🚨 PEOPLE ARE PANICKING AFTER SEEING WORKERS IN FULL CHEMICAL PROTECTIVE GEAR SPRAYING STRAWBERRY FIELDS — AND AMERICANS ARE EATING THIS
A viral video showing workers covered head-to-toe in full chemical protective gear while spraying massive clouds of pesticide mist across strawberry fields is sending the internet into full panic mode.
And now the footage is colliding with growing public concern over reports linking conventional strawberries to some of the highest pesticide residue levels in the produce aisle.
For years, strawberries have repeatedly appeared near the top of consumer “Dirty Dozen” lists highlighting produce with detectable pesticide residues after testing.
Viewers can’t stop pointing out the contradiction:
• The workers are wearing respirators
• Their entire bodies are covered
• They avoid breathing the chemicals directly
• Yet the strawberries still end up in grocery stores labeled “fresh”
Now the comments are completely exploding:
• “If they need THAT much protection, why are we eating it?”
• “This looks like a toxic waste cleanup.”
• “And they wonder why cancer rates keep rising.”
• “Modern food production is becoming terrifying.”
• “There’s no way washing removes all of that.”
Others argue:
• this is standard agricultural safety protocol
• concentrated pesticides require protective equipment during application
• and pesticide residues on food are regulated before products reach consumers
But the footage is fueling a massive online debate about what’s really being sprayed onto America’s food supply… and whether people have any idea what they’re consuming long term.
Be honest… if workers need respirators and full chemical protective gear to spray this stuff, what do you think it’s doing inside the human body long term?
📹: Instagram/flowerinspanish
A California felon who brutally raped and murdered an 8-year-old girl after luring her with ice cream could soon be back on the streets due to a woke California juvenile justice law authored by Kamala Harris during her tenure as state Attorney General.
Adrian Jerry “AJ” Gonzalez, 25, pleaded guilty in juvenile court. He was set to be released under Proposition 57, which grants parole eligibility at age 25 for those whose crimes were adjudicated in juvenile court.
Gonzalez was tried as a juvenile at age 21 and received the maximum sentence of three years. Before his scheduled release, the Santa Cruz County District Attorney petitioned to keep him incarcerated, arguing he remains a danger to society.