More on African American Incidental UV Transference

African american incidental uv transference and its pernicious lies seems to have spread further on the net than I had previously imagined. I am sitting here dozing off at my computer, but I wanted to say this:

If you do research the topic, do NOT believe all the anecdotal posts on the footnotes of blogs and forums. Go to reputable medical sites, like webmd, or mayo clinic. I know wikipedia isn’t totally reliable, but there’s nothing there either. The only thing you’ll find online is stinking garbage in posts on blogs that say something like:

“We’ve learned the best way to avoid skin cancer is to avoid black people. Reportedly their African American Incidental (UV) Transference (AAIT) is the leading cause of our melanomas. After the loss of my wife, by the AAIT, people in my community started taking it VERY seriously. We are fortunate and don’t live around a lot of blacks. My wife, however, worked with them. We’ve got our children in a private school with no black children. We hate to raise them in this kind of environment, but this is the world we live in today.”

Even if you don’t believe in traditional medicine, go find some alternative therapy, especially sites that talk about the Budwig diet, and you’ll find that no one in their right mind believes that one person is physically capable of storing and transmitting UV rays. If I weren’t so sleepy, I could go into the physics of the whole thing and talk about angstroms and light waves and stuff like that. But I can barely see the screen, so if you don’t believe that AAIT is a pile of garbage, make sure you take the time to do your research and use reputable sources.

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