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MostcoolParticipantExperiments using garlic have shown that if you rub a clove of garlic on the sole of your foot, an hour later there will be a detectable garlic smell on your breath. The point? If such a tiny amount of garlic can affect your smell I see no reason why certain races (and more importantly, cultures and the sorts of food they tend to eat) should affect their smell. To answer the original question, if white people ate lots of noodles, and asians drank more coffee, I suspect we would all smell differently. So it’s probably not a ‘race’ thing, it’s probably a ‘culture’ thing.
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Name : Mostcool, City : London, State : NA, Country : United Kingdom,- AuthorPosts
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