As one of the more prominent online health gurus—Tucker Carlson called me the “spiritual leader of the broscientists” in his documentary The End of Men—I get asked a lot about supplements and techniques to improve masculine vitality, usually meaning testosterone levels. Should I take zinc and vitamin D? Ashwagandha? What do you think of red-light panels? I should retain my semen too, right?
“Retaining your semen” might sound like a funny thing to do, but it’s actually becoming a pretty common practice, especially in the “redpill” community and on the more youthful end of the right-wing spectrum. “No Nut November”—a month of zero masturbation—and a broader vow of “nofap” are presented as ways for men to reclaim their self-control and their health, by breaking with harmful dependency on pornography and sublimating their sexual desire into an outlet that’s more productive than self-abuse.
There’s a long tradition of male sexual abstinence for spiritual, intellectual and physical purposes. Everybody from great religious leaders and philosophers like Friedrich Nietzsche, to nineteenth-century race scientists and sportsmen—boxers, football players, athletes—has sworn by the benefits of a man retaining his semen. Some even dignify or mystify it with names like “manly essence” or “vril,” and describe the heedless loss of semen as a form of self-enervation or deflation, like running down a battery or letting all the air out of a tire.
Science-wise, there isn’t actually a great deal of research into the benefits of abstaining from ejaculation as a man. There’s at least one study I know of that shows a significant testosterone boost from abstinence over a period of about a week, before returning to baseline levels. This suggests, at the very least, that ejaculating once every week or so may be optimal for male hormonal health.
But like I say, there isn’t a great deal of science to draw firm conclusions from.
My general point, in the absence of definitive scientific evidence is a more basic behavioral one. If you can’t stop touching your penis, you’ve got a problem—just like if you can’t stop drinking or compulsively doing anything else, for that matter. We live in a world of instant gratification, and all signs in our culture point in that direction— consume, consume, consume—so you’re not going to be dissuaded from spending all your time browsing the internet with your left hand unless you decide yourself that something’s wrong. Much larger exercises in self-control—building a great physique, creating the life you really want—can then follow from a simple willed act of refusal.
Or that’s the theory, anyway.
We had some news this week that should, on the face of it, concern any young man currently mulling over what to do with the contents of his balls.
According to a Swiss study from 2023, the hantavirus can remain present in a man’s semen for up to six years and could also be sexually transmitted.
The study looks at a 55-year-old man who went to South America and caught the virus. That’s where the unfortunate passengers of the MV Hondius cruise ship also appear to have picked it up—the so-called Andes strain, which can, unlike other strains, pass from human to human.
Although the virus disappeared from the man’s blood, urine and respiratory tract, genetic material remained present in the man’s semen for 71 months. That’s one month shy of six whole-ass years.
In short, it looks like the testes could act as a long-term reservoir for hantavirus and, just as importantly, that it could be transmitted sexually.
This phenomenon has been documented before, perhaps most notably for the Ebola and Zika viruses. The World Health Organization has linked outbreaks of Ebola to sexual intercourse, and male cases are told to have their semen tested every three months until they return two consecutive negative tests.
So what does this mean? Should every man zip up his sack tight—or empty its contents furiously into the nearest sink?
Actually, calm down: The study doesn’t really mean anything. First of all, there have barely been a dozen cases of hantavirus linked to the Hondius cruise from Hell, so there’s a vanishingly thin chance, fellas, you’re incubating the virus in your two veg as you read this.
Reporting on the study has also been disingenuous to say the least. Some media outlets—Britain’s Daily Telegraph among them—chose to report the virus had been found in sperm. Sperm and semen are not the same thing. Sperm are the swimmers; semen is the substance they swim in.
Remedial biology lesson over.
A bigger problem: The scientists didn’t isolate a single live virus. What they found was genetic material from the virus, and when they tried to grow live viruses from that material using a selection of human cells—including cells from the lungs and respiratory tract—they failed.
But that didn’t stop The Telegraph from saying the virus “survives” in semen.
Genetic analysis showed the virus had barely replicated in samples taken less than a year and five years apart. Again: that means the virus isn’t really alive, and certainly not at levels necessary or to constitute a so-called “viral load” that could cause infection.
There’s more—the patient also had high levels of neutralizing antibodies in his body, for the entire duration of the study. Indeed, the researchers note, “repeated symptomatic infection with hantaviruses has not been observed, suggesting life-long protection.” Live hantaviruses exiting the testes would be in big trouble because of the body’s immune system.
So, in short, there’s actually no evidence the hantavirus “survives” in the testes for up to six years, and the possibility of sexual transmission, while plausible, remains completely undemonstrated.
You might want to question why this non-story ever became a story. If you did want to do that, you could start by reading this piece on the Children’s Health Defense website, which helped me as I unraveled the science above.
For now, though, I’m going to leave detective work about the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and Swiss biological weapons research to someone else.
I’ll just say this: Pay attention. The informational landscape about hantavirus is only going to become more difficult to navigate in the coming weeks and months.
A case in point is yesterday’s intervention by Tedros What’s-His-Name, the head of the WHO, who responded to Alex Jones on X with a request to have a conversation “sincerely, with an open heart” about the hantavirus. Remember: This is the Tedros What’s-His-Name who colluded with the Chinese government to suppress the true origin of COVID-19 at the Wuhan Institute of Virology; the Tedros What’s-His-Name who provided contradictory guidance about transmission, mortality rates, safety measures and treatments, including therapeutics like ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine as opposed to vaccines; the Tedros What’s-His-Name who is in large part responsible for the disaster that claimed the lives and wrecked the health of millions of people around the world, changing the world irretrievably for the worse.
The idea of a “sincere” conversation “with an open heart” with this man, or indeed any of the other “experts” who guided the world into calamity—well, it’s not possible, is it?
So for now you can forget about hantavirus hiding in your balls. It’s not and it won’t. But that doesn’t mean there aren’t already bad things in there you should worry about. If you’ve been following my work, you’ll know all about them: glyphosate, microplastics, forever chemicals… That’s load enough on any man’s mind.
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7 Responses
Just don’t **** rats and you’ll be fine!
even hood rat wimmims??????
My balls were already rotating before.
If you need pornography to spank your monkey to, you’re most likely low IQ with poor abstract thinking and spatial recall skills coupled with a lack of real pussy experience. Anyone with over 30 prior partners should have a reel of suitable material already loaded in their memory without needing to resort to rabbi owned porn sites.
Just adopt the precautionary principle, Have Dr Fauci arrested. Whatever it is he is bound to have something to do with it.
TLDR for people not wanting to read all this retard soop
*slop:
> genome persists within the reproductive tract for at least 71 months. Genome sequence analysis early and late after infection reveals a low number of mutations (two single nucleotide variants and one deletion), suggesting limited replication activity.