In 1960, erectile dysfunction affected about 7% of American men. Today, that number has exploded to 62% of men over 40, and cases in men under 30 have grown 330% in the last two decades. And it has nothing to do with age, testosterone, or psychology.
What researchers tracking thousands of men have found is dangerously high concentrations of glyphosate — a pesticide present in 93% of American food, drinking water, and even in the meat of animals fed contaminated feed. Inside the male organ, glyphosate slowly hardens the cavernous tissue from the inside out, turning what should be elastic "sponge" tissue into stiff, fibrotic scar tissue. That's why Viagra and pumps fail: they force more blood in, but the tissue can no longer expand to hold it.
This is also why every other fix on the market only delivers temporary relief. Once the cavernous tissue has hardened from years of glyphosate exposure, no amount of blood flow can force it to expand again. It's like inflating a bicycle tire whose rubber has dried out in the sun — you can pump in all the air you want, but the rubber simply won't stretch anymore. You have to soften the rubber first.
That's when a retired NY urologist traveled to Lexington, Kentucky to study Champion Percheron stallions — the only species exposed to the same toxins as humans, yet whose cavernous tissue stays fully elastic for life. What he found there is now being called the "13-second horse gelatin" method — a protocol his own colleagues had dismissed as impossible, that's now restoring hardness in men whose doctors had given up on them.
Tap the button below to watch the full presentation that explains exactly how it works — and why thousands of men over 50 say this changed everything for them.