Content starts here
CLOSE ×
Search
Reply
Bronze Conversationalist

Fluoride - Demand AARP Take Action

โ€œThe evidence that fluoride is more harmful than beneficial is now overwhelmingโ€ฆ fluoride may be destroying our bones, our teeth, and our overall health.โ€ - Dr. Hardy Limeback,  former President of Canadian ADA, Head of Preventive Dentistry at Univ of Toronto, 2006 National Research Council Scientist (2007)

 

The 2006 National Research Council on Fluoride in Drinking Water commented to the EPA that fluoridation at 1 ppm can be anticipated to be harmful for those with reduced renal function and the elderly. The NRC confirmed that fluoride not excreted by kidneys builds up in bones, resulting in arthritic pain and increased brittleness. However, there were no EPA studies on the whole health impacts of fluoridated water on susceptible population such as kidney patients, children, those with prolonged disease or the elderly. There still arenโ€™t. 

 

However, there is mounting science from other sources that โ€œoptimally fluoridatedโ€ water, which is known to cause varying degrees of dental fluorosis in 58% of Black American adolescents and 36% of White American adolescents, is causing subtle deficits in ability to remember or focus. That same โ€œoptimal levelโ€ has also been proved in a 2014 study as being nephrotoxic in rats with chronic kidney disease. Chronic kidney disease (CKD) affects approximately 15% of Americans, although CKD is quadruple the rate in Black Americans, and predictably worse in older Americans. 

 

Perhaps the most horrifying part of the story of fluoridation is that not only is at least 50% of every drop of fluoride that has passed the lips of a Baby Boomer permanently stored in bones, fluoride isn't the only poison in packages of fluoride that originate as the waste product of aluminum an phosphate industry. 100% of the fluoride sampled in a 2014 study was contaminated with aluminum; arsenic and lead were other common contaminants. In other words, fluoridated water serves as a delivery system for aluminum and lead into our bones and our brains. As we all know, aluminum is associated with Alzheimers in adults, and lead is associated with learning disabilities in children. Approximately 15% of the population who is sensitive to chemicals cite inability to think clearly and overwhelming fatigue as symptoms of exposure to fluoridated water. 

 

Our generation was part of a great human experiment. It may have had noble intentions based on the faulty hypothesis that  drinking fluoridated water prevented cavities. It is now known that any perceived benefits of fluoride are from tooth brushing.  Our grandchildren are the third generation in this travesty. I suggest we all DEMAND the AARP stand up for us and our grandchildren by issuing a strong position paper calling for the cessation of water fluoridation. 

 

SCIENCE REFERENCES

  1. 2014 in Toxicology. Effect of water fluoridation on the development of medial vascular calcification in uremic rats. (โ€œOptimal levelsโ€ worsen kidney function๐Ÿ˜ž http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24561004
     
  2. 2015  in Neurotoxicology and Teratology. Association of lifetime exposure to fluoride and cognitive functions in Chinese children: A pilot study.  (Children with visible dental fluorosis perform less well on memory tasks, correlating with the degree of severity of their fluorosis. One of a series of human and animal studies with the same consistent findings.๐Ÿ˜ž 
    1. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25446012  
    2. http://braindrain.dk/2014/12/mottled-fluoride-debate/ 

  3. 2014 in Physiology and Behavior. Fluoride exposure during development affects both cognition and emotion in mice. (Measurable behavioral changes๐Ÿ˜ž http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24184405

  4. 2014 in International Journal of Occupational and Environmental Health. A new perspective on metals and other contaminants in fluoridation chemicals. (All samples of fluoride are contaminated with aluminum, plus other contaminants like arsenic, lead and barium); 
    1. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24999851
    2. http://momsagainstfluoridation.org/sites/default/files/Mullenix%202014-2-2.pdf

  5. 2014 in Scientific World Journal. Water Fluoridation: A Critical Review of the Physiological Effects of Ingested Fluoride as a Public Health Intervention. (Health risks and cost don't justify minimal and questionable dental benefit.):  http://www.hindawi.com/journals/tswj/2014/293019/

 

RACIAL INEQUITY (FOIA)

Here are three Oct 2014 news articles on the content of the Freedom of Information Act documents. Rev. Andrew Young, former UN ambassador has pursued them with the CDC, but to little effect. Civil Rights leaders have been calling for an end to community water fluoridation (CWF) since 2011. 

 

2015 LEGAL ARGUMENT (GROSS DISPROPORTIONALITY) 

There is a legal initiative in Peel, Ontario (pop 1.3m) to remove fluoride from the water supply based on the principle of gross disproportionality, i.e. marginal benefit does not justify great risk of harm. There is also a political effort afoot in Canadian govt to mandate fluoridation and thereby make the legal argument moot. I suggest this document is well-worth printing.  http://fluoridealert.org/wp-content/uploads/peel.june2014.pdf

  • a. The first 19 pages of this document is about the legal strategy. It includes summary of US legal cases that found water fluoridation harmful to the public, but legal under US "police power" mandate.
  • b. Starting on page 20 is a devastating affidavit by Dr. Kathleen Thiessen, NAS/NRC scientist and international expert in risk assessment. Very readable summary of science indicating harm to populations in โ€œoptimallyโ€ fluoridated communities. 

 

POPULATION WITH LOW CHEMICAL THRESHOLD

  1. In excess of 25% of previously healthy Gulf War Veterans have Multiple Chemical Sensitivities, which includes sensitivity to fluoride. See: http://www.va.gov/rac-gwvi/docs/committee_documents/gwiandhealthofgwveterans_rac-gwvireport_2008.pdf 
    1. EXCERPT: โ€œIt is well established that some people are more vulnerable to adverse effects of certain  chemicals than others, due to variability in biological processes that neutralize those chemicals, and clear them from the body.โ€ - Research Advisory Committee on Gulf War Veteransโ€™ Illnesses 2008 
  2. Affidavit of Dr. Hans Moolenburgh: https://fluorideinformationaustralia.files.wordpress.com/2013/01/affidavit-moolenburgh.pdf
    1. Except: โ€œAs a summary of our research, we are now convinced that fluoridation of the water supplies causes a low grade intoxication of the whole population, with only the approximately 5% most sensitive persons showing acute symptoms.The whole population being subjected to low grade poisoning means that their immune systems are constantly overtaxed. With all the other poisonous influences in our environment, this can hasten health calamities.โ€ 
  3. PubMed Listed Studies on immune system response: 
    1. a. Fluoride makes allergies worse, rats (1990): http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1707853 
    2. b. Fluoride makes allergies worse, in vitro (1999): http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9892783
    3. c. Immune system of the gut (2010): http://www.hindawi.com/journals/iji/2010/823710/ 
    4. d. ASIA Syndrome, adjuvant impact (2011): http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20708902
    5. e. Gene predicts fluoride sensitivity (2015): http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25556215
    6. f.  Brain has an immune system (2015): http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26030524

 

AARP - STAND UP on our behalf! 

466,813 Views
1523
Report
3 ACCEPTED SOLUTIONS
Bronze Conversationalist

 Dr. Joel Bohemierโ€™s presentation to the Commissioners of Collier County, FL  includes quotes for EPA, CDC and others under oath from TSCA trial depositions. This presentation was part of the Commissioners deliberation that resulted in its unanimous vote to end fluoridation last week: https://unite.live/widgets/4142/recording/player#  

 

It is in the hands of Judge Chen, now, but I've got to say that the closing on Feb. 20th was odd.

 

Not only did Judge Chen pepper both attorneys with questions, the EPA attorneys seemed to admit that fluoride exposure at doses consistent with water concentration of 1.5 ppm, 2 ppm and 4 ppm had been proven to result in lower IQ per studies of mom-child pairs performed in Canadian and other communities across the world. They admitted this despite the official policy of the U.S. EPA stating there is no harm up to 4 ppm (the actionable threshold for remediation) other than mild cosmetic dental fluorosis (tooth staining) at or above 2 ppm. The Canadian government has an actionable threshold of 1.5 ppm which is consistent with the WHO guidelines. 

 

When Judge Chen challenged the EPA that per both plaintiff and defense witnesses, shouldn't there be a protective uncertainty or safety factor of at least ten to protect consumers applied to 2 or 4 which would protect teeth from moderate dental fluorosis which a recent Health Canada is concern at 1.56 ppm and from severe dental fluorosis which the 2006 National Research Council (NRC) said was an adverse health risk at 4 ppm which would also protect brains, EPA Defense attorney said that would be an interesting thought experiment, but Plaintiff attorney didn't argue about dental fluorosis (which by the way is positively associated with lower IQ and learning disabilities) so the judge could not legally do so. Frankly, it almost seemed like the EPA attorneys were threatening the Judge. 

 

Judge Chen pushed back about EPA "Health Protective Assumption" guidelines, but EPA insisted that the Judge must not act based on science or consumer protection, but on strict interpretation of statutory law and the skill of the Plaintiff attorney in proving his case. 

 

On the other hand, Plaintiff attorney was clear that the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA) only requires that any specific use of a chemical (fluoridation programs) not pose an "unreasonable risk" to consumers which include susceptible sub-populations like pregnant women and their offspring and bottle-fed babies. All five plaintiff witnesses were quite clear that optimally fluoridated water per CDC guidelines is subtly and permanently damaging the brains of millions of children. Even EPA witnesses and attorneys admitted that there is "something there" in the scientific evidence showing neurotoxic effects at 0.7 ppm, but argued it is not clearly defined enough to identify a "Point of Departure" for the EPA to perform a risk assessment. 

 

Really? 

 

Three Benchmark Dose Analyses which are the gold standard for beginning risk assessments and established uncertainty factors have identified that 0.2 mg/L, which is one tenth of 2 ppm, as harmful. This suggests that no fluoride exposure is safe for baby brains and is a scientifically justifiable Point of Departure in anyone's book.  

 

BMCLBMCL

 

But let's make it even easier for thick-headed fluoridationists to understand: 

  • No amount of fluoride in water or food is safe for pregnant women and their fetuses; bottle-fed infants and young children; the elderly and any in fragile health, such as diabetics or those with thyroid or kidney disease. 

 

 

View solution in original post

117,288 Views
1
Report
Bronze Conversationalist

 โ€œTodayโ€™s ruling represents an important acknowledgement of a large and growing body of science indicating serious human health risks associated with fluoridated drinking water. This court looked at the science and acted accordingly. Now the EPA must respond by implementing new regulations that adequately protect all Americans โ€“ especially our most vulnerable infants and children โ€“ from this known health threat.โ€ - Wenonah Hauter, Director of Food & Water Watch in โ€œHistoric Court Decision in Fluoridation Toxicity Case Orders EPA to Actโ€ (Sept. 25, 2024)

 

Well, it as been a busy few weeks! 

 

Not only was the final NTP Systematic Review, "Fluoride Exposure: Neurodevelopment and Cognition" published in August (despite political efforts by HHS/PHS and ADA to scuttle it) after five (or was it six) peer reviews, the Final Findings and Conclusion of Law from a lengthy de novo trial was rendered in September with excellent detail, and the 2024 Cochrane Systematic Review, "Water fluoridation for the prevention of dental caries," published in October repeated that dental fluorosis is an adverse effect of fluoridation, a practice which provides no benefit to adults or lower socio-economic groups. The Cochrane authors also wrote that the very small benefit they were able to document to children from "poor quality" studies at high risk of bias "may not be real." 

In other words, community water fluoridation is all risk and no benefit. Fluoridation is dental mythology, a magic potion tooth-fairy tale. The most important thing is that Judge Chen ordered the EPA to take action to eliminate the risk to consumers. 

 

  • UNSAFE: p. 2:  the Court finds that fluoridation of water at 0.7 milligrams per liter (โ€œmg/Lโ€) โ€“ the level presently considered โ€œoptimalโ€ in the United States โ€“ poses an unreasonable risk of reduced IQ in children.

 

  • HAZARD: p 5:   The pooled benchmark dose analysis concluded that a 1-point drop in IQ of a child is to be expected for each 0.28 mg/L of fluoride in a pregnant motherโ€™s urine. This is highly concerning, because maternal urinary fluoride levels for pregnant mothers in the United States range from 0.8 mg/L at the median and 1.89 mg/L depending upon the degree of exposure. Not only is there an insufficient margin between the hazard level and these exposure levels, for many, the exposure levels exceed the hazard level of 0.28 mg/L.

  • CERTAINTY: p. 77: The scientific literature in the record provides a high level of certainty that a hazard is present; fluoride is associated with reduced IQ. There are uncertainties presented by the underlying data regarding the appropriate point of departure and exposure level to utilize in this risk evaluation. But those uncertainties do not undermine the finding of an unreasonable risk; in every scenario utilizing any of the various possible points of departures, exposure levels and metrics, a risk is present in view of the applicable uncertainty factors that apply.

  • VULNERABILITY: p. 76: The size of the affected population is vast. Approximately 200 million Americans have fluoride intentionally added to their drinking water at a concentration of 0.7 mg/L. See Dkt. No. 421 at 206-07 (undisputed). Other Americans are indirectly exposed to fluoridated water through consumption of commercial beverages and food manufactured with fluoridated water

  • SUSCEPTIBILITY: p. 76: Approximately two million pregnant women, and over 300,000 exclusively formula-fed babies are exposed to fluoridated water. The number of pregnant women and formula-fed babies alone who are exposed to water fluoridation each year exceeds entire populations exposed to conditions of use for which EPA has found unreasonable risk; the EPA has found risks unreasonable where the population impacted was less than 500 people. 

View solution in original post

34,461 Views
0
Report
Bronze Conversationalist

'"It is public health malpractice to continue adding fluoride to community water systems."  -  Dr. Joseph Ladapo MD, PhD Florida Surgeon General (Nov. 22, 2024) 

 

 "This is a human rights issue and public health issue, separate from other public health issues." - Dr. Ashley Malin, PhD (Nov. 22, 2024) 

 

The Surgeon General of Florida announced yesterday that he was "appalled" at the evidence of harm caused by fluoridation policy which has been ignored for years. He announced that he was recommending that all water treatment plants(WTP) in Florida end fluoridation. immediately. 

 

Dr. Ladapo also said he always believed fluoridation was "safe and effective" because that was what he was taught, but that after looking closely at the science as a result of the September verdict agains the EPA and Bobby Kennedy's statements, he realizes that fluoridation is anything but safe and effective.  He went on to say that he and his family were taking measures to reduce their fluoride exposure

 

Yet, what do the fluoridation profiteers and their corporate partners do? They launch more smear campaigns in the media- against Joe Ladapo, Bobby Kennedy, or anyone else who challenges their profitable tooth-fairy tale.  

 

One of the fluoride-lobby claims, which they offered in court, is fluoride consumption might be harmful if the dose is at 1.5 mg/L or above but fluoridation concentrations in water is half that at 0.7 ppm. 

 

Let's make this clear:

1. Not only do some people drink more water than others, fluoride is in foods prepared with fluoridated water or treated with fluoridated agrichemicals. Dose is dependent on intake, not water concentration

  • This is why there is supposed to be a 10x safety factor applied to hazards like fluoride, although 100 is more typical. That would reduce the assumed safe concentration to 0.15 or 0.015 ppm.

 

2. The assumption of a dose of 0.7 mg/L is based on only one liter of fluoridated water consumed (and with a perfectly calibrated fluoride 0.7 ppm concentration)

 

3. The dose of 1.5 mg/L recognized as unsafe is reached by consuming a couple of mouthfuls over 2 liters of water

 

4. The rule of thumb medical advice is that a healthy adult should consume at least eight 8 ounce glasses of water daily (8x8), which provides just under 2 liters. A half glass more (or fluoride from another source) will bring you into the red zone. 

 

5. NASEM recommends fluid consumption, primarily water, be:

  1. About 15.5 cups (3.7 liters) of fluids a day for men
  2. About 11.5 cups (2.7 liters) of fluids a day for women

 

Go to FluorideLawsuit.com to see a copy of the verdict and a hyperlinked annotated bibliography of peer-reviewed science published in credible journals since 2015 documenting that fluoridation is DANGEROUS and INEFFECTIVE. and since it affects brains in the womb and is stored in our bones, fluoridation policy poisons us all from womb to tomb. 

 

Then tell the Surgeon General in your state that he should follow Dr. Ladapo's lead.  

View solution in original post

0 Kudos
12,962 Views
1
Report
Regular Contributor

With reference to a presentation by Paul Connett to the New Zealand Parliament last year KenP asserts that no one turned up. However, one of his own blog postings (06/03/2018) records correctly that three Members of Parliament attended.
KenPโ€™s quaint reliance on democratic process to resolve a public health issue involving uncontrolled medical treatment with a neurotoxin by way of a community water supply stands in stark contrast to his self-proclaimed scientific integrity.
In his own city 24,635 citizens determined that 11,768 fellow citizens were forced against their expressed wishes to receive fluoridated water through their household taps. Where are scientific principles or medical ethics here?
There is no doubt about the science under-pinning the escalating climate crisis but there is sufficient science-based growing concern about the total bodily effects of ingested fluoride for an ultra-precautionary approach to be taken on CWF.
There are viable oral health alternatives to CWF which have been demonstrated in several countries, including New Zealand, that are safer, more effective, with broader societal coverage and immensely more economical so I keep wondering why KenP devotes so much of his discretionary research time to bolstering a medical intervention that is well past its use-by date.

15,743 Views
4
Report
Conversationalist

Yes, Ross. The three organisers turned up but no one else did.

If you talk to politicians they are well aware of the way activists bombard them with rubbish - this whole process is quite unproductive for anti-fluoride activity. Even local body politicians, who are far more gullible, have been turned off by this bombardment and have been pleading with the government to remove the issue from their responsibilities.

You may believe the democratic process is quaint - but it is fundamental in our society. I think it is worse than "quaint" for you to think that democratic expressions must be "forced" from people. To my mind such a characterisation is obscene.

And, no, democratic expression does not rely on "scientific principles or medical ethics" - it relies on the predominant values in the community. That is why I believe such democratic decisions should stand - even when I disagree with the result scientifically, ethically (and no one should vote on science - that relies on facts) or politically. After all, there have been extremely few elections I have been involved in which have resulted in the decision I favored - but to me, the majority decisions are far more important than my own.

I am glad you accept the scientific basis supporting our understanding of man-made climate change - but your description of it as a crisis is not supported to the same degree by any means. The science supporting the safety, effectiveness, and cost-effectiveness of community water fluoridation is far more certain.

You claim that "There are viable oral health alternatives to CWF which have been demonstrated in several countries, including New Zealand, that are safer, more effective, with broader societal coverage and immensely more economical." I would certainly be interested in your presentation of them and the evidence for them so that a proper comparison could be made. Interesting you neglect to do that and I certainly can't think of what you mean.

In the end, health experts have the respoosnbibilty of introducing policies that they consider effective, safe and economical - and also acceptable to the community. I believe that is happening. To a large extent, the range of health actions that are used are complementary and there is no need the put all one's eggs in one basket.

I have already explained my activity on this question - as on my explaining of the science behind climate change and evolution. My critique of religious apologists who justify misrepresentation and distortion of science. Scientific principles never have a use-by date and should always be defended. If you understood that, then you would see what I am doing and your contribution to discussion here would be science-based instead of relying on activist ideology and unsupported attacks on science. Evidence and scientific understanding are the sorts of things I prefer to engage with.

0 Kudos
15,736 Views
3
Report
Trusted Contributor

I recently posted a comment describing a common tactic of anti-science activists, Circular Debating Technique (08-17-2019 09:11 AM).

 

Another very common tactic of anti-science activists is Gish Gallop, โ€œa technique used during debating that focuses on overwhelming an opponent with as many arguments as possible, without regard for accuracy or strength of the arguments. The term was coined by Eugenie Scott and named after the creationist Duane Gish, who used the technique frequently against proponents of evolution.โ€ (Wikipedia)  โ€œBy using a quantity of arguments as a quality itself, a Gish Gallop tries to create the illusion of authority and weight of evidence. It is effectively style over substance."
https://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Gish_Gallop
https://effectiviology.com/gish-gallop/
http://blogs.bu.edu/pbokulic/2013/11/18/gish-gallop-fallacy-of-the-day/
https://skepticalscience.com/climate-Gish-Gallop-of-epic-proportions.html

 

GishGallop2a..png

 

Various Cancer Claims are excellent examples of both Gish Gallop and Circular Debating Technique used by fluoridation opponents in this discussion.

 

Earlier in this discussion Bill Osmunson dumped over 16,000 words into the exchange in an apparent attempt to support his claim that drinking optimally fluoridated water is a significant risk factor for causing cancer. 

 

Bill Osmunsonโ€™s Gish Gallop references to fluoride and cancer:
โ€œRandy, Lets talk science rather concensus.  Remember, the masses can be wrong.  Marketing can change public opinion.  The next few posts will be just a touch on one aspect of fluoride, carcinogenicity.โ€ (09-04-2018 02:04 PM), โ€œRandy, Letโ€™s look at some studies.โ€ (09-04-2018 02:05 PM), (09-04-2018 02:07 PM), (09-04-2018 04:11 PM), (09-04-2018 04:12 PM), (09-04-2018 04:47 PM), (09-04-2018 04:57 PM), (09-04-2018 05:02 PM), (09-04-2018 05:03 PM), (09-04-2018 05:05 PM), (09-04-2018 05:06 PM), (09-05-2018 04:12 PM), (09-05-2018 04:14 PM), (09-05-2018 04:18 PM), โ€œThis forum only accepts 20,000 charactors, so I cannot post all the fluoride cancer studies.  Here are some, in response to your claim, โ€˜Fluoride is NOT a carcinogenโ€™โ€ (07-11-2018 06:26 PM)

 

That is one of the most remarkable examples of Gish Gallop I have ever seen, and other fluoridation opponents have also contributed their opinions.

 

If any of the anti-fluoridation interpretations of the evidence were legitimate, why do none of the major cancer organizations list community water fluoridation as a cancer risk?  Do the activists have a better understanding of the evidence than the relevant experts?  Why would anyone trust the opinions of passionate activists who have no legitimate evidence to support their opinions and change the conclusions of the experts, but who continue to dump tons of irrelevant studies into public discussions.

 

These are the actual conclusions of some relevant Cancer Organizations:

National Cancer Institute โ€“ Fluoridated Water: โ€œMore recent population-based studies using cancer registry data found no evidence of an association between fluoride in drinking water and the risk of osteosarcoma or Ewing sarcoma.โ€
https://www.cancer.gov/about-cancer/causes-prevention/risk/myths/fluoridated-water-fact-sheet

 

American Cancer Society - Water Fluoridation and Cancer Risk: โ€œThe general consensus among the reviews done to date is that there is no strong evidence of a link between water fluoridation and cancerโ€ and โ€œMore recent studies have compared the rates of osteosarcoma in areas with higher versus lower levels of fluoridation in Great Britain, Ireland, and the United States. These studies have not found an increased risk of osteosarcoma in areas of water fluoridation.โ€
https://www.cancer.org/cancer/cancer-causes/water-fluoridation-and-cancer-risk.html

 

Canadian Cancer Society โ€“ Fluoride: โ€œBased on current evidence, CCS believes it is unlikely that adding fluoride to water raises the risk of cancer, including osteosarcoma, in humans. At the same time, we know that there are many benefits to water fluoridation, especially for people who have less access to dental care. We will continue to watch this area of research and update our information as we learn more.โ€
https://www.cancer.ca/en/prevention-and-screening/reduce-cancer-risk/make-informed-decisions/know-yo...

 

Cancer Council Western Australia - Cancer myth: Fluoride and cancer: โ€œFluoridation is considered by many to be a major public health achievement of the 20th century. The addition of fluoride to drinking water has led to a significant reduction in dental caries. There is no consistent evidence that fluoride in drinking water increases the risk of cancer. The weight of the current evidence supports the view that there is no link between water fluoridation and osteosarcoma.โ€
https://www.cancerwa.asn.au/resources/cancermyths/fluoride-cancer-myth/

 

Cancer Council NSW: "Fluoride in tap water does not cause cancer."
https://www.cancercouncil.com.au/86052/cancer-information/general-information-cancer-information/can...


Cancer Society, New Zealand: โ€œOne hazard that has been mentioned is that children drinking fluoridated water are at higher risk of developing an extremely rare form of bone cancer called osteosarcoma.  At this time there is no evidence that this is true.โ€
https://cancernz.org.nz/assets/Reduce-your-cancer-risk/Risks-in-your-environment/FluorideOsteosarcom...

 

National Cancer Control Programme โ€“ Water Fluoridation and effects on health: โ€œIn conclusion, all systematic reviews to date have found no association between fluoridation of drinking water at the recommended levels and risk of cancer or bone fracture. The effects of fluoride on health and related matters are kept under constant review. In addition, the Expert Body on Fluorides and Health in Ireland is of the opinion that water fluoridation significantly benefits dental health.โ€
https://www.hse.ie/eng/services/list/5/cancer/pubs/reports/water-fluoridation-and-effects-on-health-...

 

National Health Service, UK โ€“ Fluoride โ€œOverall, these reviews found that water fluoridation appears to contribute to reduced tooth decay levels and doesn't seem to be associated with any significant health risks.โ€
https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/fluoride/

 

Scientific Committee on Health and Environmental Risks (SCHER) 2011 report, Critical review of any new evidence on the hazard profile, health effects, and human exposure to fluoride and the fluoridating

agents of drinking water:  โ€œSCHER agrees that epidemiological studies do not indicate a clear link between fluoride in drinking water, and osteosarcoma and cancer in general. There is no evidence from animal studies to support the link, thus fluoride cannot be classified as carcinogenic.โ€

 

Also the 2016 World Health Organization report, Fluoride and Oral Health report concluded, โ€œOn the basis of recent published reviews and peer reviewed publications there is no evidence that fluoride levels in drinking water at concentrations aimed at controlling dental caries is associated with increased risk of osteocarcoma or any other kind of bone cancer in humans.โ€  Nor was drinking optimally fluoridated water linked to any other forms of cancer.  In fact, one of the studies reviewed (Public Health England, 2014), โ€œfound a lower rate of kidney stones and bladder cancer in fluoridated areas than non-fluoridated areasโ€.
https://www.who.int/oral_health/publications/fluroide-oral-health/en/

 

A Healthline discussion with references:
https://www.healthline.com/health/fluoride-cancer#the-research

Randy Johnson
0 Kudos
15,644 Views
0
Report
Conversationalist

Ken,

 

For months you have been silent on dosage.

 

You even mocked me for not being willing to debate you on your forum.  I chose dosage and sent you my first statement.  You claimed computer problems and then went silent on the issue.  Why?  You have no answer.  

 

You have gone silent here again.

 

The most fundamental question any scientists would ask for any substance for any purpose is, "how much?"   Yet you refuse to answer.

 

Clearly, you do not have an answer.  You are totally blind to dosage.  Have you not even thought about total dosage desired from all sources?  Not to treat water, but to treat humans, prevent dental caries.

 

How can I pop your fake science mythology by forcing, begging, pleading with you to consider the most fundamental question, "how much?"   "What dosage of fluoride ingested prevents dental caries?"   

 

Bill Osmunson DDS MPH

15,653 Views
1
Report
Conversationalist

Bill, You wrote:

 

โ€œYou even mocked me for not being willing to debate you on your forum.  I chose dosage and sent you my first statement.  You claimed computer problems and then went silent on the issue.  Why?  You have no answer. 

 

You have gone silent here again.โ€

 

 

I do not appreciate your misrepresentation of the situation or your attempt to imply I am avoiding any exchange. For this reason, I will quote from our emails and I apologise the length.

These emails followed my offer of an open uncensored exchange on my blog along the lines of the one I had with Paul Connett in 2013/14. You accepted my offer and on April 5 this year I got a document with your email saying:


โ€œHere you go, attached.  Graphs did not cut and paste below.

 

Bill

 

Excess Fluoride Exposureโ€”Streams of Evidence

April, 2019โ€œ

I responded the same day with:

โ€œThanks for this Bill.

 

โ€œI will aim to start this exchange early next week (Weekends are not a good time for hits). I should be able to extract the images from the pdf.

Do you have a reference list to go with this that could go at the end of the article?โ€

I set out to make the necessary conversions to unformatted text required on the blog but had some difficulties and emailed you 2 days later (April 7) saying:


โ€œHi Bill,

 

Do you have a word version of this?

I am having trouble removing the formatting when converting the pdf so a word or text version would help.

Also, have you got a reference or citation list yet โ€“ preferably with links.โ€

 

You replied the next day (April 8):

โ€œWorking on it.

Billโ€

 

And then later

 

โ€œ**bleep** computers.  I also had problems and I'm moving and swamped.  I did add some references.  Can you get it off of this attachment?

 

Bill"

 

On April 10 I replied:

โ€œBill,

I think I can just copy and paste from the pdf and I have extracted the figures. But have not yet been able to extract a reference list from what you gave me.

But now my computer is now playing silly buggers and it is undergoing a long term scan โ€“ probably not complete until tomorrow (when I have my great grandson for our weekly play date so wonโ€™t be doing any computer work).

It would help if you could extract the references and give me a list, preferably linked, that I can add to the end of the article.

Regards
Kenโ€œ


Then my computer packed up. It was taking a while to repair (both hard drives were wiped) so I contacted you a few days later (April 15):


โ€œHi Bill.

My computer is being repaired. Learned yesterday that both hard drives have been wiped. I do have a backup but it will take time to reinstall all the programmes and recover the data.

 

So anything you can do to insert the references and links will help.

 

Donโ€™t know when I will get the computer back. They may well find other problems.

 

Regards

 

Ken Perrottโ€

 

You responded on April 17

 


โ€œSorry about computer problems.  

 

Iโ€™ll see what I can do.   How do you want references inserted?  Footnotes is what I provided.  Do u want web links instead?โ€

 

I cannot, at this time, find any of our other correspondence on this specific issue.

However, I had given up hunting down your references (yes proper citations and links are normal โ€“ out of respect to readers and to you discussion partner. How can one check what the referenced article says without proper citation?).

There was also the problem of a figure which had not been prepared properly for this particular exchange (Obviously used elsewhere).

But I certainly understood the ball was in your court to correct the article (as it should be) and in no way was I withdrawing from the exchange.

As I explained the other day I am interested in critiquing the dental fluorosis argument โ€“ specifically the Neurath paper you rely on in your article โ€“ so I am keen for the exchange to go ahead.

I hope this clarifies the situation for other readers. I repeat I do not appreciate the misrepresentation you have indulged in, Bill, or the resort to abusive terms. These should not be used in a scientific exchange โ€“ another reason why I think the Open Parachute blog is the best place for such an exchange.

15,641 Views
0
Report
Bronze Conversationalist

CRITICAL THINKING: Since fluoride is a poison that is known to kill developing tooth cells which cause staining and pitting called 'dental fluorosis' and fluoride accumulates in bones, stresses kidneys, and suppresses thyroid function, the 21st century science documenting disease processes from even low dose exposure to fluoride should prompt an immediate suspension of municipal fluoridation programs. 

 

CIRCULAR REASONING: Since the U.S. government decided fluoridation was 'safe and effective' in 1950, any modern scientific evidence that fluoridation is harmful must be flawed. Consequently,  promoters of fluoridation are justified in using any political actions and social media strategies to suppress science, silence expert opinions and stifle the voices of victims. 

 

In the early 1980s, the EPA was under political pressure to increase the MCL/MCLG of fluoride from 2.4 ppm to 4 ppm. The first step in getting that done was to change the perception of dental fluorosis. The first image is an excerpt from a 1984 MEMO from the Director at the EPA Office of Drinking Water to the Head of the EPA regarding the deception underfoot. Dental fluorosis at that point in time was affecting about 1 in 4 American teens with about 1 in 100 having moderate to severe dental fluorosis. 

 

In 2019, HHS and CDC with partners are involved in the same type of word play. Dental fluorosis is now affecting about half of all American teens, with fluorosis of aesthetic concern affecting at least 1 in 10 per 2015 Cochrane report (2nd image) and 1 in 3 suffering from moderate to severe DF per 2019 analysis of most recent NHANES data (C. Neurath , H. Limeback, B. Osmunson, M. Connett, V. Kanter, and C. R. Wells.  "Dental Fluorosis Trends in US Oral Health Surveys: 1986 to 2012in JDR Clinical and Translational Research. 2019.) 

 

Memo1984EPA.jpgDFperCochrane.jpg

14,341 Views
0
Report
Bronze Conversationalist

Indeed it is so true. For example, there are fluoridation promoters all over the internet that are anti-science. This diatribe just presented doesn't even mention that even fluoridationists publish that all cities that fluoridate people have increased incidence of dental fluorosis and that there are no exceptions. Dental fluorosis is an abnormality. It is pathologic, due to systemic fluoride interfering with removal of albumin during enamelization in childhood so that the fluorotic tooth has enamel hypoplasia. This is a laughable joke to some fluoridation promoters, and other fluoridation promoters actually assume that since "fluoride must be good" then enamel fluorosis must be good too and assume that fluorotic teeth have fewer cavities, not realizing the underlying dentin, a derivative of bone, has accumulated fluoride as well and that caries are far more difficult to treat becuase of it. It is all a pretty sick joke, and yet those opoposed to eating and drinking fluoride are the ones claimed to be "anti science.". Wow. .

Richard Sauerheber, Ph.D.
14,260 Views
0
Report
Bronze Conversationalist

I most certainly do not agree with fluoridating people simply because  the water supply is considered hard. Although assimilation  of F would be impaired by the somewhat protective calcium, and these people,would be fortunate to be able to better withstand artificial fluoridation, there is zero benefit for tne action and lifelong it still accumulates F in bone.

In natural areas where 1 ppm F is accompanied with plentiful calcium. dental fluorosis is still rampant and teeth interiors become crumbly (dentist Dr. Heard, Hereford Texas who initially promoted fluoride adjustments in water supplies but later apologized for the notion). The procedure of adding more of the F contaminant into water is mistaken, period.

Richard Sauerheber, Ph.D.
14,249 Views
0
Report
Trusted Contributor

I have read hundreds of cientific studies on fluorides and listened to the opinions of many โ€œexperrtsโ€. It is more than clear that there is very little valid science in support of fluoridation. Even though some older papers start with such statements โ€œin supportโ€, they conclude otherwise. Thus, any โ€œexpertโ€, who supports water fluoridation based on mere venally interested opinions, is no expert at all. 

 

In addition, it is truly irrelevant what any of these fluoridation promoters have to say, because (regardless of anyoneโ€™s opinions), what gives anyone a right to medicate the masses through the public water supply? Are these so called (unnamed and unknown) โ€œexpertsโ€ our personal doctors who monitor the dosage daily? Where is their expertise in every individual case that have been dosed with these artificial compounds of fluorine?

What kind of a fascist country do we live in that our individual consent does not matter? Why is the population being used as fluoride waste filters, with the pretense that there is some unproven benefit to one part of the body? 

 

I have heard the fluoridation waste industryโ€™s motto that: โ€œ Dilution is a solution to pollution!โ€ HA!

14,264 Views
0
Report
Contributor

Yes, AARP and CARP should take action.

Artificial fluoridation began 75 years ago. In this time dental fluorosis rates have skyrocketed. The industrial by-product used to fluoridate water has been classified as a persistent, bioaccumulative, neurodevelopmental toxin. And rates of neurodevelopmental issues like Alzheimerโ€™s, ADHD, and autism have also skyrocketed. 

 

Time to stop the nonsense and stop the additional exposures of this toxic substance.

14,205 Views
0
Report
Bronze Conversationalist

โ€œOne usually expects at least a factor of 10 between a no-effect level and a maximum โ€˜safe for everyoneโ€™ level, yet here EPA seems to approve of less than a factor of 6 between โ€˜not safeโ€™ and โ€˜recommended for everyoneโ€™ (including susceptible subpopulations).โ€ -  Dr. Kathleen Thiessen, 2006 National Research Council panelist (2017)

 

This is not the place for scientific bickering. Moreover, strawman misrepresentation of the opposing views is not helpful.  The topic is whether or not fluoridation policy is harmful to some consumers who include vulnerable populations such as senior citizens and those with chronic illness like  kidney disease or diabetes

 

A valid part of that discussion, as mentioned by Bill O, is how do you control dose when the substance is in the water? This is a particularly important point for those vulnerable populations who have medical reason to avoid fluoride, such as those with kidney disease, thyroid disease, immune system disease, inflammatory diseases, and diabetes.  

 

I also know people with a family history of breast cancer whose doctors have advised they avoid fluoridated water and foods as a precautionary measure since fluoride is an endocrine disruptor and there is evidence of it promoting cancer. See scientific references included in this 2016 letter to the American Thyroid Association.   

 

AARP - You told me in January 2015 that you use activity on your forum to gauge interest for items to take under consideration by your policy team.

This thread certainly has been active for the past 4 years. 

When are you going to advocate on behalf of your constituents?

 

DoseQuiz.jpeg

14,183 Views
3
Report
Trusted Contributor

Some good news.  An effort aimed at possibly stopping fluoridation of drinking water in Gloucester MA was recently defeated (8/13/2019) despite vigorous, vocal promotion by fluoridation opponents (FOs).  Only two of eight City Council members believed the anti-F propaganda โ€“โ€“ the others six carefully considered the evidence on both sides, recognized the severe limitations and misrepresentation of the anti-F โ€œevidenceโ€, and chose to accept the conclusions of the Gloucester Board of Health and virtually all other science and health organizations in the world.

 

In a democracy it is critical for citizens, government representative responsible for making important public health decisions or citizens responsible for electing those representatives (and sometimes voting on public health measures), to either actually understand the complex science underlying those decisions or trust the interpretation of evidence by reputable experts.  There are serious dangers to trusting the opinions of vocal critics of those scientific conclusions which are accepted by the overwhelming majority of relevant experts.  These anti-science critics utilize a variety of disingenuous tactics to mislead and scare and scam members of the public into blindly trusting their opinions over those of the actual experts.

 

In a recent Dilbert comic, Wally describes the Circular Debating Technique that FOs like โ€œCarryAnneโ€, Richard Sauerheber, Bill Osmunson and other anti-science activists have mastered.  For evidence, go back over 1,290 posts and start readingโ€ฆ

Dilbert..png

https://dilbert.com/strip/2019-08-04


โ€œThe public debates go on, the claims get repeated and the task of countering misleading and dishonest claims just doesnโ€™t go away. They need to be countered โ€“ especially as they are often being promoted, almost unchallenged, to decision-making bodies.โ€ (Ken Perrott)
https://openparachute.wordpress.com/fluoridation/ -  reviews of studies used by anti-F activists

 

Fact: Most people respect and trust most scientific conclusions that are accepted by the majority of relevant experts and the policies and technological advances that are based on those conclusions.  However, strongly held personal beliefs can cause some people to distrust some specific scientific conclusions that seem to conflict with those beliefs.  Those individuals are not necessarily anti-science activists โ€“ they choose to believe the interpretation of โ€œevidenceโ€ presented by anti-science activists.  The Scientific American article describes this as โ€œisolated incidents of motivated biasโ€.
https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/guest-blog/who-are-you-calling-anti-science/

 

Fact: Anti-science activists are those scientists and health care professionals who have exceptionally strong, passionately held, inflexible beliefs that conflict with an established scientific consensus.  However, they have no legitimate, relevant, reproducible scientific evidence sufficient to challenge the scientific consensus.  With no valid evidence and a fixed belief, they abandon working within the scientific communities to legitimately change the consensus and (with the help of some passionate followers) take their opinions directly to the public (in forums like this) in an attempt change public opinion and hijack the democratic process.

 

Fact: The scientific consensus of nearly all relevant science and health experts world-wide for over 70 years continues to be that community water fluoridation (CWF) is a safe and effective public health measure for reducing the risk of dental decay and related health issues in communities. 

 

Fact: Legitimate challenges to established scientific conclusions (theories, consensus) by legitimate researchers presenting legitimate evidence to the relevant scientific experts are critical to scientific progress.  If the evidence presented is relevant, well conducted, as unbiased as possible, and reproducible, even an established scientific consensus will change.  More than 70 years of scientific evidence continues to support CWF.
http://www.cyber-nook.com/water/FluoridationInformation-Reviews.html
http://www.cyber-nook.com/water/FluoridationReferences.htm

 

Fact: Circular debating FOs have no legitimate scientific evidence to change the scientific consensus.  That is why the World Health Organization and more than 100 of the most recognized science and health organizations in the world (and their hundreds of thousands of members) continue to recognize the benefits and safety of CWF to reduce the risk of dental decay and related health problems.
https://ilikemyteeth.org/fluoridation/why-fluoride/

 

Fact: FOs have no rational explanation the fact that there are no such nationally or internationally recognized science or health organizations that promote the anti-F opinions.  Only about 6 alternate โ€œhealthโ€ organizations, some activist groups like Childrenโ€™s Health Defense and conspiracy fanatics like Alex Jones [INFOWARS] and Mike Adams [Natural News] support the beliefs of fluoridation opponents (FOs).
http://www.cyber-nook.com/water/FluoridationInformation-consensus.html

 

Fact: If well-meaning citizens who participate in the democratic process (as voters or elected government officials) have been deceived and manipulated to believe the opinions of anti-science activists over the actual scientific conclusions, the resulting governmental actions can be harmful โ€“ resulting in an increased risk of largely preventable diseases and health problems.

 

Fact: FOs and other anti-science activists employ fear-mongering and other disingenuous tactics to try and convince well-meaning citizens (most donโ€™t have the training or experience to personally evaluate decades of complex scientific issues) to trust their opinions over the conclusions of most relevant experts.  The tactics include dismissing the scientific consensus as irrelevant, employing the โ€œGish Gallopโ€ strategy to present mountains of poor quality and irrelevant studies, manipulating, selectively quoting and exaggerating the findings of legitimate studies to fabricate false conclusions and blurring the boundaries between ethics and science to set up false โ€œmoralโ€ arguments.
http://www.cyber-nook.com/water/FluoridationInformation-AntiScienceTactics.html
https://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Gish_Gallop โ€œCite a giant wall of text, or a three hour long YouTube video, and then claim it as irrefutable proof. When they ask for the relevant excerpt, whine about how it's not your job to do the research for them. When they go through the video and start explaining why the video is wrong, accuse them of cherry picking [โ€ฆ] because they aren't addressing the "important" arguments. When they ask you what the important arguments are, insist that it's not your job to do the research for them. Andโ€ฆ repeat.โ€

 

Fact: One of the more duplicitous tactics employed by FOs and other anti-science activists is to try and cast doubt on and discredit mainstream scientists and health care professionals who support CWF and the organizations that represent them.  For example in this discussion:

CarryAnne described these professionals as โ€œwillfully blindโ€, โ€œmorally corruptโ€, โ€œcowardsโ€, โ€œignorantโ€ โ€œsociopaths motivated by power, prestige and paychecksโ€ willing to โ€œprotect a profitable program that causes misery to millionsโ€.
(08-22-2018 06:59 AM), (08-19-2018 01:05 PM), (07-25-2018 11:30 PM), (07-25-2018 11:30 PM), (07-03-2018 07:35 AM)

Bill Osmunson claims these professionals โ€œdon't think for themselvesโ€, โ€œthink fluoride is a magic elementโ€, have โ€œseriously tarnishedโ€ credibility, โ€œdonโ€™t protect the publicโ€, are โ€œlemmings, followers, part of a herd, not scientistsโ€ and โ€œNone reviewed the science.  All the so called โ€˜scientificโ€™ organizations were all puppets of each other with fluoridation.โ€
(08-19-2018 02:18 AM), (08-19-2018 07:15 PM), (07-09-2018 09:09 PM)
I asked both FOs several times if thatโ€™s their only explanation for why all major science and health organizations continue to recognize the benefits of CWF โ€“ and received no answers.
(09-15-2018 10:34 AM), โ€Ž(10-26-2018 02:17 AM), โ€Ž(10-23-2018 11:24 AM โ€“ Q1)

 

For those reading these comments who care about your health, the health of your family and fellow citizens and who donโ€™t have the training or experience to personally evaluate hundreds of complex scientific studies, please consider trusting the majority of science and health experts over the opinions of a relatively few, but extremely vocal and persistent, activists who completely contradict the majority conclusions on important scientific and health issues and completely misrepresent the evidence to try and support their opinions.

 

Most citizens are not anti-science.  They are well-meaning non-scientists who have been scammed by the anti-science activists who abandoned the scientific process of proving their claims to the relevant experts and legitimately challenging the consensus.
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/antiscience-beliefs-jeopardize-us-democracy/

Some additional relevant resources:
https://rationalwiki.org/wiki/War_on_Science
https://www.scienceinmedicine.org/policy/papers/AntiFluoridationist.pdf
https://scimoms.com/risk-perspective-series-intro/
https://openparachute.wordpress.com/fluoridation/
https://americanfluoridationsociety.org/debunking-anti-claims/myths/
https://www.dentalwatch.org/fl/key_facts.html
https://www.scienceinmedicine.org/policy/papers/AntiFluoridationist.pdf
https://www.acsh.org/news/2005/10/31/time-and-the-anti-fluoride-cause
https://ricochet.com/612147/remembering-the-fluoridated-water-wars/

 

 

Randy Johnson
14,212 Views
2
Report
Conversationalist

So true Randy.

 

Internet debates every day reinforce my understanding that humans are not a rational species, more a rationalising one.

On the other hand, most of us do tend to respect expert advice and can only take so much conspiracy theory rubbish, In New Zealand, these days most community consultations on community water fluoridation show support for the health policy because people get the message that it is effective, economical and safe.

People have become so fed up with the anti-fluoride activists they do not get an audience these days. Very telling was that when a few anti-fluoride members of the NZ parliament organised a meeting at Parliament Buildings for Paul Connett last year no-one turned up.

On the other hand, while these anti-fluoride campaigners may be tiresome and do misrepresent the science their activity does keep good science on its toes. For example, dredging up poor quality research from areas of endemic fluorosis to argue that fluoride lowers IQ has led to genuine science checking this out in areas where fluoride intake is much lower (as in fluoridated areas). This research has shown no IQ effect.

Similarly, in New Zealand, the intense activity of anti-fluoride campaigners aimed at local body councils led to councils requesting a proper scientific review from authoritative bodies like the Royal Society. That resulted in the NZ Fluoridation Review - see Eason, C., & Elwood, JM. Seymour, Thomson, WM. Wilson, N. Prendergast, K. (2014). Health effects of water fluoridation: A review of the scientific evidence. It also resulted in councils requesting that the government take away responsibility for fluoridation decisions from local bodies and invest it in regional Health Boards.

Personally, I think local communities should have the final say and do not advocate introducing fluoridation where it is not suitable or the community is overwhelmingly opposed. To me democracy is important.

I leave the advocacy of health policies to the health experts. However, as a scientist, I object very strongly to the misrepresentation and distortion of since which is so rampart amongst anti-fluoridationists - as it is amongst climate change deniers and religious apologists (creationism, "intelligent design"). So I will get involved in debates where I see this happening (as it is here).

Finally, I accept that the die-hard anti-science, anti-fluoridation, climate change denying and creationist propagandists will not be convinced by my contributions. But I do not do it for them - my hope is that there are readers lurking in the background who may appreciate clarification of the scientific issues.


13,846 Views
0
Report
Contributor

Randy...you sound exactly like Randy Johnson ...a fluoride lobbyist who is from the American Fluoridation Society. Your president Johnny Johnson appeared at our City Council meeting and lied to our councillors  claiming concentrations in water would still be safe even 16x the levels considered optimal. We have it on tape.

why would anyone believe you or your group?

 

 

 

13,791 Views
0
Report
Bronze Conversationalist

Everyone knows most calcium in water supplies is from calcium salts other than calcium fluoride. So what?

NaF has an LD50 and CaF2 does not,

even though the fluorode ions are identical in structure in the two salts.

I never said calcium is reduced from fluoridation.

I said fluoridation with toxic NaF in calcium deficient water ( such as in pagosa springs or in hooper bay) is an extreme poison.  If calcium fluoride were used then an overfeed would not have happened due to solubility issues.

Calcium fluoride is very insoluble but sodium fluoride is the opposite, extremely soluble, even though the fluoride atoms are  identical in structure in both.

Anyway, there are plentiful sources of fresh clean water lacking F. The sun evaporates salt water (which contains 1 pom F) to form a distillate that is free of F. this is the,eource of rain  and snow that forms rivers,and lakes. If no F salts are in a reguon then the distillate will remain fluoride free..

Richard Sauerheber, Ph.D.
13,543 Views
2
Report
Conversationalist

Richard - so you appear to be acknowledging that the normal treated water used for supply has no problem with toxicity because (in your eyes) the calcium levels are relatively high?

Of course, the other aspect is that the fluoride levels are extremely low - concepts like LD50 are just not relevant.

Uncontrolled use of CaF2 would produce far higher levels of F than is optimum for treated water. And at those higher concentrations, skeletal and dental fluorosis would be and are, problems.

As for snow and rainwater - don't forget that they also pick up contaminants from the atmosphere. In fact, rainwater taken from a roof can often be problematic because of contaminants.

0 Kudos
13,725 Views
1
Report
Bronze Conversationalist

LD50s not relevant? Tell that to the survivors of the Hooper Bay, AK fluoridation overfeed. The lawsuit is still not resolved , the loss of life not recompensed, and the government relations with native American tribes is lost.

Richard Sauerheber, Ph.D.
13,801 Views
0
Report
Bronze Conversationalist

This is bizarre. Of course fluoride anions are identical in any salt compund or as the free ions in solution. So what? When fluoride is in calcium rich water as in natural sources it is not possible to drink enough to be acutely fluoride poisoned. The LD50 for calcium fluroide does not exist. But when fluoride is in calcium poor water at high amounts from sodium fluoride then people have been killed from lethal fluoride poisoning as in fluoridation overfeeds (JEPH 439490, 2013). If calicumfluoride had been used to fluoridated then no one would have been acutely poisoned. This is because fluoride toxicity depnds on the chemical environment in which the otherwise identical anions are located.  The LD50 for sodium fluoride is about 65 mg/kg (Merck Index) and sodium fluoride (but not calcium fluoride) is listed in all poirosns registries as a toxic substance.

But I was not discussing that. That has been published for all to read.

I was pointing out the Perrot statement that there is no such thing as naturally fluoride free water in the Connett section.I have no problem with Connett's words there, but with Perrot's.. 

Clean fresh drinking water deos not contain detectable contaminant fluoride. I suppose it doesn'tmatter how many times I say the pdf statement is worng.But the readers can read the pdf report themselves.

Richard Sauerheber, Ph.D.
13,336 Views
1
Report
Conversationalist

Richard, I take it from your reaction that you now acknowledge that your claim about me referring to fluoride-free natural waters was wrong.

I also think Connett's claims were bizarre - as you say "Of course fluoride anions are identical in any salt compound or as the free ions in solution." But he worked very hard to justify his statement that there was a difference.

However, you also seem to be arguing desperately for differences - without providing a single fact.

1: Calcium fluoride, by itself, does not control the calcium concentration in natural waters - there are a number of sources. So the calcium concentration in natural waters can vary quite independently of fluoride.

2: Similar fluoride in treated water drinking water does not control the calcium concentration - nor does the calcium concentration generally control the fluoride concentration. This is because the fluoride concentrations are very low and the solubility product does not come into play.

3: There is generally no reason for the concentration of calcium to drop when water is treated for drinking. Because lime is often used for water treatment the calcium concentration may well be higher after treatment.

 

4: You do not attempt to back up your implied assertion that somehow the calcium concentration of fluoridated water is lower than in the natural source water. I don't believe you can.

5: I have been into this discussion before and shown that the concentrations of calcium in our "soft" drinking water are much higher than anything CaF2 could contribute see - Calcium fluoride and the โ€œsoftโ€ water anti-fluoridation myth
See figure:
hardness.jpg

As I said then your claim was hogwash. It still is.

0 Kudos
13,357 Views
0
Report
Bronze Conversationalist

It is under Ken Perrot Oct 30 the medical argument written criticism of paul connetts point 1.

I stand by what I said.

Richard Sauerheber, Ph.D.
0 Kudos
12,214 Views
0
Report
Bronze Conversationalist

It is under Ken Perrot Oct 30 the medical argument written criticism of paul connetts point 1.

I stand by what i said.

Richard Sauerheber, Ph.D.
0 Kudos
6,158 Views
6
Report
Conversationalist

Progress, at last, Richard.

This is what I wrote on page 9:

"Connettโ€™s point 1: Why should we not be concerned about controlling the dose of natural levels of fluoride (or many of the other elements we consume) while only be concerned about the fluoride added as a โ€œtop up?โ€ The are no differences between the โ€œartificialโ€ and โ€œnaturalโ€ fluoride anions in drinking water. In reality most elements like this have a sufficiently wide range of concentrations and intakes for efficacy that it is just ridiculous to treat them like powerful drugs which need accurate dosage."

What do you actually object to? I ask because there is nothing here relevant to your original claim.

In fact, Connett objected many times and at length to my statement "The are no differences between the โ€œartificialโ€ and โ€œnaturalโ€ fluoride anions in drinking water." - which is surprising for a chemist. he could not point to anything to support his objection.

6,245 Views
5
Report
Conversationalist

Ken,

 

You make no sense because you have never said how much,  "fluoride added as a โ€œtop up?โ€

 

You have never said how much fluoride is desired to reduce dental caries?

 

Top up to what?  

 

Why add more fluoride when you don't know how much fluoride is desired?

 

Ever since I've communicated with you, perhaps a couple years, you have been silent on the most fundamental question.  How much fluoride prevents dental caries?

 

Bill Osmunson DDS MPH

6,670 Views
0
Report
Conversationalist

Richard and Ken,

 

Total fluoride exposure is so very important.  Fluoride from all sources.

 

Fluoridationists evade the issue and want to talk about fluoridated water as though it is the only source.

 

You are spot on Richard to bring up the issue of fluoride from all sources.

 

And Ken, you really mush look at total exposure.  Even though you support adding more fluoride to everyone, you must answer the critical questions of

 

1.  How much do you want?

2.  How much are we getting?

3. How much more should we get and is that still safe?

 

Bill Osmunson DDS MPH

6,266 Views
3
Report
Conversationalist

Bill - I think your problem is the use of meaningless words like "fluoridationist." What exactly does that describe?

Heath authorities are not as idiotic as you seem to wish them to be. When considering the introduction of health policies like community water fluoridation, etc., they rightfully consider a range of factors especially total fluoride intake - including dietary intake.

I cannot see what you comment has to do with Richard's mistaken attempt to attribute a claim to me.

0 Kudos
6,249 Views
2
Report
Conversationalist

Ken,

 

You said, "Heath authorities are not as idiotic as you seem to wish them to be. When considering the introduction of health policies like community water fluoridation, etc., they rightfully consider a range of factors especially total fluoride intake - including dietary intake."

 

In many areas of Public Health, that is true.  However, not with fluoride.

 

Name the "Health authority" (and link) who is responsible for determining the optimal dosage (mg/kg BW/day) of fluoride for humans.

 

You are such a trusting soul.  

 

Perhaps you have not read my questions, but lets make it more simple for you.

 

How much total fluoride is needed to prevent dental caries?

 

You refuse to answer because you don't know, no one does.  

 

The rest of fluoridation is a house of cards, built on a myth of unknown dosage, assumptions of benefit and assumptions of safety.

 

I have no idea why you would cling to such an obsurd concept as fluoridation which has no basis in quality science.

 

Bill Osmunson DDS MPH

6,709 Views
1
Report
Conversationalist

Bill, you are being disrespectful (or worse). I am not the authority to ask questions about dietary uptake of anything - not my field, not my interest.

I would simply look up the appropriate sources to find an answer to your question - and I suggest it would be more efficient for you to do this yourself. After all, I know you will reject any answer you get from me - so why don't you take the pleasure (for you) of rejecting the real experts instead of a chemist without any nutritional training, at all.

 

Conspiracy theorists surely can't get much please from rejecting me - can they?

0 Kudos
6,703 Views
0
Report
Bronze Conversationalist

In an attempt to imply that fluoride ingestion is no big deal because fluoride is ubiquitous naturally, the claim was made in the pdf that there is no such thing as naturally fluoride free water. You might want to read the pdf again. The other claims against Connett are for the most part misinterpretations of Connett's words that are not his fault. But who wants to spend their life correcting others' junk? 

Furthermore, we have fought the San Diego city council for decades, both in a group setting, San Diegans for Clean water, and as many of us individually, and in public gropus at water district headquarters.  So to say we need to do something about the overruling of the cities' two votes against fluoridation and the city ordinance against it, as though we haven't, is laughable.

Richard Sauerheber, Ph.D.
6,238 Views
1
Report
Conversationalist

Richard, you tell me "You might want to read the pdf again."

But a quick check on the Connett & Perrott (2014) document suggests to me that perhaps you need to read it yourself.

Nowhere in that article can I find the claim by me that there is"no such thing as naturally fluoride-free water."

So you appear to be arguing with a straw man.

In fact, checking through the document it is Paul Connett who refers mostly to natural fluoride in water or naturally fluoride-free water - not me.

Have a search for the word "naturally" to check that out.

Of course, if you can produce a quote of mine I am open to discussion - but as it stands there is nothing here to discuss.

0 Kudos
6,225 Views
0
Report
Trusted Contributor

Ken,

 

You are telling us that, people are so brain damaged by fluorides in this country that they cannot discern facts from propaganda? You say that:โ€œVoters make their decisions according to values - not science.โ€ Ok, so what values? The value to be able to ingest clean water or the value imposed by the brainwashing of the fluoride disposing industry or the propaganda ministry of the milutary industrial complex?

 

 Then you claim that: โ€œThe science is far too complex for even representatives to understand, let alone voters.โ€ Really? The science is more than clear that all fluorides are neurotoxic endocrine disrupting enzyme poisons. What is so compkex about that? 

 

โ€œIt comes down to where one lays one's confidenceโ€ - Yes, with valid science and not with venally interested โ€œhealth expertsโ€ of the fluoride disposal industry. They can ingest their rat poison toorhpaste as much as they wish, but what right does any โ€œhealth expertโ€ have to poison the public water supply? Again, where is the informed consent that belongs to individuals and not to some unknown โ€œhealth expertsโ€ that take no responsibility for any outcomes whatsoever!

0 Kudos
6,262 Views
11
Report
cancel
Showing results forย 
Showย ย onlyย  | Search instead forย 
Did you mean:ย 
Users
Need to Know

"I downloaded AARP Perks to assist in staying connected and never missing out on a discount!" -LeeshaD341679

AARP Perks

More From AARP