad). And leeches are used in certain procedures, although I haven’t heard of them being used to remove microplastics (yet).