After Trump appointee RFK Jr. gets flouride removed from water

by SydBarrett 7 Replies latest jw friends

  • SydBarrett
  • Jehalapeno
    Jehalapeno

    Cope.


  • NotFormer
    NotFormer

    Wouldn't that be a state issue, therefore out of his ambit?

  • Anony Mous
    Anony Mous

    @NotFormer: Fluorine in the water is mandated by the Federal government (FDA). It was an experiment performed under the Manhattan Project under the guise that it was to improve oral health, really, it was human subject testing on widespread atomic contamination (this wasn’t the only human subject testing that went on, in various places .

    Strong Memorial Hospital
    Located at the University of Rochester, this hospital was the site of a field office called the “Manhattan Annex” that focused on health-related issues. The hospital was involved in a series of controversial experiments that injected patients with plutonium and uranium to study how the body expels radioactive materials.

    • University of California San Francisco
      One of the hospitals where patients were injected with radioactive elements.
  • University of Chicago
    One of the hospitals where patients were injected with radioactive elements.
  • Manhattan District Hospital
    Located in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, this hospital was involved in the plutonium experiments.
  • Massachusetts General Hospital
    Injected patients with uranium between 1953 and 1957.
  • Vidqun
    Vidqun

    Perhaps fluoride in water is not such a good idea:

    https://www.zerohedge.com/medical/government-report-links-high-fluoride-exposure-low-iq-among-children

  • Vidqun
    Vidqun

    Perhaps fluoride in water is not such a good idea after all:

    https://www.zerohedge.com/medical/government-report-links-high-fluoride-exposure-low-iq-among-children

  • Vidqun
    Vidqun

    Not sure what's happening here. A glitch in the matrix?

  • WTWizard
    WTWizard

    And this time they had better really get it out, instead of lying about it as they did when they claimed to have reduced it to 0.7 ppm (I think it is still 1.2 ppm). If they are going to put anything in the water to improve your teeth, why not boron? This is a mineral that most of us are deficient in, and without it, most of us are getting calcium deposits where they don't need them. (Such as the arteries.) I think that 1.2 ppm of boron would be nice, since that would supply roughly 2.5 mg of boron per 2 liters of water (I take 10 mg a day in pills, and most of us would do well to get at least 5 mg of boron a day.)

    If anyone really wants fluoride, they can take 1 mg pills of the stuff as sodium fluoride. There is also the option of using fluoride toothpaste. And no, taking fluoride out of the water is not going to result in cavities in the teeth. Fluoride is the smallest portion of the tooth enamel--chloride is actually more important. It might, however, result in cavities in the boasting session attendance if people stop eating this poison, and grow back some of their brain enough to realize that the whole xian religion is a scam.

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