Love Has No Color
Posted by Michelle Moquin on April 30th, 2013
Good morning!
First of all, I need to retract a statement that I made from yesterday’s blog write. I stated that I was posting some “simple, common sense tips.” Actually, I don’t feel that these tips are “common sense”, or so many girls wouldn’t make these faux pas on a first date. I think that young girls just don’t know. And even some older more experienced girls just don’t know either.
I work with quite a few single women who are getting out into the dating world again. And I am shocked over what they show me they have worn on a first date. After our discussion, and I tell them what their clothes are saying, they realize the message they are sending to their date is not the message they intend to send.
So forgive me for making that statement. I have made mistakes in my younger years because I didn’t know. And I learned the hard way. It was unfair of me to think that what the writer suggested were “common sense tips,” as well as judge girls for not using their “common sense.” If these tips were so common, and more importantly well known, we wouldn’t need to write about them to inform.
Now…onto today’s write:
“Love Has No Color”: Georgia High School Students Set to Hold First Integrated Prom
TRANSCRIPT:
This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.
AMY GOODMAN: ”Always and Forever,” Pat Metheny, here onDemocracy Now!, democracynow.org, The War and Peace Report. I’m Amy Goodman, with Juan González.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: We turn now to Georgia, where a group of high school students are making history by challenging the segregation of their high school prom. Thanks to their efforts, Wilcox County High will hold its first-ever integrated prom this Saturday, nearly 60 years after Brown v. The Board of Educationdesegregated the nation’s school system.
The students received support from the NAACP and other groups. At a press conference, the president of the NAACP’s Georgia chapter, Edward DuBose, laid blame for segregated proms at the feet of parents and school administrators.
EDWARD DUBOSE: Shame on you. Shame on any parents who continue to embrace the politics of segregation. When you are the leaders of the county and you allow your community to retreat to the era of segregation, you are the problem.
AMY GOODMAN: Saturday’s prom will be the first in Wilcox County High’s history to bring together students of all backgrounds. In the past, the proms have been organized by private groups, and parents behind the “white prom” have refused to let African-American students attend. Local officials say the segregated prom has continued because it’s organized privately, out of the school district’s control. News of the case spread quickly over social media, fueling support and donations for an integrated prom from as far away as Australia and South Korea.
Well, for more, we’re joined by two of the students who are helping organize Saturday night’s integrated prom: Mareshia Rucker and Brandon Davis. And then we’ll speak with Mareshia’s mother, Toni, who has encouraged her daughter’s efforts.
Mareshia, tell us how it’s possible that the prom has been segregated for all of these years and what you decided to do about it.
MARESHIA RUCKER: That’s actually a good question. Our school, when they integrated, they never did start to sponsor a school prom, so they left it up to the parents to have a prom for their children. That’s how it ended up having a white prom and a black prom all these years. But when we became juniors, toward the beginning—the end of our junior year and the beginning of our senior year, we decided that we get along with everyone, we all do everything together, so there was no reason for us to have a prom that excluded any one of us.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: And, Brandon, what’s been the reactions, first of your fellow students and then also of parents of the students, to this idea?
BRANDON DAVIS: Well, at first we had a whole bunch of students who—you could tell they wanted to support it, but they were too scared to stand out and stand against not just their peers but their parents. But as time’s progressed and time’s gone on, we’ve had more and more students change, come help us out, and we’ve actually had more parents. At first, it was like—parents were like, “Well, it’s tradition. Let’s just stay it this way.” But after time, their children changed. They’re like, “Hey, I’m going to support my children. This is their memory. Let’s go.”
AMY GOODMAN: Brandon, did you ever go to the white prom?
BRANDON DAVIS: No, Ma’am.
AMY GOODMAN: And how is it that the white parents would not allow in black students?
BRANDON DAVIS: Well, since it’s a private event, they have all the power they want, and they can say, “Hey, none of the black kids can come, because it’s just private.” And that’s just protected them against all these laws.
AMY GOODMAN: So, Mareshia, the homecoming queen this year, the prom queen, she’s African American, and the prom—I don’t know what you call him—king is white?
MARESHIA RUCKER: Yes, Ma’am. The home—they’re actually the homecoming king and queen. And, yes, the king is white, and the queen is black.
AMY GOODMAN: So, was the queen able to go to the prom, to the white prom?
MARESHIA RUCKER: It was actually the homecoming dance that she was not allowed to go to. And they also would not let the king and queen take pictures together for our school yearbook.
AMY GOODMAN: Wow.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: I want to ask you about an article written by Wayne McGuinty in The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. He’s a city councilmember in Rochelle, Georgia. McGuinty writes, “The truth is, Wilcox County has traditionally had two proms by choice—not coercion, personal preference, and not pressure. There has not been any attempt to block or prevent students from holding an integrated prom and, in fact, the community has supported both proms in the past by participating in student fundraisers. We’re certainly not perfect in Wilcox County, but we’re not as different from anyplace else as we have been portrayed in the media.” This sounds like an argument for “separate but equal.” But I’d like to get your response.
MARESHIA RUCKER: In response to that, that would be like completely false information, because if it’s—they’re saying that tradition is the reason. That’s just their way of making a cop-out, because they don’t want to acknowledge the fact that if adults had done what they were supposed to do, then we, as students, would not have been having to do this right now. Because our community is so very small-minded, and racism runs really deep here, no one wants to acknowledge that, because they’ve been living in this for so long. But reality is that students not wanting it or not coming up with the idea is like—that’s false information. He did not tell the truth about that.
AMY GOODMAN: Your governor, the Georgia governor, Republican, Nathan Deal, was asked by a group called Better Georgia to publicly support your integrated prom, as some Republican and Democratic state officials have already done. Governor Deal’s spokesman, Brian Robinson, responded by attacking the group rather than addressing the question. He wrote, quote, “This is a leftist front group for the state Democratic party, and we’re not going to lend a hand to their silly publicity stunt.” The statement forced Governor Deal to clarify his position. He later told a reporter atThe Atlanta Journal-Constitution, quote, “I believe that anything that’s associated with a school should not have the distinction or discrimination made based on race or gender or any other separation, but it appears to me that the parents and students have worked that out on their own, as they should.” Brandon, your response?
BRANDON DAVIS: Well, first I’d have to say about what he said, it really shocked me. And as me having a military part of a background, I’ve never heard anyone, quote-unquote, “commit political suicide” so fast. And just by saying that, does he not realize the students who are supporting this and putting this together are ages of 17 and 18 and legal voting age? He just, like—it just—it really, really dug deep with me.
MARESHIA RUCKER: Wow.
AMY GOODMAN: Mareshia, are you excited about the prom tomorrow night?
MARESHIA RUCKER: Yes, I am completely stoked for prom tomorrow night. I am—I don’t think I’ve been this excited in a long, long time. It’s been a while.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: And, Brandon, have you been surprised by the response on the Internet, people offering to—financial support for your efforts to organize this integrated prom?
BRANDON DAVIS: I’m amazed, and I’m just overwhelmed by all the people in the world that want to help us. It just—it shows how great the world really is, even though most of the time we can’t see it.
AMY GOODMAN: Well, we want to thank you both for being with us. In a moment, we’re going to talk, Mareshia, to your mother. We’ve been talking to Mareshia Rucker and Brandon Davis. But as we talk about segregation in the U.S. that continues to this day, I want to go back to 1957, when a group known as the Little Rock Nine integrated Little Rock Central High School in Arkansas. This was three years after the Supreme Court’s landmark decision in Brown v. Board of Educationdeclaring the segregation of public schools unconstitutional. The first time the students tried to attend what had previously been an all-white school, they were turned away by the National Guard on the orders of Arkansas Governor Orval Faubus. The second time, they were met by a mob of more than a thousand people, who beat the African-American journalists who were there to cover the story. Finally, President Dwight Eisenhower sent in the Army to escort the students to school. Well, the youngest member of the Little Rock Nine was Carlotta Walls LaNier. She was 14 when she was faced with the mob along with eight other students. I interviewed Carlotta earlier this month at the National Conference for Media Reform in Denver and asked her to describe that historic day, September 25th, 1957, when the Little Rock Nine finally integrated Little Rock Central High School.
CARLOTTA WALLS LANIER: That was a wonderful day, because we had a jeep in front and a jeep in the back, and we were in station wagons, and fixed bayonets, guns, the whole nine yards. They were there to protect us and see to it that we got into the school. Once we got into the school, we all had an individual bodyguard. The troopers were all up and down the hallways. They didn’t come into the classrooms, but they were up and down the hallways. And that is how I went to school and—for the year ’57, ’58. A helicopter was buzzing over the school. The 1,200 troopers were bivouacked out on the football field and the grounds and so forth those first two or three weeks. And I don’t wish that on any young person, but that’s what was necessary for us to get our education. And I’m happy that it took place.
AMY GOODMAN: So they kept out the angry mob of a thousand outside the school, but what about inside, hundreds and hundreds of white students, a sea of white inside the walls of the school?
CARLOTTA WALLS LANIER: Right, thousands. There was 2,100 students that went to this school. And I cannot say that they were all against me, because they weren’t. But there was a concentrated group of people that only came to school to make it miserable for us, at least that’s how I viewed it. And they made a concerted effort to do that. We were pushed, slammed into lockers, down staircases, you know, ink in our seats, spittle, spat upon, you know, constant name calling, those sort of things.
AMY GOODMAN: So what gave you the strength, Carlotta? You were 14 years old?
CARLOTTA WALLS LANIER: I knew I was right. And when you know you’re right, you just seem to be able to. And I had faith that I would be protected, that I knew I was doing the right thing. And I considered that group of people who—especially the name callers and so forth, you know, just a bunch of ignorant people. And I was not about to stoop to their level. And it was their problem. I decided that this situation was their problem, because we were within the law. We were doing what was right. We had a right to be there. The Supreme Court decision had given us that right.
AMY GOODMAN: That was Carlotta Walls LaNier, youngest member of the Little Rock Nine. She was 14 years old when she integrated Central High. Her book is called A Mighty Long Way: My Journey to Justice at Little Rock Central High School.
Well, we’re going to end this segment back in Georgia with Toni Rucker, who has been helping her daughter, Mareshia, and other students who have organized the first integrated prom at Wilcox County High in Georgia, which will be held on Saturday night. Mareshia is still with us.
Toni Rucker, as you listen to Carlotta talk about her journey in 1957, tell us very briefly about the journey you and Mareshia took to challenge segregation in Wilcox.
TONI RUCKER: Well, first of all, you know, I’m so thankful for Miss Carlotta as well as the other eight who integrated. And so, from that, they give us strength to continue to do, you know, what we’ve been doing for the past year now. You know, it has been a trying process, but through it all, these kids have planted their feet, and they said, “We’re going to do this.” And so, as a parent, you know, I had to get on board with something that is right, something that is good for the community collectively, and something that unifies us, unifies us all, showing that there is no difference between us, you know, aside from the color of our skin. So, it’s been a fight, but it’s been the best fight that I’ve had, you know, in my lifetime, I’ll say.
AMY GOODMAN: And finally, your feelings about your daughter, who’s sitting right there next to you, Mareshia?
TONI RUCKER: As I said before, Webster has not created words yet. As a parent, this is one of the most rewarding things that could happen, you know, to a parent, to see their child display all of the morals and values that you instill in them from very young. So, to display that, to see her be strong and independent and, you know, fighting for such a worthy cause is an amazing feeling as a parent. So rewarding.
AMY GOODMAN: We thank you both for being with us. Mareshia, any final words as you sit there glowing next to your mother, Toni?
MARESHIA RUCKER: If I had anything to say, it would just be that this has really been amazing, and I have become more of an humble person because of it. And I just want people to understand that love has no color.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: And, Mareshia, has your mother given you a curfew time for the prom night Saturday night?
MARESHIA RUCKER: Well, mom is going to be there, so I guess my curfew is whenever she leaves, I better be leaving.
AMY GOODMAN: Well, have a great time, Mareshia Rucker and Toni Rucker, your mom.
*****
Readers: It’s hard to imagine that segregation is still going on. Yet there are those that insist on “tradition” to maintain separate proms for their black and white students to keep the illusion that white is better. Pretty disgusting. Is there any wonder why most of America’s whites feel entitled to dis the president because he is black. Kudos to Lanier for being such a brave girl back in ’57, and kudos to Rucker and Davis for their courage today, telling it like it is…speaking the truth.
Peace out.
Lastly, greed over a great story is surfacing from my “loyal”(?) readers. With all this back and forth about who owns what, that appears on my blog, let me reiterate that all material posted on my blog becomes the sole property of my blog. If you want to reserve any proprietary rights don’t post it to my blog. I will prominently display this caveat on my blog from now on to remind those who may have forgotten this notice.
Gratefully your blog host,
michelle
Aka BABE: We all know what this means by now :)
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April 30th, 2013 at 7:13 am
Before the Obama administration, the Espionage Act of 1917 had only been used only 3 times to prosecute officials who divulged government secrets. Since President Obama took office, 6 whistleblowers have been charged under the Act. Meet all 6.
http://billmoyers.com/content/slideshow-six-whistleblowers-charged-under-the-espionage-act/
April 30th, 2013 at 9:12 am
Common sense isn’t common.
I’m not saying any of the whites invasions on any territory is right but I’m dine I’d only be speaking to peeps who think u don’t know about global economics and Itheft and I do. Nuff said.
Luv, Zen Lill and it’s blonde and proud of it so smoke that : )
April 30th, 2013 at 9:13 am
Typos r b. my smartphone has no common sense either.
April 30th, 2013 at 11:30 am
Just had a chance to read this article transcript…ridiculous that this is still happening…what can I say, there are days when being white is definitely not a point of pride when it comes to perpetuating any of this kind of racist trash (coming clearly from – white trash). – ZL
April 30th, 2013 at 11:31 am
correction, just in case it’s not clear in above statement – I’m not white trash (though I have my naysayers, obviously : ) and I don’t perpetuate any of this color of the skin ‘trash’ – ZL
April 30th, 2013 at 5:14 pm
But, hey, there’s no racism in America, we’re just playing the race card.
April 30th, 2013 at 5:27 pm
Come on Zen Lill at least be real.
April 30th, 2013 at 5:51 pm
Kissing and Other Surprising Causes of Cavities
Four out of five people think that sugar causes cavities, but that’s not true. The real culprits are bacteria in the mouth that feed on sugar and other carbs, then release acids that dissolve tooth enamel, weakening and eroding it to the point where cavities can form.
Certain behaviors—including some that are sure to surprise you, such as kissing!—increase your risk for dental decay.
Matthew J. Messina, DDS, a national spokesperson for the American Dental Association and a dentist in private practice in Fairview Park, Ohio, explained how to guard against startling causes of cavities, including…
French kissing.
Smooching can transfer bacteria such as Streptococcus mutans from your sweetheart’s mouth to yours—and vice versa. When those bacteria produce acids, cavity risk increases.
Prevention:
You and your partner must practice good oral hygiene to protect each other. This means brushing twice each day with a tooth-strengthening fluoride toothpaste and flossing daily. It’s also smart to brush the surface of your tongue once a day. “You can use a toothbrush.
Just stick out your tongue and hold the tip with your nonbrushing hand, then scrape the tongue’s surface lightly,” Dr. Messina said. Also ask your dentist whether an antibacterial mouthwash would be beneficial for you.
If you and your partner follow these steps, the bacteria levels in your mouths should be low enough that tongue-touching kisses won’t increase your cavity risk.
What if your honey does not practice good oral hygiene? Give your partner a new toothbrush and fluoride toothpaste. Lovingly suggest that a trip to the dentist and improved oral hygiene could help banish bad breath and other turnoffs, making make him or her more kissable.
Dr. Messina did not recommend scare tactics, such as showing your partner a disgusting close-up image of bacteria eating away at dirty teeth—but you can explain that poor oral health may be linked to heart disease and other health problems.
Sipping sweet drinks.
The sugar in soda, energy drinks and sports drinks is bad enough because it feeds those acid-producing bacteria. This problem is compounded, however, because these beverages also contain acids (such as citric, carbonic, malic and/or phosphoric acid) that skew the acid/alkaline balance inside the mouth.
Normally the mouth has a neutral pH of 7.0. Tooth dentin (the root and inside part of the tooth) starts to dissolve at a pH of 6.5, while enamel starts to dissolve at a pH of 5.5.
Regular and diet soft drinks, energy drinks, sports drinks and citrus juices have a pH of 2.3 to 4.0—levels that can dissolve rust, Dr. Messina said. Sipping such beverages is especially damaging because it prolongs the “acid bath” that your teeth must soak in.
Prevention:
Drink water instead. Or if you can’t resist the allure of a sweet beverage, drink it more quickly rather than sipping…or at least use a straw to help keep the fluid away from your teeth.
When you’re done with your drink, immediately rinse your mouth with water. Don’t brush right away, though—the acid leaves enamel soft and vulnerable.
Wait 30 minutes for the enamel to harden up before you brush, Dr. Messina advised. (Watch this video, and you’ll never have a sweet drink again.)
Too-vigorous tooth-brushing. Forceful brushing causes gums to recede, exposing part of the roots of the teeth. The roots are covered with cementum, which is softer than enamel and thus more vulnerable to decay (not to mention more sensitive to pain). Older adults are particularly prone to cavities at the gum line.
Prevention:
Use a soft toothbrush to gently clean all the surfaces of the teeth. At the gum line especially, think of using those bristles to massage, not to scrub, Dr. Messina suggested. Many people brush improperly, so watch this video to learn the right way to brush, especially in hard-to-reach spots.
Using mouth-drying drugs. Saliva is a natural buffer against cavities because it helps neutralize acids and washes food particles away from teeth.
More than 400 prescription and over-the-counter medications can reduce saliva production, leaving you with a dry, cavity-prone mouth. These include certain drugs that treat depression, high blood pressure, diarrhea and urinary incontinence, as well chemotherapy drugs, antihistamines and decongestants.
Prevention:
Chew sugarless gum sweetened with xylitol to stimulate saliva flow, and drink plenty of water to keep your mouth hydrated. Don’t smoke!
Along with all its other catastrophic health effects, smoking dries out your mouth. Also, tell your dentist about all prescription and over-the-counter medications and supplements you take and whether you experience dry mouth.
Together, your dentist and doctor may be able to find alternative treatments that do not have this side effect.
Ignoring old fillings.
Dental fillings can weaken, loosen or crack over time, creating tiny crevices in which acid-producing bacteria can build up. Yet it is difficult for the average person to tell whether there is a problem with an old filling that is starting to fail, Dr. Messina said.
Prevention:
Have your teeth professionally examined at least twice a year—so worn-out fillings can be replaced before bacteria have a chance to make your old cavities even worse.
Source: Matthew J. Messina, DDS, national spokesperson, American Dental Association, private practitioner, Fairview Park, Ohio, and visiting faculty member, Pankey Institute, Key Biscayne, Florida. http://www.DocMJMessina.com
April 30th, 2013 at 5:52 pm
Zen Lill you can do me anyway you want anytime you want. First, second or whatever date.
I am very partial to blonds.
April 30th, 2013 at 6:10 pm
Be real about what exactly, Davey? I never said any of it was the correct thing to do, short of killing off all white men, what do you want me to say or do that’s ‘real’ dude? -ZL
April 30th, 2013 at 6:35 pm
Alycedale, you were right about most white women following their men lockstep.
——————
Former U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor expressed doubts that the nation’s highest court should have ruled on the controversial Bush v. Gore case that decided the outcome of the 2000 presidential election.
====================
May 1st, 2013 at 6:18 am
Zen Lill, let’s not advocate killing me off. I was just saying choose a side and argue your point. You do it well enough.
Taking all sides of an issue is just not real.
May 1st, 2013 at 6:27 am
Zen Lill summer is upon us again, so please make a guy’s day and send Michelle a picture of you in your choice for this year’s summer fashion.
May 1st, 2013 at 6:32 am
White people love this kind of news. It reinforces their belief that they are special. See we don’t associate with the darkies.
If not for their numerical superiority, they would have long ago been discarded.
May 1st, 2013 at 6:35 am
Any parent that sponsors/funds segregated proms should be brought up for child abuse.
Any, but a white one. They are truly sick.
May 1st, 2013 at 6:40 am
That’s white america for you. Two sets of rules, if OTW parents started a segregated party for students that attended a public school, whites would go to court or their legislators and get a desegregated prom mandated.
But this shit is just another pathetic attempt to suggest being white is somehow better. When will they ever get over themselves?
May 1st, 2013 at 6:41 am
Welcome to the 20th century, Wilcox High! Oh, wait a minute….
May 1st, 2013 at 6:43 am
Wow. As someone who grew up in California… I just have no words…
Truly pitiful they have to resort to stuff like this to make themselves feel superior.
May 1st, 2013 at 6:44 am
What a sad & embarrassing story for America. I wonder how many more places in the South have this segregation?
Congratulations for the kids who stood up & said we want all of our class mates together. The parents who wanted the segregated proms are disgusting.
May 1st, 2013 at 6:48 am
Jonas, I remember when, fondly also. Zen Lill you used to be kinder and grace us occasionally with a peek a your latest fashion choices.
Well, nothing like warm California weather to bring out the latest. I mean you are wearing something out in all that great weather. Why not share???????????????
May 1st, 2013 at 6:54 am
I would like to say it is embarrassing that this still happens. But whites still hold the numerical advantage in this country. They will exploit every advantage to hold on to the illusion that they are special because of the color of their skins.
Really, looking at the reality, that is all they have. I mean even a casual evaluation of the first black president against the other 43 shows the huge difference in what can be accomplished by someone other than a white man.
May 1st, 2013 at 6:57 am
it is the school’s fault for not recognizing this as a divisive issue & taking action LONG ago. Parents should not have control over school-related activities like prom & graduation specifically so stupid stuff like this doesn’t happen in 2013.
May 1st, 2013 at 6:59 am
Don’t we all just love this nations obsession with melanin? So adorable and primitive!
May 1st, 2013 at 6:59 am
This is nice but embarrassing. How is it possible that this is just now happening? This is not anything to be proud of, it’s ridiculous. Why are the school administrators not being questioned for violating the Constitution?
May 1st, 2013 at 6:59 am
I can’t believe they had a segregated prom up until now! Are you kidding me?!
May 1st, 2013 at 7:01 am
Steward, more likely, the school dropped the prom many years ago BECAUSE it was a divisive issue. And school budgets being what they are these days, I’m sure they are not in a hurry to pick it up again. Proms can be expensive.
May 1st, 2013 at 7:02 am
Lex, I kept re-reading thinking I was missing the part where it said the story is a hoax. I went to “school sponsored” events since Jr. High in N.C..
We never even gave it a thought that anything would be separate. My mouth is still open, my head is still shaking as I’m typing……..
May 1st, 2013 at 7:17 am
“…BECAUSE it was a divisive issue.”
Bruce, that’s just white bullshit. An integrated prom is NOT a divisive issue in and of itself. It is a manufactured divisive issue by whites trying to pretend that their race is so special that permission is needed by OTWs to mingle with them.
Your reflexive acceptance of that premise tells me your race. Most others will find the assumption that an integrated prom between teenagers who attend the same public school would be divisive idiotic.
Unfortunately, you and the rest of your race will have to face this fact also, you are not special because of the color of your skin. NOT today, nor were you yesterday.
It was only as Robert,RT has been pointing out to you on this blog. You were Constitutionally made America’s Affirmative Action Beneficiaries.
But we are tearing down that privilege every day even if it seems progress is one brick at a time sometimes.
May 1st, 2013 at 7:33 am
Can Sunscreen Do More Harm Than Good?
by Dr. David Williams
After a long winter, springtime is finally upon us. And soon, instead of warnings about the flu, we’ll be hearing from medical experts about the importance of using sunscreen every day to protect ourselves from skin cancer.
Daily sunscreen use and warnings to avoid the sun at all costs have been the mantra of government agencies and most medical professionals for at least a decade or more. However, during that time we’ve seen monumental jumps in depression (and the use of antidepressants) and vitamin D deficiencies, both of which sunlight helps to prevent.
Studies have also shown that, while sunscreen use can prevent visible burning, it’s questionable whether it actually results in a drop in skin cancer rates—particularly melanoma, the most deadly form.
And, then there’s the concern of various sunscreen ingredients being absorbed by the body and causing further problems. Scientists have now found that one widely used sunscreen ingredient, benzophenone (BP), can pass through the skin and be absorbed into the bloodstream. Once inside the body, it mimics the effects of estrogen.
This latest study was performed to see if there was a link between endometriosis, which affects 1 in 10 women, and the use of sunscreens and other personal care products that contain BP. Endometriosis requires estrogen to develop.
When they tested the urine of women who underwent surgery for endometriosis, they found high levels of BP—and higher levels of the chemical was associated with an increased risk.
While this study focused on mature women and endometriosis, you have to wonder about the effects on young children. Research has shown that unborn and young children are the most susceptible to estrogen-mimicking compounds.
Young children are generally the ones covered in these chemicals. Even low doses of these chemicals have been shown to alter sexual characteristics in developing fetuses, cause the early onset of puberty, and damage estrogen cycles throughout adulthood.
If you’re going to be out in the sun for long periods of time and require a sunscreen, then zinc oxide is probably the best option. Make sure it isn’t micronized zinc oxide, which is another way of saying it is zinc oxide nanoparticles. Nanoparticles are small enough to penetrate the skin and are the latest craze in skin care products.
By using nanoparticles, manufacturers hope to get more of the product into the inner layers of the skin. Unfortunately, these chemicals can then enter the bloodstream and the effects on various other tissues and organs are still largely unknown.
Now it’s your turn: Are you an avid sunscreen user?
May 1st, 2013 at 8:06 am
Davey, I’ll indulge you, which issue would you like me to argue, the SA or the ‘cheating’ word? : ) you know I give good banter whichever side of a subject I choose, and no, I’m not all for killing off all white men either, though some of you could use a mega-AssKicking. And about history of whites, theyn have done some rotten things to the indigenous people of many lands, I kind of wonder now what would the US look like if whites never ‘discovered’ it and what would SA look like if Brits/Boors never ‘discovered’ it…etc…etc…etc…wonder if an alien might want to chime in on that. How do you undo all the wrongs whites have committed? It seems to be a moot argument at best, so again short of killing off all of you, what’s a world to do?
Luv, Zen Lill
PS men of MM blog – new summer fashions have just hit my closet, it IS that time of year.
May 1st, 2013 at 9:36 am
That’s why I tune in. Zen Lill share what your choices are. We need PICTORIALS.