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| The Myth of the 'Good Negro' | |
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| Topic Started: Nov 19 2015, 10:36 AM (385 Views) | |
| Zechariah | Nov 20 2015, 11:58 AM Post #11 |
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Zechariah
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Can you type that in English, with your illiterate ass? You really butcher the English language, and it's a shame because you have no other.
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| ...fixed | Nov 20 2015, 03:35 PM Post #12 |
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My writing skills annihilate your writing abilities as I stay, 100% compliant, with high grammatical standards. So you can take your jealousy and your envy for my precocious, posting prowess, and shove it right where Doc Saul shoved his jealousy for my style of writing. |
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| Zechariah | Nov 21 2015, 12:40 AM Post #13 |
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Zechariah
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This may help you improve your language skills, Milkdud.
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| ...fixed | Nov 21 2015, 01:14 AM Post #14 |
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| ...fixed | Nov 21 2015, 01:17 AM Post #15 |
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Superior Protection Against The Effects of Ultraviolet Radiation Exposure to the sun has the potential to cause premature aging of the skin, as well as various skin cancers. Your ability to withstand the potentially damaging effects of the sun’s ultraviolet radiation depends on the amount of melanin in your skin, which is determined by the number of melanocytes that are active beneath the surface of your skin. Melanin is an effective absorber of light; the pigment is able to dissipate more than 99.9% of absorbed UV radiation. In even the most light-skinned people, the body’s melanocytes respond to sun exposure by producing more melanin, which creates the effect known as tanning. However, there is a limit to the degree of protection that melanin can provide, and it’s significantly higher in people with naturally darker skin. Xray Neutralizes Harmful Effects of Other Dangerous Radiation Other Than Ultraviolet Melanin can absorb a great amount of energy and yet not produce a tremendous amount of heat when it absorbs this energy, because it can transform harmful energy into useful energy. According to dermatologist and dermapathologist Dr. Leon Edelstein, director of the National American West Skin Pathology Consultation Service, melanin can absorb tremendous quantities of energy of all kinds, including energy from sunlight, x-ray machines, and energy that is formed within cells during the metabolism of cells. His theory is that melanin has the ability to neutralize the potentially harmful effects of these energies. |
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| ...fixed | Nov 21 2015, 01:19 AM Post #16 |
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Causes Younger-Looking Skin Exposure to the sun has the potential to cause premature aging of the skin. Darkly pigmented people tend to exhibit less signs of aging. Dermatologist Susan C. Taylor, author of “Brown Skin,” points out that Blacks and other people of color generally look younger than their lighter-skinned peers because of the higher levels of melanin in their skin. The increased melanin protects those who have it from short-term damage from the sun, as well as the long-term signs of aging, such as age spots, deep wrinkles and rough texture, according to Taylor. Melanin Aids In Human Reproduction The dark pigmentation protects from DNA damage and absorbs the right amounts of UV radiation needed by the body, as well as protects against folate depletion. Folate is water soluble vitamin B complex which naturally occurs in green, leafy vegetables, whole grains, and citrus fruits. Women need folate to maintain healthy eggs, for proper implantation of eggs, and for the normal development of placenta after fertilization. Folate is needed for normal sperm production in men. Furthermore, folate is essential for fetal growth, organ development, and neural tube development. Folate breaks down in high intense UVR. Dark-skinned women suffer the lowest level of neural tube defects. |
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| ...fixed | Nov 21 2015, 01:23 AM Post #17 |
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Melanin: The Organizing Molecule Dr. Frank Barr, pioneering discoverer of melanin’s organizing ability and other properties, theorizes in his technical work, Melanin: The Organizing Molecule: “The hypothesis is advanced that (neuro)melanin (in conjunction with other pigment molecules such as the isopentenoids) functions as the major organizational molecule in living systems. Melanin is depicted as an organizational “trigger” capable of using established properties such as photon- (electron)- photon conversions, free radical-redox mechanism, ion exchange mechanisms, ion exchange mechanisms, and semiconductive switching capabilities to direct energy to strategic molecular systems and sensitive hierarchies of protein enzyme cascades. Melanin is held capable of regulating a wide range of molecular interactions and metabolic processes…” |
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| UTB | Nov 21 2015, 11:53 AM Post #18 |
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Please tell us, how did melanin help the poor Africans that lived in hut fashioned from wooden poles, clay, and cow shit? Are you implying that melanin allowed the Negroes in North Africa to build Pyramids. but his cousins below, in the Sub-Saharan desert, wasn't able to build secure huts? You tell us about Hotep was a great physician, but black Africans didn't know that drinking water out of the river, would give them parasites ? You tell us how great the African armies were, but no African had invented a firearm? So tell us more Bubba, about how great melanin is. It's suppose to be great, but other countries had to send their doctors in to rescue them from Ebola and AIDS. Cut the bullshit bro, and tell us something relevant. |
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4:19 AM Jul 11