Candid views by TikTok creator Jehvana J have gone viral after she claimed that chemicals in American food may be contributing to changes in men’s behavior and masculinity.
“I really do believe that they’re doing stuff to the food and it’s affecting these men,” she said in the video, which has rapidly circulated across social media platforms.
Jehvana expressed strong skepticism about conventional explanations for generational shifts, adding:
“I don’t know if they’re injecting the foods that we eat with like estrogen or female hormones, but it’s something—and nobody can convince me otherwise.”

She rejected social explanations often cited in public discourse.
“It’s like a lack of masculinity within this generation, and I’m not about to keep blaming it on… he was raised by a single mom,” she said. “No—it’s something they’re doing to the atmosphere, to the food, to the water.”
The creator went on to describe what she views as a cultural shift in gender roles and behavior.
“None of these men are masculine… they argue back and forth with females constantly… they don’t work hard,” she said, also pointing to changing lifestyle preferences among younger men.
Speaking broadly about her concerns, she added: “It’s a war on our men, and that’s a hill that I’m ready to die on because I know it’s true.”
Jehvana also referenced food production practices, particularly in the meat industry.
“They give them animals all type of hormones, then they slaughter them… and then y’all eat that, so now you’re ingesting them hormones,” she said. “I think it’s a whole lot of estrogen.”
The video has drawn mixed reactions online, with some users expressing concern about food safety and environmental exposure, while others have criticized the claims as unproven and misleading.
Public health experts note that while hormones are used in some agricultural processes, food safety regulations are designed to limit potential risks. However, the viral nature of the video highlights how social media continues to amplify debates at the intersection of science, culture, and perception.
