well, the majority of cancer is skin cancer, and it's brought on by occasionally going outside in the UV light, but I take your point
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We generally separate non melanoma skin cancers from all the others.
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even if it were safe enough to DRINK up: if it eliminates life downriver miles away from the golf courses where it is applied, it is bad in my book. VERY bad!
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It's use is certainly up for debate. But it doesn't cause cancer.
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Not sure what you mean by "not exposed to anything that caused it." With no long term safety studies on humans, and mixed studies determining if links with other autoimmune and chronic diseases, is "proven safe" accurate, or "not (yet) proven unsafe?"
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I bet there will be a lot of people who drank alcohol who developed cancer suing breweries, wineries, and distilleries now since alcohol is considered a stronger cancer link risk than glyphosphate.
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The difference is that glyphosate exposure is not always voluntary. If it were carcinogenic, this would be a big deal. But it's not.
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