Saturday, July 7, 2007

White Race's Skin Sins Avenged with Skin Cancers, Melanomas

Waldorf Carathers - Early reports find the sharpest rise in reported cases of skin cancers the nation has ever seen; and, the National Curfew for Whites, imposed by the firebrand scientist and Prophet, Yacub 7 Ali, has barely been in affect over 2 weeks.

Fairskinned residents living in heavily populated Yacub 7 Ali Sun Cult areas are finding the early reports "extremely disturbing."


Yacub 7 Ali 2006
Target City List
California
Florida
Texas
Pennsylvania
New York
Ohio
New Jersey
Michigan
Illinois
Massachusetts

More than three-fourths of the surge in 2006's reported incidents of skin cancers (carcinomas, sarcomas and melanomas) resulted from Yacub 7 Ali sun worshipers honing their skills of redirecting ultraviolet light onto the skin of unsuspecting whites, Jeuger Niglery's Glax Haas Skin Cancer Study reported today.

The study was published in a statement released across Niglery's Intranet Network.

On the eve of the Yacub 7 Ali New Negro Sun Worship movement's National Curfew for Whites, the findings are crippling for melanoma striken whites, whites with skin cancer in their families and whites hoping to enjoy a peaceable summer 2007.

"In 2005 we launched sects of Yacub 7 Ali's sun worship sect movement in 10 U.S. cities in seperate states.

We compiled data we could use from neighboring cities of our target cities, established what the chosen city's skin cancer expectation rates were and in 2006 awarded the organization with grants to conduct the study.

"Through 2006 we tracked our targeted city's reported incidents of skin cancer," a Glax Haas spokesman said.

"Incidents of skin cancer in targeted cities near tripled in reported cases of basal and squamonous cell carcinomas and more than doubled in reported cases of melanomas. Texas.

We saw the highest gains in Texas, Florida, California, Michigan and Illinois.

"The single largest increase was in Fort Worth, Texas.

Fort Worth, Texas is the worst place in America for whites to live."