I'm not into fashion; I just want natural fabrics in classic looks. Suppose you wanted to find 100% cotton casual pants, chinos, khakis, etc in the Western world. Could you do it?
Unfortunately, you may find this task ranging from unreasonably difficult to next-to-impossible. You see, clothing manufacturers have decided to add 2-3% elastane to nearly all skus of men's cotton pants, en masse, in a coordinated way.
Choose any brand off the top of your head and attempt to find a 100% cotton pant without any elastane. Look for the materials listing.If you do manage to find one, there's a 90% chance it will be on sale or clearence.
Apparently, this transition has been in works for some time. Yes, even for jeans.
One could argue that this is simply:
- The usual cartel-imposed fashion cycle as profit-making tool. The recent scourage of the dress shirt "spread collar" comes to mind.
- The "planned obsolecence" model applied to pants as elastane tends to degrade quickly, ruining the drape and cut of the pants
- A billion-dollar deal cut with the synthetics industry by fashion cartels
However, is that what we're seeing in this case? The infiltration of 2% elastane into the men's casual pants category is almost TOTAL. It's bizarre. It's not that these brands are carrying blended fabric "flex" pants alongside the cotton fabrics or even just giving them priority. The cotton pants are GONE. You can't buy them.
To speculate, this operation doesn't have the appearence to me of being just about profits this time. Consider the woven elastane as the vehicle for a beacon, repeater, or payload.
If elastane is a monopolized commodity, then a whole variety of nanotech can be silently blended into the raw product while guarenteeing that it receives whole-market penetration. Thousands of manufactures worldwide then buy elastane thread from this monopoly and weave the product into their clothes under the auspice of "added comfort", distrubuting nanotech into billions of articles of clothing. A trojan horse having direct contact with the bodies of hundreds of millions of men.
Think...
- Long-term contact with skin
- Designed to "ping",
- Designed to degrade, release, shed
Think...
- Mass bio-surveilance, track and trace
- Unique RFIDs embedded in fabric, wearer and location metadata
- IoT and "wearables"
- Delivery of synth-bio fibers
Elastane is polyurethane.
Just like plastics (polyester, acrylic, nylon) when combined with natural fibers (like cotton) they create a POSITIVE electric charge (i.e. loss of electrons) due to static features of the combined fabrics.
What happens when you are wearing these kinds of combination fabrics on your skin?
You skin is constantly losing surface electrons to the fabric (which with positive charge is pulling them away from your skin).
What does your cells require to work, heal and live on? Electron charge (i.e. enough extra electrons).
To make a new cell, roughly -50mV of charge potential is required within the cell, when that rises due to loss of stolen electrons to ~ -20mV, the cell becomes sick and cannot operate properly.
When you combine this with the fact that most people are NOT grounding properly (i.e. wear shoes all day long and only walk on asphalt or dry sand at best), and are NOT replacing the lost electrons -> the risk of chronic cellular diseases increases.
Never wear any artificial / synthetic fibers next to your skin: only pure natural fibers (cotton, wools, silk, linen, fur, leather, etc).
The frequency link I found said that even silk has a very low frequency akin to a dead body. So mostly just cotton, linen, wool - but they can't be blended. For some reason the frequencies interrupt each other and you don't get the benefit.
I posted it here in the last week or two.
Not sure how fur and leather are. Hopefully ok.
Leather and fur against skin are great in terms of static electric potential. Healthy!