I was thinking today as I walked in the sunshine
Mar 22, 2016 10:43:42 GMT -5
starlight and shawnanagins775 like this
Post by kay on Mar 22, 2016 10:43:42 GMT -5
Hi Hounds,
I was thinking today as I walked in the sunshine and had a banana as I trudged along the beach. I was thinking of the different types of radiation and how the different energies affect biological tissue differently. Since alpha and beta are particulates the thought struck me that perhaps it is alpha and beta radiation that is causing skin cancer? Scientists go on and on about the sun causing skin cancer yet it is vitamin D a lot of people are deficient in. Sunlight interacting with the skin is necessary for vitamin D production so I don't buy this anymore. In short I think the link between sunlight and cancer is an unproven junk science theory that causes people to slather on a vat full of chemicals that are worse than sunshine could ever be on your skin and cause the vitamin D deficiency.
I would like to see anyone prove the sunlight causes skin cancer theory with NO particulate radiation( no alpha, beta, neutron) allowed on the skin. The tests would have to be performed in a strictly filtered environment, especially since post Fukushima. Where oh where could we get particulate radiation free? Well... I don't think anywhere in the world for the next, oh 500, 000 years. I know it would be wishful thinking to see studies not slanted towards the scientists proving their theories without complete bias to cater to a giant corporation like Coppertone.
I followed the train of thought to a question. I wonder how many people get skin cancer today compared to prior to nuclear bombs tests and nuclear weapons plants belching out alpha and beta emissions? To be precise how many people prior to 1940's developed skin cancer? Has there been any comparative studies?
I bet there are no studies. Before weapons development, alpha and beta particulates were non-existent because they occur rarely in nature. Where am I going with this? Can skin cancer likely be the result of alpha and beta particulate radiation from nuclear weapons testing and plants?
Kay
I was thinking today as I walked in the sunshine and had a banana as I trudged along the beach. I was thinking of the different types of radiation and how the different energies affect biological tissue differently. Since alpha and beta are particulates the thought struck me that perhaps it is alpha and beta radiation that is causing skin cancer? Scientists go on and on about the sun causing skin cancer yet it is vitamin D a lot of people are deficient in. Sunlight interacting with the skin is necessary for vitamin D production so I don't buy this anymore. In short I think the link between sunlight and cancer is an unproven junk science theory that causes people to slather on a vat full of chemicals that are worse than sunshine could ever be on your skin and cause the vitamin D deficiency.
I would like to see anyone prove the sunlight causes skin cancer theory with NO particulate radiation( no alpha, beta, neutron) allowed on the skin. The tests would have to be performed in a strictly filtered environment, especially since post Fukushima. Where oh where could we get particulate radiation free? Well... I don't think anywhere in the world for the next, oh 500, 000 years. I know it would be wishful thinking to see studies not slanted towards the scientists proving their theories without complete bias to cater to a giant corporation like Coppertone.
I followed the train of thought to a question. I wonder how many people get skin cancer today compared to prior to nuclear bombs tests and nuclear weapons plants belching out alpha and beta emissions? To be precise how many people prior to 1940's developed skin cancer? Has there been any comparative studies?
I bet there are no studies. Before weapons development, alpha and beta particulates were non-existent because they occur rarely in nature. Where am I going with this? Can skin cancer likely be the result of alpha and beta particulate radiation from nuclear weapons testing and plants?
Kay