Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by Mistletoe 857 days ago
>Toxicological studies suggest that exposure to chlormequat can reduce fertility and harm the developing fetus at doses lower than those used by regulatory agencies to set allowable daily intake levels.

I think they are worried about this. Perhaps the levels are set too high?

2 comments

Also there's hundreds of similarly synthetic substances, each not individually going over set limits, but perhaps the resulting cocktail causes "death by a thousand cuts".
It is scary. Our best recourse is just to "trust the science", but there are a ton of parties invested in keeping the status quo.
"Trust the science" doesn't mean much. In the 70s, studies showed that jeans caused cancer. And yogurt. Other, real carcinogenic compounds were not studied. It takes ages for the dust to settle down and have a decent consensus. In the mean time, it's best to be cautionary.
Why would they say that without mentioning what levels those studies suggest are dangerous?