Sunburns are a defensive response which the body does itself.
The skin cells detect that theyve been damaged by the sun, so when it comes time to divide they instead kill themselves. This is to prevent the spread of its broken DNA and is a natural defense against cancer.
And every mammal can get sunburns, so its a trait that evolved long ago. The sweat of hippo's is actually brown and is a sunscreen. Large sun exposure over generations caused this all to evolve. This indirectly confirms that the sun kills and that sunburns prevent sun-based genetic illness.
The planets been exposed to this level of light forever, so life's adjusted, but if the sun cranked up out of nowhere (or the ozone depletes) it'd cause a mass extinction.
You were on the website, look up UV rays.
Read its discussion about UV rays causing cancer, then realize the sun sprays UV everyday.
I’m fully aware of Science Priests claiming that “the sun causes cancer” for decades.
You’re the one making the positive claim. You back it up.
My claim is only that they haven’t proven it, because I’m not aware of them having definitively proven it.
Everyone should have been dying of skin cancer left and right for centuries, yet somehow “skin cancer” only shows up in the 20th century. Weird.
Meanwhile, I simply cover up when I go outside, with a good hat and a long shirt, and even after 6+ hours, not even a slight burn is present.
Sunburns are a defensive response which the body does itself.
The skin cells detect that theyve been damaged by the sun, so when it comes time to divide they instead kill themselves. This is to prevent the spread of its broken DNA and is a natural defense against cancer.
And every mammal can get sunburns, so its a trait that evolved long ago. The sweat of hippo's is actually brown and is a sunscreen. Large sun exposure over generations caused this all to evolve. This indirectly confirms that the sun kills and that sunburns prevent sun-based genetic illness.
The planets been exposed to this level of light forever, so life's adjusted, but if the sun cranked up out of nowhere (or the ozone depletes) it'd cause a mass extinction.