African Americans, Part 3: Vitamin D and Rickets
Rickets, a deforming, crippling bone disease
of infants and young children, is a well-established vitamin
D-deficiency disease. Children with adequate levels of
vitamin D simply don't get rickets.
Nevertheless, rickets has made a comeback,
and between 1990 and 2000 increased by 400% among black
children.[1] The reasons:
1. The Powers of Darkness (the POD or sunscare industry)
insist that all children be “protected” from sunlight,
meaning that the most natural method of vitamin D
production—sunlight exposure—is denied to infants, young
children and expectant mothers—mothers who must produce
sufficient vitamin D to meet their own needs and the needs
of both their unborn babies. Sunscreen “protection” reduces
vitamin D synthesis in the skin by 99.5%[2].
This is a disaster for black children and
expectant mothers who are already vitamin D-deficient.
2. The food that is fortified with vitamin D for mass
consumption is milk; however, much of the black population
is intolerant to lactose (milk sugar) and cannot drink milk.
This intolerance has been known of for
decades, and yet the “authorities” continue to fortify a
food not conducive to health in black Americans. Was this
done purposely? I certainly hope not. It is probably
incompetence rather than conspiracy, but it seems too
stupid.
3. Black skin can take 6 times longer than white skin to
make a given amount of vitamin D.[3]
Therefore, to suggest that African Americans
avoid the sunlight is criminal. Yet, despite protestations
to the contrary by the POD, we have become a nation of
indoor dwellers—perhaps the only true cave men that ever
existed.
This assures that blacks, who already have a
very difficult time making vitamin D, are further denied
this life-giving hormone.
When these factors combine, they produce the
vitamin D deficiencies that lead to rickets—a 100%
preventable disease. The POD are responsible for the
resurgence of this disease.
Will the Powers of Darkness be overcome by light and truth
or will they continue to spread the message that results in
death and destruction?
[1] Schwartz, R. Science News Aug 17, 2000.
[2] Matsuoka, L. et al. Sunscreens suppress cutaneous
vitamin D3 synthesis. Journal of Clinical Endocrinology &
Metabolism 1987; 64:1165-68.
[3] Harris, S. et al. Seasonal changes in plasma
25-hydroxyvitamin D concentrations of young American black
and white women. Am J Clin Nutr 1998;67:1232-36.
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