Man, where to start.
Number 1:
As a general rule, technology at the end of its life cycle will be more reliable than technology at the beginning of its life cycle. Simple as that. Due to continued refinement in the technology and manufacturing processes. Its not some grand evil conspiracy. Its simple logic. An early CRT monitor is just as shit as an early LCD monitor. Conversely, I have a later LCD monitor in the closet that's gotta be a decade old that still works fine. That doesn't mean it's better though. Which is something you completely ignore in your thesis.
A CRT monitor might still work, but its complete shit vs a modern LCD or LED monitor by every possible metric. You're also ignoring the fact that modern electronics have quite a bit more in the way of safety technology and damage resistance. My current computer could survive a power surge, cooling failure, short circuit, etc with at worst me only having to replace one component. My computer in 1997 would have just burst into flames and need to be completely replaced.
Your 1972 oven may still be holding up, but it uses three times as much power as a modern oven and would die to a power surge or other unforeseen electrical fault. Probably burning your kitchen down in the process.
Number 2:
I have a ton of food allergens: Wheat, soy, dairy ( all dairy, goat included ), eggs, yeast, peanuts and various things vaguely related. That said;
Food allergens are not triggered by pesticides, hormones, chemicals, etc. Food allergens are triggered by an increase in exposure to the allergen which can be made worse by avoiding exposure to the allergen in early childhood. Food allergens are also something that has seen increased awareness and screening in recent years. So of course the rate of it is going to increase as we test for it more often. When I was 16 and having problems due to the allergens, it wasn't even on the radar of my doctor. It went undiagnosed until this year at age 33 when I went to a new doctor that knew about allergens and recognized the symptoms for what they were.
Food allergens normally go undiagnosed because they generally manifest as digestive problems and people just start to avoid those foods. Completely unaware they have a sensitivity. Its not exactly uncommon for someone to have a food or foods they don't eat because it causes gas, indigestion, etc. That's a food allergen. But most people wouldn't come to that conclusion and think to go get tested.
The "thing you saw on the news" that is "baffling scientists" is specifically the dramatic increase in peanut allergens. Which has increased by 50% in children in the last 15 years or so. Peanuts are a strong allergen to begin with and have become more and more widely consumed over the last 20 years. These days they're a very common additive to food and its much much MUCH more common for foods to be cross contaminated during manufacturing. As most companies these days produce multiple products at the same facility.
However, severe peanut allergens only affect 0.1% of the US population after that 50% increase. Its not the wide spread bizarre conspiracy theory you're labouring under. It was an increase from 0.05% to 0.1%. Thus, the big picture here is utterly insignificant.
Number 1:
As a general rule, technology at the end of its life cycle will be more reliable than technology at the beginning of its life cycle. Simple as that. Due to continued refinement in the technology and manufacturing processes. Its not some grand evil conspiracy. Its simple logic. An early CRT monitor is just as shit as an early LCD monitor. Conversely, I have a later LCD monitor in the closet that's gotta be a decade old that still works fine. That doesn't mean it's better though. Which is something you completely ignore in your thesis.
A CRT monitor might still work, but its complete shit vs a modern LCD or LED monitor by every possible metric. You're also ignoring the fact that modern electronics have quite a bit more in the way of safety technology and damage resistance. My current computer could survive a power surge, cooling failure, short circuit, etc with at worst me only having to replace one component. My computer in 1997 would have just burst into flames and need to be completely replaced.
Your 1972 oven may still be holding up, but it uses three times as much power as a modern oven and would die to a power surge or other unforeseen electrical fault. Probably burning your kitchen down in the process.
Number 2:
I have a ton of food allergens: Wheat, soy, dairy ( all dairy, goat included ), eggs, yeast, peanuts and various things vaguely related. That said;
Food allergens are not triggered by pesticides, hormones, chemicals, etc. Food allergens are triggered by an increase in exposure to the allergen which can be made worse by avoiding exposure to the allergen in early childhood. Food allergens are also something that has seen increased awareness and screening in recent years. So of course the rate of it is going to increase as we test for it more often. When I was 16 and having problems due to the allergens, it wasn't even on the radar of my doctor. It went undiagnosed until this year at age 33 when I went to a new doctor that knew about allergens and recognized the symptoms for what they were.
Food allergens normally go undiagnosed because they generally manifest as digestive problems and people just start to avoid those foods. Completely unaware they have a sensitivity. Its not exactly uncommon for someone to have a food or foods they don't eat because it causes gas, indigestion, etc. That's a food allergen. But most people wouldn't come to that conclusion and think to go get tested.
The "thing you saw on the news" that is "baffling scientists" is specifically the dramatic increase in peanut allergens. Which has increased by 50% in children in the last 15 years or so. Peanuts are a strong allergen to begin with and have become more and more widely consumed over the last 20 years. These days they're a very common additive to food and its much much MUCH more common for foods to be cross contaminated during manufacturing. As most companies these days produce multiple products at the same facility.
However, severe peanut allergens only affect 0.1% of the US population after that 50% increase. Its not the wide spread bizarre conspiracy theory you're labouring under. It was an increase from 0.05% to 0.1%. Thus, the big picture here is utterly insignificant.
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