But I am mighty!!
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Every English tourist in Australia.
In New Zealand the sun feels like it's stabbing you after 10min in summer. I can feel my skin prickling like tiny fire ants.It doesn't take long to burn here. serious respect for the sun and upper atmosphere
there's a hole in my ozone dear lyza, dear lyza..
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Mate. I'm a ginger living in New Zealand. Sunburn is an inevitability.
You choose new Zeeland over Australia due to the lack of venomous animals, but forgot to check for unprotected astronomical nuclear reactor in the sky
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Ok Bo Burnham
Went out to look for a reason to hide again
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Baking in the sun risks skin cancer. But people like to be tanned, so cancer is worth it for a good look.
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mate it's £5-10 for a 200ml bottle I'd hardly call that cheap
wrote on last edited by [email protected]In the city of Utrecht NL they have free sunblock stations spread around the city. It shows the temp and UV rating. But buying it in store is crazy expensive and often the quality is poor. Some fancy tiny spray bottles go up to 12 euros, only good for 3 to 4 uses. wtf. Imagine being ginger, there's a ginger tax called sunblock.
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"ball of fire"
Haha, no no. You threw down with a gigantic source of cell destroying radiation. The fire did no harm.
Why exactly do you think there is UV radiation coming from the sun?
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mate it's £5-10 for a 200ml bottle I'd hardly call that cheap
wrote on last edited by [email protected]I buy the store brand from the local supermarket. €2,99 for a 250 ml bottle of SPF 30 and it works great. I never get sunburn, even during multi hour bike rides in the blazing sun.
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Clearly you've never met someone like my wife.
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In the US it's cheap but unregulated and full of shit that's terrible for you. Or you can pay an arm and a leg for stuff that's better but still not up to the standards of most other countries. I learned this by getting a chemical burn in my eye from sunscreen... meant for my face.
The USA is the Wild West when it comes to safety standards of any product.
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Hypothetically speaking, will you get sunburnt if you sit near a fire all day?
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@bees Actually the UV creams have shown to be themselves carcinogenic, so it's not about to have cancer or not, but how to get it. All things in moderation, including sun, your body does need vitamin d3 which it produces in the presence of UV.
Actually the UV creams have shown to be themselves carcinogenic
And vaccines cause autism \s
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The heat could dry out your skin, which, if I'm not mistaken, is essentially what a burn is. However, as the other person noted, a sunburn is damage from radiation, not heat. So I think you could stretch the common definition of a burn to call heat induced dry skin a burn but calling it a sunburn would not be accurate.
@[email protected] If you sit at a magnesium fire, it burns at 3300K, which is hot enough to produce sizeable ultraviolet rays. So you can get your sunburn from that, damaging the DNA in whatever of your remaining cells have not been melted away by heat.
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My excuse is that the weather was predicted as "cloudy" when we left in the morning. When we were on the trip, though, the sun was burning down to extinct humanity instead.
You should be putting sunscreen on regardless, and reapplying every 3 hours.
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WTF are those prices. I'd start looking into importing from abroad ...
Here in the Netherlands it’s expensive as well. Like a small bottle of name-brand sunscreen is €30.
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In the US it's cheap but unregulated and full of shit that's terrible for you. Or you can pay an arm and a leg for stuff that's better but still not up to the standards of most other countries. I learned this by getting a chemical burn in my eye from sunscreen... meant for my face.
wrote on last edited by [email protected]In the US it's cheap but unregulated
It’s the exact opposite actually.
US sunscreen is way worse than sunscreen in other parts of the world like the EU. It doesn’t block the harmful radiation as well. The reason is that it’s more strictly regulated in the US. IIRC it’s not considered a cosmetic product but instead it’s a medical product.
As such it’s subject to much stricter regulation and requires much more (expensive) testing before being allowed on the market. Due to this it’s considered too expensive to introduce the newer, more advanced sunscreen products in the US so you’re stuck with the older, crappier sunscreen.
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If the cream wasn't such a goddamn sensory nightmare...
UPF clothes FTW -
Ok Bo Burnham
but they're specifically avoiding burning their hams
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Cost of living in the UK is up 25% since Brexit happened in 2021.
"We've become the first country in the history of the world to have placed economic sanctions upon itself" -James O'Brien
We're a population of morons who will still blame anything but ourselves for the position we're in.
The British are the Americans of Europe, so that makes sense.
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Actually the UV creams have shown to be themselves carcinogenic
And vaccines cause autism \s
@Railcar8095 With respect to vaccines and autism, there is a correlation but as the old saying goes casuality is not causality until it is. In my view it warrants research. And I've got no doubt that the number of vaccines they are giving toddlers and children these days is overloading their immune systems. -
You choose new Zeeland over Australia due to the lack of venomous animals, but forgot to check for unprotected astronomical nuclear reactor in the sky
Melanoma is the New Zealand flavor of poison damage