Sven Longhanks
Daily Stormer
July 24, 2014
A new study has been produced which shows that Blacks age quicker than Whites and their bodies are on average, 3 years older than Whites of the same age.
This really shouldn’t come as any surprise, as Blacks have a shorter gestation period, earlier puberty and in some cases in Africa, are left to fend for themselves from the age of four.
Rather than pointing to the obvious fact that we are different species however, the researchers are claiming that the difference in body-age must be the reason why Blacks die earlier than Whites.
The idea that Blacks might die earlier than Whites because they have a much higher propensity to kill one another, does not seem to have been included as a factor in their calculations.
Black people age more quickly than white people, a controversial new study has claimed.
Researchers say that the researcher could shed new light on higher mortality rates in black people.
They say the biological age differences by race increase up until ages 60-69, and then decline.
‘Our results showed that, on average, blacks tend to be more than three years older biologically than whites,’ Morgan Levine and Eileen Crimmins of the University of Southern California’s Davis School of Gerontology. wrote in the journal Social Science and Medicine.
‘Blacks experience morbidity and mortality earlier in the life course compared to whites,’
‘This is consistent with findings from previous studies reporting that blacks tend to have levels of biological risk factors that are indicative of someone significantly older chronologically.’
‘Such premature declines in health may be indicative of an acceleration of the aging process.’
The team found that the difference in age can be up to three years.
Differences in biological age between blacks and whites appear to increase up until ages 60-65 and then decline, presumably due to mortality selection.
The researchers calculated each participant’s ‘biological age’ by looking at 10 biomarkers that have been linked to aging, including C-reactive protein, serum creatinine, glycosylated hemoglobin, systolic blood pressure, and total cholesterol.