Toxic Tattoo Ink - The Truth You Haven't Heard | |
Rorschach Watchmen
User ID: 84010289 United States 01/26/2023 01:22 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Bumping to read later, thanks for the info OP. In my experience I have always asked shops where they get the ink and then look at what goes into those companies process before going through with the tattoo. It’s incredible what they allow to be in our food and water supply, so I can only imagine that tattoo ink is even more under regulated. “When you’re dead you’re dead, but you’re not quite so dead if you contribute something” -John Dunsworth |
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Matrix Doctor
(OP) User ID: 85142679 Canada 01/26/2023 01:29 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Bumping to read later, thanks for the info OP. In my experience I have always asked shops where they get the ink and then look at what goes into those companies process before going through with the tattoo. It’s incredible what they allow to be in our food and water supply, so I can only imagine that tattoo ink is even more under regulated. Quoting: Rorschach Watchmen What concerns me is not the regulation or lack of it but the fact we as a society are wilfully ignoring what science has known for over 100 years. MSM and large corporations are causing more health issues than people can imagine. |
Matrix Doctor
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Blizzard Lizzard
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ChickenLilLips
User ID: 85025023 United States 01/26/2023 02:39 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Hi There! Just wanted to thank you for this important information in a vast sea of some crazy shit (not complaining) that I come across on this site :) Gave you some Green Karma +++++ Chicken Lil Lips is my 4lb Chihuahua. Sea-Monkey Enthusiast. We Do Not DIE - AFTERLIFE is real. If you're gonna be a bitch-ass and leave me RED karma with some negative comment... leave your GLP handle too, don't be a pu$$y...... PU$$Y! |
LucyLucid
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N3M3S1S
User ID: 82094265 United States 01/26/2023 03:00 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | More toxins in food dyes than in tatto inks. [link to www.karger.com (secure)] "Most interesting is the fact that the limits for metals in these resolutions are exceedingly lower than those for food colourants, according to the Directive 95/45/EEC. For example, the amount of chromium allowed in food colourants is 100 mg/kg, while for tattoo inks it is 0.2 mg/kg according to ResAP(2008)1. This means that food colourants may contain 500 times more chromium than tattoo ink. In addition, 25 times more cadmium is allowed in food colourants than in tattoo ink. The reasoning for the set limits for tattoo and PMU inks is hard to understand." |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 83563327 Taiwan 01/26/2023 03:00 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | I've been wondering about these tattoos for a while now myself. I wonder about the safety of them as well. Also question if there's anything physically aesthetically pleasing about them? Quoting: Anonymous Coward 13073016 Good questions! I have never understood that either, especially the aesthetic appeal. The color of tats are so dull for one thing. Looks like when you combine a bunch of paint colors together and you get that puke dark green color. Plus it's always hard to make out what the tat images even are unless someone sits there and explains it. There is no clarity or vibrancy to any of the images, just dull, dull, dull. |
N3M3S1S
User ID: 82094265 United States 01/26/2023 03:01 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Drinking water limits are higher as well. "The limits for some metals in ResAP(2008)1 are similar to those for drinking water. The level for nickel according to the drinking water regulation in Germany is 0.02 mg/l, which is approximately 0.02 mg/kg [15]. As previously mentioned, the large tattoo performed at CTL® with the banned ink containing 12.2 mg/kg of nickel contained as little as 0.0057 mg of nickel. This is well below the set limits for drinking water in Germany. " |
Matrix Doctor
(OP) User ID: 84492136 Canada 01/26/2023 04:19 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | More toxins in food dyes than in tatto inks. Quoting: N3M3S1S [link to www.karger.com (secure)] "Most interesting is the fact that the limits for metals in these resolutions are exceedingly lower than those for food colourants, according to the Directive 95/45/EEC. For example, the amount of chromium allowed in food colourants is 100 mg/kg, while for tattoo inks it is 0.2 mg/kg according to ResAP(2008)1. This means that food colourants may contain 500 times more chromium than tattoo ink. In addition, 25 times more cadmium is allowed in food colourants than in tattoo ink. The reasoning for the set limits for tattoo and PMU inks is hard to understand." As for my OP read it carefully. Our bodies process toxins more efficiently through eating foods and drinking water. Anything injected into or passed the dermal layers, especially shots given intramuscularly is extremely high risk (Vaccines). Tattoo ink is a slow feed into the bloodstream and the amounts can be extremely low but they pass the blood/brain barrier much easier. It has very little to do with amounts, but rather the effects they have on the brain, however, food metal toxins should not be ignored either since certain toxic metals have zero places in our biological processes. |
*10~Pankha*
User ID: 80376576 United States 01/26/2023 04:25 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | First off I'm a researcher in fields related to metal uptake in biological fields, with an emphasis on mycology. Quoting: Matrix Doctor I have a very close friend that I've known for over 3 decades her family history has no dementia or genetic disorders in their 50s, she hasn't taken the covid shots, but she did put herself at high risk. After a tough divorce 4 years ago she went on a spree of getting body tattoos even after she asked my opinion, and my response was that she should really research and find out how many toxic neurodegenerative metals are used in making the colors in the inks. She has a degree, but will many times wilfully ignore solid facts. Fast forward to today. She's having severe issues remembering things, getting lots of brain fog, numbness and tingling in her limbs, and symptoms of what many doctors would think were Parkinson's, MS, or early dementia. Our society overlooks toxic metals on almost every level because it's used in almost everything we eat and cook with. Aluminum is an extremely bad one and imo is the primary cause of dementia and Alzheimer's since it is a known neurotoxin. The medical community will most likely diagnose her with their pick from a select Big Pharma narrative, but the truth is none of those will be correct. The issue with tattoos is it's injected into the epithelial tissue that releases these toxins as long as the ink is present, and even so they are small amounts of toxic metals the body isn't able to filter out properly through the kidneys and liver the same way as if we consumed them, so it goes directly into the bloodstream and builds up in the brain. The problem with these types of heavy metals is they cause a biological reaction causing the brain to build up something called Amyloid plaques, as well a neurodegeneration of the synaptic nerves in our brains. I'll leave a few links so people can make up their own minds. Tatto Inks [link to pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov (secure)] "They are reported to be highly carcinogenic by environmental protection agencies. Heavy metals, namely, cadmium, lead, mercury, antimony, beryllium, and arsenic are responsible for cancer, neurodegenerative diseases, cardiovascular, gastrointestinal, lungs, kidneys, liver, endocrine, and bone diseases" Aluminum is a 100% neurotoxin it has zero benefits of any kind in our biological system, meaning it should be there at all. FYI I have personally gotten rid of anything aluminum in my life. And that goes for many processed foods that use aluminum as a quick-rising agent and anti-caking agent. [link to www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov (secure)] "Titanium and aluminum are often used as colorants in tattoos; more worrisome, inks using nonmetal colorants may include traces of antimony, arsenic, beryllium, chromium, cobalt, lead, nickel, and selenium (AESI filed over the latter eight metals). Sivas says the ink used for a 3 by 5-inch tattoo contains 1–23 micrograms of lead, versus the 0.5 micrograms per day permitted under Proposition 65." Google "Aluminum neurotoxin" All of this has been known for many years now, however, big industry has kept it suppressed, even Dr. Alois Alzheimer wrote about it over 100 years ago. - Cheers Matrix Doc i only have three small ones, but i was more worried about negative energies being transferred. In any case, I blessed the tattoos prior to getting them and received them with good intentions. 4So far, so good. Love your Creator and love others, before self-preservation. |
ChickenLilLips
User ID: 85025023 United States 01/26/2023 10:50 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | How will people know how badass you are or how much your kids mean to you if we don't pay some scumbag to color on our skin with permanent toxic ink? Quoting: Anonymous Coward 80516168 THIS LOL +++++ Chicken Lil Lips is my 4lb Chihuahua. Sea-Monkey Enthusiast. We Do Not DIE - AFTERLIFE is real. If you're gonna be a bitch-ass and leave me RED karma with some negative comment... leave your GLP handle too, don't be a pu$$y...... PU$$Y! |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 80516168 United States 01/26/2023 10:53 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | More toxins in food dyes than in tatto inks. Quoting: N3M3S1S [link to www.karger.com (secure)] "Most interesting is the fact that the limits for metals in these resolutions are exceedingly lower than those for food colourants, according to the Directive 95/45/EEC. For example, the amount of chromium allowed in food colourants is 100 mg/kg, while for tattoo inks it is 0.2 mg/kg according to ResAP(2008)1. This means that food colourants may contain 500 times more chromium than tattoo ink. In addition, 25 times more cadmium is allowed in food colourants than in tattoo ink. The reasoning for the set limits for tattoo and PMU inks is hard to understand." As for my OP read it carefully. Our bodies process toxins more efficiently through eating foods and drinking water. Anything injected into or passed the dermal layers, especially shots given intramuscularly is extremely high risk (Vaccines). Tattoo ink is a slow feed into the bloodstream and the amounts can be extremely low but they pass the blood/brain barrier much easier. It has very little to do with amounts, but rather the effects they have on the brain, however, food metal toxins should not be ignored either since certain toxic metals have zero places in our biological processes. It's called "hepatic firsr pass". The bloodstream from your gut passes through the liver for filtering before going to the rest of the circulation. Things absorbed from the skin doesn't have that built in filter. |
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Anonymous Coward User ID: 59121114 United States 01/27/2023 01:23 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | I always wondered why tattoos were so heavily promoted that i think some people think they should get one. That it's weird if they don't or something. I suggested to someone who was married to an artist to just get the artist to draw something on them. Then when that began to fade, wash it off and get another drawing (this is back when people got one tattoo, not ten tattoos). They looked at me like I was nuts. That might still be toxic though. Thank you for the information. I'm sorry about your friend's problems, o.p. |
Crypto-Tard
User ID: 78144147 United States 01/27/2023 01:43 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 83168030 United States 01/27/2023 01:59 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | More toxins in food dyes than in tatto inks. Quoting: N3M3S1S [link to www.karger.com (secure)] "Most interesting is the fact that the limits for metals in these resolutions are exceedingly lower than those for food colourants, according to the Directive 95/45/EEC. For example, the amount of chromium allowed in food colourants is 100 mg/kg, while for tattoo inks it is 0.2 mg/kg according to ResAP(2008)1. This means that food colourants may contain 500 times more chromium than tattoo ink. In addition, 25 times more cadmium is allowed in food colourants than in tattoo ink. The reasoning for the set limits for tattoo and PMU inks is hard to understand." Yeah but in a tat tarnish situation Its imbedded into your skin forever, slowly gassing off into the human Food color you just shit. Out and filter accordingly cause thats what your digestive system does |
Matrix Doctor
(OP) User ID: 84756942 United States 01/27/2023 11:25 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | More toxins in food dyes than in tatto inks. Quoting: N3M3S1S [link to www.karger.com (secure)] "Most interesting is the fact that the limits for metals in these resolutions are exceedingly lower than those for food colourants, according to the Directive 95/45/EEC. For example, the amount of chromium allowed in food colourants is 100 mg/kg, while for tattoo inks it is 0.2 mg/kg according to ResAP(2008)1. This means that food colourants may contain 500 times more chromium than tattoo ink. In addition, 25 times more cadmium is allowed in food colourants than in tattoo ink. The reasoning for the set limits for tattoo and PMU inks is hard to understand." As for my OP read it carefully. Our bodies process toxins more efficiently through eating foods and drinking water. Anything injected into or passed the dermal layers, especially shots given intramuscularly is extremely high risk (Vaccines). Tattoo ink is a slow feed into the bloodstream and the amounts can be extremely low but they pass the blood/brain barrier much easier. It has very little to do with amounts, but rather the effects they have on the brain, however, food metal toxins should not be ignored either since certain toxic metals have zero places in our biological processes. It's called "hepatic firsr pass". The bloodstream from your gut passes through the liver for filtering before going to the rest of the circulation. Things absorbed from the skin doesn't have that built in filter. "hepatic firsr pass" is strictly jargon used in the medical field in regards to drug metabolism when it's first taken, then loses its efficacy through the body's organs. Basically, it's people taking big pharma meds, and then they lose their potency as they passes through the body's organs. I try to stay away from Jargon terms because people need to hear me talking in layman's terms instead of trying to talk over them. I'm here to share what I know, not make people feel like they are idiots. Hope that makes sense. Last Edited by Matrix Doctor on 01/27/2023 11:30 AM |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 74365765 United States 01/27/2023 11:29 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 85157683 Austria 01/27/2023 11:31 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Tattoo is another tool of soft-depopulation. Ink, mostly produced in China, is dissolved in your body and goess into lymph nodes. People were conned into making tattooes like vaxers into taking a vax. Truth is, they, do everything to "thing the herd" with any means possible. |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 74365765 United States 01/27/2023 11:32 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Tattoo is another tool of soft-depopulation. Ink, mostly produced in China, is dissolved in your body and goess into lymph nodes. People were conned into making tattooes like vaxers into taking a vax. Truth is, they, do everything to "thing the herd" with any means possible. Quoting: Anonymous Coward 85157683 i have the chinese symbol for tumor tattooed on my neck. |