One survey, from the Orlando Health Cancer Institute, found that 1 in 7 American adults under age 35 believe using sunscreen daily is more harmful than direct sun exposure.
“There have been several high-profile individuals” – including reality-TV star Kristin Cavallari – who have talked about how they don't wear sunscreen, about how it's not natural to wear sunscreen, about how sunscreen causes cancer. That’s not based in fact and it’s not accurate information,” Rogers says.
Lmao...
My ancestors evolved to live in Britain where if there's a sunny afternoon abover 70 degrees (freedom units, obviously) everyone loses their god damn minds. Then they moved to Appalachian America where they were under trees the majority of their life.
It's not "natural" for my pasty ass to be exposed to the sun.
Sunscreen is the only reason I don't have to schedule my activities like a vampire.
And my back still looks like a connect the dots drawing.
Thank you! I look for more examples like this ever since someone turned down agave nectar because it wasn’t natural. I was trying to explain how agave nectar was what I always expect honey to be like (pours easy, lighter flavor).
First, honey isn’t natural either. It’s made by an alien hive mind. A human collecting a plants nectar is way more natural. But any way, here is my contribution:
Perhaps you’d like shots of this 100% all-natural rattlesnake venom? Not man-made at all.
Pale skin is a specific - and quite recent - adaption to colder climates that enables the body to produce sufficient vitamin D even from limited sunlight. Oh and living "naturally" also means you're very unlikely to live beyond 40, so skin cancer is less of a consideration. But anybody who believes some dumb Tiktoker over scientific fact probably shouldn't reproduce anyway.
To clarify, it wasn't so much that sun was limited, it's that skin was limited.
The further away from the equator, the colder it is, the more skin gets covered by clothes and can't make the D.
So skin got so pale that just exposed areas like face/hands could make enough D
There was some evolutionary changes because there's more variation in length of daylight, but that was really just a more flexible circadian rhythm if I'm remember correctly.
And the lifespan thing is commonly misunderstood.
If someone made it to like 10 years old, they'd probably make it to their 60s. Infant mortality was pretty big for most of human evolution. And the getting past the first couple of years was what really brought down average lifespan.
But anybody who believes some dumb Tiktoker over scientific fact probably shouldn’t reproduce anyway.
This is a lot more grey, because (at least in America) we can't count on the government to prevent toxic shit being in everything.
So it is plausible that some sunscreens are toxic. But even if they are, there needs to be a cost/benefit analysis to see if it's so toxic it's more dangerous than sun cancer.
And expecting your average Americans to do all of that....
Is gonna lead to a lot of skin cancer. Be a use we're lazy and it's easier to just stop using sunscreen