o7
7.8K posts

o7
@o7_4_now
A fish does not see or understand water until it's on the end of a line, but by then, it's too late.



This is the biggest reform to our Parliament in a generation. 🇬🇧 This morning, the 700-year-old system of hereditary membership in the House of Lords was abolished. Membership is now earned through public service and merit, not granted by an inheritance. ✅



















A controversial theory has emerged from the Institute of Cancer Research in London, suggesting that ancestral humans evolved black skin as a response to lethal skin cancer caused by UV radiation. Professor Mel Greaves, the director of the Centre for Evolution and Cancer, proposed this idea in a paper published in Proceedings of the Royal Society B. Greaves challenges the long-held belief that black skin evolved primarily to protect against UV-induced damage to sweat glands or nutrient levels in the blood. Instead, he argues that lethal skin cancer in early, light-skinned humans acted as an evolutionary force, driving the development of darker skin for survival. His theory posits that ancestral humans may have been pale-skinned before evolving darker pigmentation, with high rates of fatal skin cancer influencing reproductive success in ways that favored those with more melanin. The concept is mirrored in Chernobyl, where green frogs rapidly evolved into black frogs due to the fact that the pigment Melanin reduces the effect of radiation, and those with higher concentration of this pigment are more likely to survive. The video below examines Earth's magnetic field fluctuations and their impact on early human populations. Discover surprising connections between ancient cave dwellings, red ochre, and genetic history. The Red Root Race youtube.com/watch?v=PnP7yP…

@ConnorHollandUK We’re all of foreign descent you stupid racist.



















