But I’d like to talk about cancer.
Any type of cancer is the bodies inability to get rid of dead cells.
Usually of course,the dead cells build up and turn into a tumor right?
So, not all tumors are inherently cancerous and not all cancer turns into tumors. Leukemia is a good example.
Cancer is mutated cells multiplying uncontrollably. Cells grow and divide to create new cells as needed. Old or damaged cells die naturally and are replaced by 'new' ones. In rare cases, damaged or abnormal cells start multiplying uncontrollably - which is cancer. Sometimes it forms tumors, sometimes it doesn't. I'm not sure I would call a tumor a clog of dead cells.
This is an oversimplification of cancer, but I hope you get the idea.
What if I told you,toxins and heavy metals are also the main reason of this cause.
Like I explained,metals accumulate by the skin,the sun plays a role in this but it absolutely shouldn’t play a role if those heavy metals are not present.
I know what the concept of sunscreen is of course,no explanation needed.
So I’ve never seen someone talk about how heavy metals play a huge role in skin cancer,maybe aajonus vonderplanitz did but I never heard.
I would need to conduct a study or an experiment with this to properly confirm.
But here’s my theory that in my opinion makes the most sense:
A high concentration of heavy metals on a specific part of your skin,this attracts and heats the surrounding cells up,causing them to die,with a high total of toxin amount in the body,your immune system and bacteria cannot properly regenerate those cells properly.
This in term causes as cancer is known,a build up of dead cells that cannot be digested by macrophages and other cells of the immune system and also bacteria.
A wow,you have skin cancer.
For the sake of argument, I'm going to assume you mean skin cancer. The most common types of skin cancer is Basal Cell Carcinoma, Melanoma and Squamous Cell Carcinoma - All
mainly caused by UV light. Even in the case of Nonmelanoma (an umbrella term to describe cancers that are not Melanoma), UV light causes most of the DNA changes in skin cells. So it makes sense why this is the case.
If sunburn is damaged tissue (due to DNA damage) caused by UV light, then the skin sheds the damaged cells, and new ones regenerate by multiplying and dividing the cells. While this process is happening, because this is a normal process for our skin to do, sometimes cancer can form. If cancer is abnormal cells multiplying and dividing, then being constantly exposed to UV light increases your chances of cancer because you're increasing your chances of abnormal cells forming.
By your logic, the
cause of the cells regenerating are being caused by surface level metals heating up and then killing the cells - and
not sunburn killing those cells. I'm not sure I agree, but I can understand why you might think that way. But this does not
disprove the theory that UV light causes skin cancer - you said you simply don't agree that sunburn exists in the manner that it's understood. For your argument to make sense, you have to first disprove sunburn does not exist via UV light. Maybe metals can be a
factor in some skin cancers, but I don't see how this would prove that sunburn (as we currently understand it) does not exist. Or why this would disprove the effect of sunscreen.
This study would be somewhat easy to confirm. You would just get skin samples of patients who have skin cancer, and compare it to people who don't. Obviously I don't expect you to study people's skin, but it might be something you can submit to an educational research institute and see if they'd look into it.
I can’t get my head around the concept of sunlight hitting all parts of your body (if the individual is unclothed of course) and specifically targeting one single spot.
Because this is not how it works. First, it's nearly impossible for sunlight to hit all of your body parts, even unclothed. It's unlikely (not impossible) for someone to get skin cancer in their armpit for example. When you look up images of skin cancer, it's mainly the face, arms, shoulders, back, and whatnot - stuff that faces
towards the sun.
When you're driving a car, your left shoulder is closer to the window than your right shoulder. That small exposure makes a differences in regards where the cancer might form. It just doesn't randomly develop on the bottom of your foot, because the sunlight does
not hit all of your body parts evenly, 24/7, even when fully unclothed.
I find your theory interesting, but I'm struggling to understand. I
want to understand it, but I don't understand why you came to the conclusion that you did.