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by adunaway
4412 days ago
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It seems like the loudest outcries are people afraid of others not washing their hands after using the toilet. The article doesn't explicitly say anything about it, but I didn't get the impression that any of those people (even the ones that haven't showered in years) weren't washing their hands after going to the bathroom. |
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I can only speak for myself, but I still use soap after using the washroom and when handling food.
There's pretty clear scientific evidence for the use of hand-washing in specific cases. I think most of the people trying the no-soap, no-shampoo thing are actually rather empirical and respectful of science.
I used to work on repairing old newspapers in an archives. I saw the old ad campaigns for soap. We originally started using soap due to marketing, not due to scientific studies.
At the time, people didn't bathe that much. Ads recommended bathing regularly with soap. This improved odour. People fell for a correlation and thought it was soap that was the cause. This knowledge "wash yourself with soap!" was handed down through successive generations.
This belief was strengthened due to a TEMPORARY increase in BO if you stop using soap, once started. Takes about 1-4 weeks before the body adjusts and you become LESS smelly than you were before. Few people would have tried going without soap that long, so naive empiricism backed up marketing and tradition.
In other words, our current "soap everywhere, every day!" habits were not formed due to empirical inquiry and scientific study.
Here's one of the soap ads. These ran between 1920-1950:
https://www.dropbox.com/s/y1yyuz0p6ybhby3/Soap%20Ad.jpg