Mr (or Mrs.) Anonymous, thanks again for your enlightening comments.
I may not have made it as obvious as it could of been. The point I was making is NOT that the man's relatives were all dead.
All 13 relatives mentioned died of cancer.
ALL OF THEM.
That's more than 1/3rd (33.33%) - That's 100%.
That's statistically significant.
I take it from the tone of your note that the current levels of preventable cancer related deaths (every 52 seconds) are perfectly ok with you then, an inevitability, which we should just accept and do absolutely nothing about. As far as you are concerned, that's just the way it is and we can't change it, right? After all, we are all going to die at some point anyway, so why bother?
If I "scaremonger", and save or prolong one life over the next 30-50 years as a result, I'm ok with that.
In my opinion, people are more important than minerals, silica or asbestos.
I think we'll just have to agree to disagree on this one. My conscience is clear.
However, its not just my opinion...remember this?
IMF / News article
Preventing occupational cancer
"A new cancer prevention guide, reveals that over 600,000 deaths a year – one death every 52 seconds – are caused by occupational cancer, making up almost one-third of all work-related deaths.
GLOBAL: A worldwide epidemic of occupational cancer is claiming at least one life every 52 seconds, but this tragedy is being ignored by both official regulators and employers."
refer to http://www.imfmetal.org/main/index.cfm?n=47&l=2&c=15708
There's a lot of "scaremongering" about isn't there?
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