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    Home»Economy»COVID Harmed Male Fertility | Armstrong Economics
    Economy

    COVID Harmed Male Fertility | Armstrong Economics

    April 20, 20264 Mins Read
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    A newly published peer-reviewed study in Scientific Reports confirmed what many refused to even consider during the height of the COVID narrative—COVID harmed fertility rates. Researchers examined hundreds of men and found that those exposed to COVID-19 showed statistically significant declines in key fertility markers. Total sperm count dropped, progressive motility declined, and DNA fragmentation increased, which is critical because it directly impacts the ability to conceive and carry healthy offspring.

    In the longitudinal portion of the study, where they tracked the same men before and after infection, the deterioration was unmistakable. Total sperm count, motility, and quality all declined after infection, while DNA fragmentation rose. In plain terms: the data showed that after COVID, sperm became fewer, slower, and more damaged.

    Now this is where the real issue emerges, and it is precisely where governments and institutions become very quiet. We have hard clinical evidence that the virus itself had measurable negative effects on male fertility, and yet, the powers that be are still refusing to prosecute anyone for creating, studying, or “leaking” the virus.

    COVID was not simply an “act of nature” as the public was led to believe. There is a growing body of evidence, including congressional investigations and internal communications, showing that gain-of-function research was funded, directly or indirectly, through U.S. agencies and funneled into laboratories studying bat coronaviruses. Dr. Anthony Fauci repeatedly denied under oath that such funding existed, only for documents later to surface showing that organizations like EcoHealth Alliance had indeed received grants tied to this type of research.

    COVID 19 Risks

    We shut down the global economy, mandated experimental injections, censored dissent, and now we are discovering measurable biological consequences from the virus itself, including potential long-term damage to fertility. Yet those who approved the funding, those who oversaw the research, and those who controlled the narrative have faced no meaningful accountability.

    The population has been declining across the developed world long before COVID ever appeared because people no longer have confidence in the future. When you destroy economic stability, when you drive up the cost of living, when young people cannot afford homes or raise families, birth rates fall. That is a natural consequence of economic mismanagement. We have seen this countless times throughout history, from the collapse of Rome to modern Europe.

    What COVID did was accelerate a trend that was already in motion, and that is the key point everyone keeps missing. Population decline does not happen overnight from a single event. It unfolds when confidence in the future begins to collapse, and COVID became the catalyst that pushed that process forward far more aggressively than anything we have seen in modern times.

    You shut down the global economy, you destroy small businesses, you force people into isolation, and you create widespread uncertainty about health, employment, and stability. That does not inspire people to start families. We saw birth rates decline across multiple developed nations following the lockdown period, and that was entirely predictable. When people do not know if they will have a job next year, or if the world is becoming increasingly unstable, they postpone or abandon the idea of having children altogether.

    At the same time, you have to factor in the biological side that is only now beginning to emerge in the data. Studies have already shown that COVID infection itself can reduce sperm quality, lower motility, and increase DNA fragmentation. That introduces another layer to the equation as there is evidence of a physical component that may also be contributing to reduced fertility in some cases. When you combine economic uncertainty with potential biological impacts, the effect on population becomes compounded.



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