Looks like the X shop vanished.
If you’ve been looking for our tallow skincare, essence roll-on oils, soaps, sunscreens, and all the other products we make with all natural ingredients instead of synthetic garbage, here’s the site 👇
https://t.co/X6RowPPDOd
Hawaii banned oxybenzone and octinoxate in 2021 due to their documented toxicity to coral reefs. Several other jurisdictions have followed or are in the process. A product can still carry a "reef-safe" label in most of the US while containing these compounds, because there's no federal standard for that claim. Read the label.
https://t.co/opMZsqZKKJ
Oxybenzone, avobenzone, octinoxate, and homosalate are the most commonly cited chemical UV filters. These aren't hiding in inactive lists. They're the active ingredients in standard chemical sunscreens, and they work by absorbing UV radiation and converting it to heat within the skin. The problem is they don't stay in the skin.
A 2019 FDA study found that all four were absorbed into the bloodstream at levels exceeding the agency's own threshold for systemic safety concern after just a single day of use across a large body surface area.
Oxybenzone specifically has been detected in human blood, urine, and breast milk, and has demonstrated endocrine-disrupting effects in animal studies
https://t.co/6QTkmLjFdV
Vicks lists turpentine oil as an inactive ingredient (active at 5% in the UK formulation). The toxicology data on turpentine is serious: as little as 15 mL of neat oil has been cited as potentially fatal to a child, causing chemical pneumonitis, central nervous system depression, and kidney damage.
NOSTR and Bitcoin’s decentralized model is exactly why decentralized systems need to be implemented across as many areas of society as possible.
Being reliant on a single corporation, server, or centralized entity is simply too risky
Oxybenzone, avobenzone, octinoxate, and homosalate are the most commonly cited chemical UV filters. These aren't hiding in inactive lists. They're the active ingredients in standard chemical sunscreens, and they work by absorbing UV radiation and converting it to heat within the skin. The problem is they don't stay in the skin.
A 2019 FDA study found that all four were absorbed into the bloodstream at levels exceeding the agency's own threshold for systemic safety concern after just a single day of use across a large body surface area.
Oxybenzone specifically has been detected in human blood, urine, and breast milk, and has demonstrated endocrine-disrupting effects in animal studies
https://t.co/6QTkmLjFdV