Anal cancer incidence and deaths are on the rise, especially among millennial black men and certain white women, according to new research. The study, published Tuesday in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute , looked at trends in squamous cell carcinoma of the anus SCCA — the most common type of anal cancer — between and It found that during that stretch, incidence increased 2. Anal cancer is less common than many other types of cancer, making up about 0.

How the Normalization of Anal Sex Has Shifted the Conversation About Consent



Jamaican women raping young boys — officials
It was my first experience learning the difference between men who appreciate the black female body and men who fetishize it. So the full lips, natural hair, big bottoms, bodacious curves, and dark skin of many black women are considered unattractive on people who naturally have these features, but when white women appropriate or have those exact same features, they are considered beautiful. White women are paragons of virtue and desire, while black women are objects of fetishism and brutality. But I learned that some white men love black bodies but do not necessarily love black women. After I broke up with that first boyfriend and entered the dating scene again months later, I would run into that racist, sexist language from white men over and over again.


African American Images, Inc.
I recently met a guy with a sexual secret. He was 39, in great shape, and in his spare time was a CrossFit athlete. But he had diabetes, and he told me that it made him impotent. Besides, an erect, on-demand, rock hard schlong that could go for hours?



A Denver woman says she did just that when she recorded a white woman following and questioning a Black man in a neighborhood near Cranmer Park. The woman who took the video did not want to be identified by her last name, but said her first name is Beth. She recorded the interaction on Sunday evening and shared it on social media. The video has now been viewed thousands of times. The video shows a white woman trailing a Black man walking in the neighborhood and asking him questions about a picture.