According to leading dermatologists and writers of "black female acne", Dr. Neil Persadsingh said bleaching is a process used to kill skin melanin. Melanin is a substance that gives pigmentation to the skin and protects the skin from carcinogenic ultraviolet rays from the sun. The more melanin the skin, the darker the person. According to Persadsingh physician, most bleaching products contain a large amount of hydroquinone which is a very hazardous substance such as nausea, shortness of breath, cramping, wrinkles, wrinkles, terrible acne, traces and so on.
"Return to black" - "Black is beautiful" campaign nods - is a political statement that can solve the urge to bleach the black skin of many people. It may reverse this contempt of the skin and thereby reverse the contempt of this feature. Repeating such a slogan, in honor of the beauty of such a beautiful woman, even black celebrities with beautiful skin can help to beautify the dark skin: Lupita Nyong'o, Gabrielle Union, Janelle Monae
From the late nineteenth century to the early twentieth century, black American women were increasingly whitening influenced. Bleaching of the skin is considered more than just a ceremony of beauty - it is a symbolic way of progressing in a biased society where black skinny people experience relatively better treatment. Advertisers use these biases in the beauty industry to promise that women "build a higher position in society and business, become more married and get along better," and are made more beautiful through brighter skin . In this 1944 advertisement, bright skin is the same as "cute" skin.
Bleaching the skin is an act of using a chemical method to reduce the color of the skin. It is believed to improve people's appearance. Whitening is a social problem that many Jamaican people face. The epidemic began several years ago because of race discrimination. Blacks are considered to be inferior to white people and believe that bleaching the skin is as valuable as lightening the skin. The combination of ancestral generations' pattern and contemporary prejudice makes skin bleaching popular. Racial discrimination still exists. Even in Jamaica, we are depicting racial discrimination in the workplace and at home. This problem is caused by many factors. The most common thing is the marginalization of black people. People with thin skin color are recognized as having opportunities to acquire more opportunities, imitated by society, and forced people of dark skin to wish for dawn.