'We're All Plastic Individuals Now': A Groundbreaking Documentary

May 25, 2024
A plastic straw, a bottle of water, a plastic bag from the grocery — these single-use plastics appear so innocuous that folks barely give them a second thought earlier than tossing them out. Sadly, the event of this throwaway tradition has contributed to the mounting burden of plastic waste that threatens the setting, wildlife and our very personal our bodies. Discarded plastics are made primarily from petrochemicals1 and degrade into microscopic fragments referred to as microplastics, which lurk in all places, from the depths of our oceans to the meals we eat and the air we breathe. It’s a sobering actuality underscored by the Emmy Award-winning documentary featured above, “We’re All Plastic Individuals Now.” Plastic Air pollution Has Change into a Generational Burden Produced and directed by Rory Fielding, “We’re All Plastic Individuals Now” delves into how now we have change into the embodiment of the trash we created. It’s launched by actor and ocean preservationist Ted Danson and featured on the 2024 Santa Fe Movie Competition.2 Whereas the movie briefly illustrates the devastating impacts of microplastics on marine life, notably sea turtles discovered with plastic-filled stomachs, it dives deeper right into a extra disturbing fact — people should not separate from plastic air pollution. As David A. Davis, Ph.D., a researcher from the College of Miami who’s featured within the movie, aptly places it, “Water is life, so if the water is polluted and now we have sentinel species like dolphins and sea turtles, in the event that they're additionally sick, we are able to anticipate that we'll be sick, too.” Research have detected microplastics in human tissues, together with the mind,3 lungs,4 kidney, liver5 and coronary heart,6 in addition to in human blood7 and stool.8 Even infants are uncovered to microplastics ranging from their moms’ placenta to the breast milk they depend on...

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