new internationalist
issue 198 - August 1989
TEN WAYS TO GET
CANCER
If you are really determined to get cancer here's how you
can increase your chances.
Illustrations:
Clive Offley
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Catch
some rays
If you are fair-skinned, spend lots of time in the
sun and by all means avoid using any sun block lotion. If you
live in a rainy or cold climate take lots of vacations in tropical
sunspots. And make sure you spend all your time on the beach.
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Smoke till you choke
Don't
listen to the wimps who tell you not to smoke. Tell them that
'everything causes cancer' and we all die sooner or later anyway.
Low-tar cigarettes or filters will protect you. Gutsy people who
live life to the full are smokers. Smoking has the added benefit
of exposing friends and family to lung damage.
If you live in the Third World you'll want to disassociate
yourself from boring traditional culture. The easiest way of appearing
modern and 'with it' is to have a cigarette dangling from your
lips.
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Junk food
Try
to avoid eating fresh fruit and vegetables (especially organically-grown
ones) and stick to a fatty diet: lots of meat and dairy products
like butter, cheese and cream. It is especially important not
to eat yellow vegetables - like carrots, squash and yams. And
make sure you avoid vegetables such as brussels sprouts and cabbages.
These trouble-makers are known to spoil the development of an
otherwise good cancer-causing diet. Try to eat as much smoked
or salted food as possible and don't spare the nitrites. Salami,
smoked meat and hot dogs should be regular fare. Also avoid too
much vitamin C and other vitamins.
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Friendly neighbours
See
if you can find a house near a nuclear weapons factory or at least
near a petro-chemical complex like that in the 'cancer alley'
section of Louisiana. Better still, see if you can find a place
to live near an open-pit asbestos mine. If some activist tries
to organize the community against local factories tell them pollution
is not a problem, and the country's prosperity depends on business
being given a free hand.
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Toil and trouble
Get a job that exposes you to a regular dose of
strong chemicals. Working in a tire factory or near a coke oven
would do. But you could also pump gas, install asbestos insulation,
pick fruit sprayed with pesticide or make plastics from vinyl
chloride. If your boss provides safety equipment, don't use it.
Avoid meetings of the union health and safety committee. You have
better things to do with your time.
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Trust the system
What you don't see can't hurt you. Maybe meat is
pumped full of hormones - and they say the oestrogen in those
birth control pills increases the risk of uterine cancer. So what?
They wouldn't sell such things if they were really dangerous.
And if there were the likelihood of naturally-occurring
radon gas building up in the cellar, people would have told you
about it. You shouldn't bother to check it out yourself.
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Chewing power
If
you live in India or Sri Lanka make sure you ignore the district
health worker who tells your fellow villagers about the dangers
of chewing tobacco and betel nut. There are lots of diseases around
that people weakened from malnutrition are dying from every day.
Life is difficult enough without giving up a pleasure that is
cheap and easily available.

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Zap the pests
If
you are a farmer, make sure to drench your fields with pesticides
and herbicides. Cancer risks are a small price to pay for the
most up-to-date approach to agriculture. Biological forms of pest
control seem old-fashioned and much more labour-intensive. In
the Third World it is best to use the kinds of pesticides (i.e.
DDT or Parathion) that have been banned in some Western countries
as these are cheaper and really do the job. This way both workers
and consumers can be exposed to risk by the food you grow.
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Showcase medicine
If
you live in the Third World and you are rich then you should support
politicians and experts who want the latest medical technology
from the West for the big new hospital in the capital. Then you
and the occasional Western tourist who falls ill will be able
to get the most modern health-care. You should avoid spending
money on a regular cancer screening program for poor women. This
will ensure that those who suffer three-quarters of the world's
cervical cancers continue to do so.
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Ignore the signs
Avoid
regular medical check-ups. If a mole has begun to change shape
or there is persistent swelling and soreness in your breast, ignore
it. Put it down to the aches and pains of getting older. Don't
bother with cervical smear tests, and don't pay any attention
to unexplained growths and changes in your body. And above all
don't take responsibility for your own health; it is up to the
medical profession to fix your body if it goes wrong.
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