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While Florida became the first state last year to recommend against county-level fluoridation, Utah is taking it one toothier step. Last week, Utah Governor Spencer Cox (R) said he will sign a bill banning fluoride from public water systems. “It’s got to be a really high bar for me if we’re going to require people to be medicated by their government,” Governor Cox told ABC4-Utah.
In other words— medical freedom.
Half of Utah already does not fluoridate their public drinking water. Governor Cox said dentists in those counties reported no higher levels of tooth decay than dentists in fluoridated counties. Grocery shelves are flooded with fluoridated toothpaste for anyone who wants it. So why force everyone to drink the chemical, which is not meant to be drunk anyway?
Last September, U.S. District Judge Edward Chen issued an 80-page ruling finding that the evidence — based on 72 different studies — supported a conclusion that fluoride was possibly a neurotoxin associated with IQ loss in children. The EPA, corporate media, and dental associations reflexively dismissed the finding as another conspiracy theory and have never looked back.
Grocery shelves are flooded with fluoridated toothpaste for anyone who wants it.
Or you could just hit your kid in the head with a baseball bat.
Patrick says
Or you could just hit your kid in the head with a baseball bat.
I do not think brushing your teeth and spitting it out gives the same dosage as drinking fluoride in water.
They warn you not to use teflon pans around pet birds because the fumes can poison them.
I never used deodorant, either, (aluminum) except in special cases, but not for many years now.
Ceffer says
I never used deodorant, either, (aluminum) except in special cases, but not for many years now.
Yes, whatever keeps the landlord from raising the rent. Anyway, I think the aluminum is only in anti-perspirants, not regular deodorant.

I have never used toothpaste anyway, just brush and swirl. I never used deodorant, either, (aluminum) except in special cases, but not for many years now.
Ceffer says
I have never used toothpaste anyway, just brush and swirl. I never used deodorant, either, (aluminum) except in special cases, but not for many years now.
I have been using plain baking soda after my dentist suggestion. Since its slightly base, it avoids bio films created by bad bacteria to form plaques. Tooth paste contains carcinogens like Sodium lauryl sulfate.

Agreed, it's not an issue if you spit it out. That being said, especially young kids and toddlers may tend to swallow bits of toothpaste, so it makes sense to buy fluoride free until they now what they're doing
mell says
Agreed, it's not an issue if you spit it out. That being said, especially young kids and toddlers may tend to swallow bits of toothpaste, so it makes sense to buy fluoride free until they now what they're doing
Their 1st teeth are going to fall out anyway.
The water where we live in in Maryland is so over-chlorinated,
I wouldn't drink our water, ever. Kills your body, but I'd rather drink alcohol over water. You at least get a buzz out of it.
Times were so, so much better.
Speak the truth, brother.
How Beer Saved the World - 2011 documentary:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pcLasNk4i-c
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1832368/
No peanut allergies, no egg allergies. Never even heard of gluten back then.
So I was not supposed to be merely above average intelligence, but rather I was meant to be a Mensa genius? Except my parents figuratively and literally sold me down the fluoride river, altering the course of my life from evil mega genius to mere mortal?
Newly Released Records Confirm Houston, Texas is the Largest U.S. City to Stop Water Fluoridation
As the state of Utah and numerous cities end water fluoridation programs, the City of Houston, Texas has quietly become the largest city in the United States to halt the addition of fluoride to the water supply.
According to newly obtained emails between Houston officials, and a confirmed statement from the Public Works Department, the City of Houston has not added fluoridation chemicals to the water supply since at least 2019.
When Washburn, North Dakota’s town commissioners decided in January to take up the issue of whether or not to continue fluoridating the water supply for the town’s 1,300 residents, they anticipated researching the risks versus benefits and putting the matter to a vote.
What they didn’t anticipate — but soon encountered — was evidence of a coordinated effort by state actors and a national fluoride lobby group, using federal money, to crush local efforts by small towns like Washburn to stop fluoridating their water supplies.
On Monday night, town commissioners voted 4-1 to stop adding fluoride to Washburn’s water supply — making Washburn the latest in a growing list of communities across the country to end the practice in light of mounting scientific evidence that the chemical harms children’s health and provides little or no dental benefit.
On Wednesday, the Hill ran another remarkable, totally unexpected story headlined, “Florida set to become second state to outlaw fluoride from water supply. The new anti-flouride bill passed both the state’s senate and its house and is now headed for Governor DeSantis’ desk, where it will almost certainly be signed.
Corporate media is completely opposed to canceling the chemical. Yet, nearly all European countries either do not add fluoride to drinking water or have banned it outright. For some reason, that simple fact is absent from the argument here in the U.S. If more people knew that Europe is doing fine without forcibly medicating its citizens, the narrative toothpaste would be out of the tube.
Media, as we know all too well, is utterly useless.
One short year ago, the anti-fluoride argument was a wacky conspiracy theory. Twelve months later, the fluoride banning bill passed both Florida houses by wide margins. I have no idea what the booking odds were, but last summer nobody would have bet that at this point we would be watching Big Fluoride circling the drain.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis today said he will sign a bill banning the addition of fluoride to public drinking water, making Florida the second state to end the practice. ...
Ladapo also praised the decision. His office last year issued written guidance detailing the latest research showing that exposure to fluoridated water can lead to neurodevelopmental issues in children, including lower IQ. ...
DeSantis’ announcement comes one day before Utah’s fluoride ban takes effect. Utah Gov. Spencer Cox signed a bill in late March that prohibits adding the chemical to the state’s water systems, making Utah the first state to ban water fluoridation.
One of the most jaw-dropping moments came when Rep. Mike Simpson, a dentist, tried to challenge Kennedy on fluoride—and instantly regretted it.
“We better put a lot more money into dental education because we’re going to need a whole lot more dentists [if we ban fluoride],” Simpson said.
The rebuttal was too easy for Kennedy.
“We now know that virtually all the benefit [from fluoride] is from topical, and we can get that through mouthwashes. We can get through fluoridated toothpastes.”
Then came the line that hit hard:
“The National Toxicity Program issued a report in August, a meta review of all the science that now exists on fluoride, and showed a direct inverse correlation between fluoride exposure dose and lower IQ.”
“Which is an issue that we all have to be concerned with. We want high IQ kids right now,” Kennedy added.
Thursday, the Associated Press reported, “DeSantis signs a bill making Florida the 2nd state to ban fluoride from its water system.” ...
Fluoride pushback is sweeping the country. According to an NPR story, five more states have pending anti-fluoride bills: Kentucky, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Nebraska, and South Carolina. More anti-fluoride bills either failed or stalled in committee in North Dakota, Arkansas, Tennessee, Montana and New Hampshire. Other states like Hawaii, New Jersey, and Oregon already have fluoridation rates languishing in the low double digits.
Low-fluoride states like Hawaii don’t have epidemics of cavities, a fact the fake news media never mentions.
Not to be outdone, the federal government is also moving against the stupefying chemical, which, as Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. has noted, is a by-product of industrial hazardous waste. The FDA announced a ban on all “ingestible fluoride products” —tablets, lozenges, and drops— for children. Dentists prescribe these products to parents who live in fluoride-free areas. ...
The Times “forgot” about a peer-reviewed JAMA study released this year. The Gray Lady even ran a story about it in January, headlined “Study Links High Fluoride Exposure to Lower I.Q. in Children.” That January story also correctly reported that a federal court found fluoride was potentially dangerous: “Last September, U.S. District Judge Edward Chen in San Francisco ordered the Environmental Protection Agency to strengthen regulations for fluoride in drinking water because of research suggesting that high levels might pose a risk to the intellectual development of children.”
But the Times’ fluoride article this week conveniently omitted its own January article. It mentioned neither Judge Chen’s verdict, nor the gold-standard JAMA study it had just reported only three months earlier. I concede that Times reporters are competing with President Autopen for lowest IQ scores —maybe the result of too much childhood fluoridation— but seriously. It literally only took me five seconds of googling, and I don’t even work there.
Perhaps a better question is: why is corporate media covering for big fluoride?
Max’s Story: What Happens When Water Fluoridation Goes Wrong
In 2019, fifth-grader Max Widmaier was poisoned when a malfunctioning pump in Sandy, Utah, released undiluted hydrofluorosilicic acid into the water, sickening over 200 people. ...
Max unknowingly drank the over-fluoridated water in school. Soon after, he spiked a high fever, developed tics, had severe emotional swings, and experienced developmental regression so severe that at one point he lost the ability to compose sentences, his mother, Jenny Widmaier, told The Defender.
“I don’t remember fifth grade,” Max told Utah lawmakers. “That year is just a gaping hole where memory should be … because I drank the fluoridated water that day when Sandy City broke its line to public water.”
Sugar Industry Falsified Science to Sell America on Fluoride
A new study reveals the sugar industry has manipulated fluoride science since the 1930s — exaggerating benefits, concealing risks and steering attention away from sugar’s role in tooth decay.
A new study reveals the sugar industry has manipulated fluoride science since the 1930s — exaggerating benefits, concealing risks and steering attention away from sugar’s role in tooth decay.
The FDA never approved fluoride supplements, which come in tablet or lozenge form. However, doctors have routinely prescribed them for decades — even to babies as young as 6 months old — to prevent cavities.
For more than two decades, research has shown that fluoride helps teeth only when applied topically — as with toothpaste — not when ingested.
The supplements can cause dental fluorosis, a tooth discoloration that signals fluoride overexposure. Overwhelming evidence now shows that swallowing fluoride can lower children’s IQ and contribute to neurobehavioral issues and thyroid problems.
‘Formal FDA restriction of fluoride supplements is long overdue’
In January, top government scientists published a review in JAMA Pediatrics showing that early fluoride exposure was linked to lower IQ scores in children. ...
“This flies in the face of claims by proponents of fluoride ingestion, like the American Dental Association [ADA], who have made it their policy to prescribe fluoride to children as young as 6 months of age,” Cooper said.
Manufacturers launched fluoride supplements in the 1940s and later effectively grandfathered them into the regulatory process. The supplements never underwent the safety and effectiveness testing that FDA-regulated drugs typically require, and the agency never formally approved them.
Before 1938, dentists did not use sodium fluoride. Instead, people commonly used it to poison roaches and rodents.
The legal battle over fluoridated drinking water escalated today when attorneys for Food & Water Watch (FWW), Fluoride Action Network (FAN) and other plaintiffs filed a brief accusing the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) of trying “to protect the EPA from the public” rather than protecting public health. ...
Under Section 21 of TSCA, any person may petition the EPA to compel rulemaking for chemicals the agency has failed to adequately regulate — which FWW, FAN and other authors of the 2016 petition did.
When the EPA denied their petition, the FWW, FAN and others sued. The fluoride lawsuit — the first citizen-petition case to be heard in federal court — dragged out for seven years.
https://fluoridealert.org/researchers/government-reports/timeline-the-tsca-law-suit-against-u-s-epa/
... More than 200 million Americans drink fluoridated water. As the case moves forward, communities nationwide are reassessing whether to continue fluoridating their water based on evidence raised in the lawsuit.
Since the District Court ruling, more than 60 U.S. towns and counties and two states have voted to end fluoridation.

In Stanley Kubrick's 1964 film Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb, Brigadier General Jack D. Ripper, portrayed by Sterling Hayden, is a central character whose paranoid delusions drive the plot toward nuclear catastrophe.
Ripper believes that the fluoridation of public water supplies is part of a sinister Communist conspiracy to undermine the purity of American citizens' "precious bodily fluids".
He claims that the introduction of fluoride into water began in 1946, coinciding with the rise of the post-war Communist movement, and argues that this act of introducing a foreign substance without individual knowledge or consent is a hallmark of a "hard-core Commie" strategy.
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