Health
- A family dinner favorite is being recalled in 19 states—Pillsbury
bread rolls. In late June, General Mills
recalled the frozen dough for more than 730,000 rolls because it may contain
pieces of glass. On Monday, the Food and Drug Administration gave the recall
the second-highest risk level, Class II, as the rolls could cause internal
injury or laceration if consumed.
The
Free Press - Beefy muscles,
assertiveness, ambition, dominance, wealth. These are the calling cards of a
supposed “high-T man”—shorthand for high-testosterone males. And apparently,
Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth is concerned there aren’t enough of them in
the American military.
Hegseth announced on Wednesday that service members over age
30 will undergo an annual screening for their testosterone levels. Those who
don’t meet the mark could be given the option to take testosterone replacement
therapy (TRT).
“The modern battlefield is brutal and unrelenting. It
requires and demands maximum psychological and mental readiness. And by
addressing these health markers early, we’re keeping you on the leading edge of
lethality,” Hegseth said in a video posted to X yesterday titled “The High-T
Department of War.”
The move was met with confusion and disdain. Wired called
the plan a “junk science fever dream,” The New York Times said Hegseth “sought
to cultivate an image as a manosphere-friendly leader,” and in an effort to
roast Hegseth, many equated testosterone treatments for service members to
“gender-affirming care.” On the other side, the backlash was pinned on “Hegseth
Derangement Syndrome”—a play on Trump Derangement Syndrome, in which
individuals have an irrational and reflexive hostility to Trump.
It left many wondering whether Hegseth’s initiative is a
misguided policy driven by “YouTube bro-pseudoscience,” or a medically sound
effort to help our troops.
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