Get a clue fools: fluoride (as added to water) is DEADLY POISON

Apollonian

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Scientists STUNNED as first-of-its-kind study reveals strong link between fluoridated water and ADHD

Sunday, October 21, 2018 by: Vicki Batts

Link: https://www.naturalnews.com/2018-10-21-study-strong-link-between-fluoridated-water-and-adhd.html

(Natural News) There are many reasons to oppose fluoridated water. Not only is it a form of government-dictated mass medication, research has consistently shown that fluoride consumption has a host of ill effects on human health. Recent research has once again confirmed that fluoride is a neurotoxin — with developing fetuses and young children being the most susceptible to its deleterious effects.

Scientists from the University of Toronto recently confirmed that exposure to high levels of fluoride in the womb increases ADHD-like symptoms in school-aged children. Dr. Morteza Bashash, the study’s lead author and researcher at the Dalla Lana School of Public Health, commented on the findings and stated, “Our findings are consistent with a growing body of evidence suggesting that the growing fetal nervous system may be negatively affected by higher levels of fluoride exposure.”

Fluoride and ADHD

Dr. Bahash and his team studied 213 pregnant women and their children to see how fluoride affected the children as they reached school-age. All were part of the Early Life Exposures in Mexico to Environmental Toxicants (ELEMENT) project, which saw recruitment between the years of 1994 and 2005 and featured continued follow-up.

The team of experts analyzed urine samples that were taken from the mothers during pregnancy, as well as samples taken from the children while they were between six and 12 years old. The goal was to “reconstruct personal measures of fluoride exposure for both mother and child.”

Then, the scientists looked at how fluoride levels related to the children’s performance on a battery of tests and surveys which measured inattention, hyperactivity and conducted overall ADHD scoring.

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“Our findings show that children with elevated prenatal exposure to fluoride were more likely to show symptoms of ADHD as reported by parents. Prenatal fluoride exposure was more strongly associated with inattentive behaviours and cognitive problems, but not with hyperactivity,” Dr. Bahash stated.

The team was sure to adjust for other confounding factors, like lead exposure and smoking history. Previous research by Dr. Bahash’s team came to a similar conclusion, with the team finding that high levels of fluoride in the urine during pregnancy was associated with lower IQ and cognition test scores in children. Several other recent studies have also made a connection between fluoride and ADHD.

Water fluoridation may be commonplace, but that doesn’t mean it is actually safe.

The toxicity of fluoride

The truth about fluoride has long been covered up; a former EPA scientist, Dr. William Hirzy, has worked extensively to study (and expose) the real danger of fluoride. Research by Dr. Hirzy has also indicated that fluoride consumption is linked to a reduction in IQ.

Dr. Hirzy reportedly stated of his research,”The significance of this peer reviewed risk analysis is that it indicates there may be no actual safe level of exposure to fluoride.” [Emphasis added]

“Fluoride may be similar to lead and mercury in having no threshold below which exposures may be considered safe,” he added.

And as Natural News writer Tracey Watson reports further, even health experts at Harvard have been forced to admit that fluoride is indeed toxic to the brain. In 2012, researchers from the Ivy League school analyzed IQ scored from 8,000 Chinese school children who’d been exposed to fluoride in the water supply. And what they found was that fluoride, once again, was harming kids.

“High fluoride content in water may negatively affect cognitive development. The average loss in IQ was reported as a standardized weighted mean difference of 0.45, which would be approximately equivalent to seven IQ points for commonly used IQ scores with a standard deviation of 15,” reads the study’s conclusion.

Fluoride’s effect on the brain is only the tip of the iceberg. You can learn more about the dangers of this neurotoxic chemical that’s routinely added to tap water at Fluoride.news.

Sources for this article include:

NaturalHealth365.com

ScienceDaily.com

See also, http://nnnforum.com/forums/showthread.php?t=253583&highlight=fluoride , this site
 
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Fluoride is a neurotoxin that damages your brain

Saturday, December 22, 2018 by: Vicki Batts

Link: https://www.naturalnews.com/2018-12-22-fluoride-is-a-neurotoxin-that-damages-your-brain.html

(Natural News) For many people, fluoride has become a fact of life. The addition of fluoride to public water supplies en masse has made avoiding exposure to this toxin very difficult. While proponents of fluoride say that this “mineral” is essential for dental health, the truth is that fluoride is not an essential nutrient. Human beings do not need to consume fluoride to be healthy — and in fact, you are much better off without it.

While it is true that fluoride can be found in the Earth’s crust, the fluoride used in dental products and tap water is not derived from the Earth. Instead, water fluoridation relies on chemicals known as “silicofluorides.” These are byproducts of the phosphate fertilizer industry — and municipalities nationwide allow these chemicals to be dumped into the water supply for the explicit purpose of human consumption.

Fluoride is not the benign substance overzealous globalists would like for you to believe; it is a dangerous, neurotoxic substance that has been decried as a “soft kill” tactic of the global elite. At the very least, it’s a documented threat to human health.

Fluoride is toxic to your brain

While the CDC claims that water fluoridation is “one of 10 great public health achievements of the 20th century,” science shows that simply isn’t true. The CDC’s own data have shown that water fluoridation is contributing to increased rates of dental fluorosis (DF). In mild cases, DF appears as nothing more than white spots on the teeth, but more advanced cases can be disfiguring with severe damage to the tooth enamel. Statistics from 2004 indicate that 41 percent of adolescents aged 12 to 15 have dental fluorosis — a 400 percent increase in just 60 years.

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As you might surmise, fluoride’s deleterious effects do not end with damage to tooth enamel.

As Be Brain Fit reports, a recently published study in The Lancet recommended that fluoride be re-classified as a developmental neurotoxin — similar to lead, mercury, or arsenic.

Scientists have repeatedly documented evidence that suggests fluoride consumption reduces IQ in children. A study conducted in Mexico City, by scientists from the University of Toronto, University of Michigan, Harvard, McGill, and the national public health agency of Mexico, recently confirmed again that fluoride exposure negatively effects kids’ brains.

“It found an average loss of 5 to 6 IQ points among children of mothers with urine fluoride levels of 1.5 mg/L compared to those with 0.5 mg/L. For an entire population, such a loss would be expected to halve the number of geniuses in society and double the number of mentally handicapped,” PR Newswire reports.

Fluoride isn’t just making people dumb

The neurotoxic compound isn’t just lowering people’s IQs — it’s doing far more than that. Recently published research has also linked fluoride exposure to an increased risk of ADHD. The researchers stated that there is a growing body of evidence which clearly demonstrates that fetuses are especially susceptible to the harmful effects of fluoride, and that their findings are right in line with that belief: Fluoride harms developing children.

Some evidence has also indicated that fluoride may be an indirect cause of Alzheimer’s disease. It’s believed that when aluminum and fluoride combine, fluoride helps transport aluminum across the blood-brain barrier. Be Brain Fit notes that aluminum fluoride in the brain has been linked to Alzheimer’s, as well.

Fluoride has been associated with a host of other issues, including nervous system degeneration and decreased pineal gland function. Beyond the fact that fluoride is clearly not good for you, water fluoridation is a questionable endeavor, if for no other reason than for the fact that the government has no business in mass medicating the people via the water supply.

Learn more about what’s in your water at TapWater.news.

Sources for this article include:

BeBrainFit.com

FluorideAlert.org

PRNewsWire.com
 
Historical Court Case – The Fluoride Cover Up Will Soon Be Exposed

Link: https://www.thelastamericanvagabond...-case-fluoride-cover-up-will-soon-be-exposed/

06 Jun 2020 Posted by Derrick Broze

A historical trial weighing the risks of water fluoridation is set to begin in San Francisco on Monday June 8.

For the last four years, attorneys with the Fluoride Action Network have been fighting a legal battle against the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency over whether water fluoridation violates the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA). A recent ruling by the judge in the case has now set the stage for a federal trial which will include three international experts in neurotoxicity testifying on the dangers of water fluoridation.

The Fluoride Action Network (FAN) is set to argue that water fluoridation violates the TSCA provisions which prohibit the “particular use” of a chemical which has been found to present an unreasonable risk to the general public. Under section 21 of the TSCA citizens are allowed to petition the EPA to regulate or ban individual chemicals.

The FAN began their legal battle in November 2016 when they joined with five organizations and five individuals to present a Citizens’ Petition under Section 21 of TSCA to the EPA. The Citizens’ Petition calls on the EPA to prohibit the addition of fluoridation chemicals to U.S. water based on the growing body of evidence showing that fluoride is a neurotoxin at doses currently used in communities around the United States.

The plaintiffs in the case include: FAN, Moms Against Fluoridation, Food & Water Watch, the American Academy of Environmental Medicine, the International Academy of Oral Medicine and Toxicology and the Organic Consumers Association.

The plaintiffs’ have presented studies to the court detailing the evidence of neurotoxic harm as part of their Proposed Findings of Fact. Dr. Paul Connett, PhD, director of FAN, points to a number of recent studies detailing the affect of fluoridation on IQ levels.

“As of 2020 there have been 72 fluoride-IQ studies, of which 64 found a lower IQ among children with higher fluoride exposure,” Connett stated. “Many of the earlier studies were in places with elevated natural fluoride levels. There is now very strong evidence that fluoride damages both the fetal and infant brain at the levels used in artificially fluoridated areas.”

While the court will allow FAN to present evidence related to the harms caused by water fluoridation, the court has stated that the EPA cannot present information related to the purported benefits of fluoridation. The move was seen as a victory for FAN and opponents of fluoridation. The EPA also attempted to exclude three experts from speaking at the trial. However, the court over ruled the agency and will allow the expert testimony. Experts include Dr. Philippe Grandjean of Harvard and the University of Southern Denmark, Dr. Howard Hu of the University of Washington, and Dr. Bruce Lanphear of Simon Fraser University in British Columbia.

The trial is set to begin on June 8th via Zoom. I will be reporting on the trial for The Last American Vagabond. Stay tuned for daily video reports and articles.

What is Fluoride?

The substances added to municipal water supplies known by the name “fluoride” are actually a combination of unpurified byproducts of phosphate mining. In the United States thousands of tons of fluorosilicic acid is recovered from phosphoric acid plants and then used for water fluoridation. During this process the fluoride ion is created.

This process of taking waste from the phosphate industry and putting it into drinking water has long been criticized for its effects on human health and the environment. It is well known that water fluoridation has led to dental fluorosis for millions of children. This discoloring of the teeth was called “cosmetically objectionable” by the Centers for Disease Control.

Beyond the cosmetic effect there have been several studies indicating overwhelming health issues related to fluoride, especially for children. Another study found a connection between exposure to water fluoridated at relatively low concentrations and a reduced IQ among children.

As recent as September 2017 the journal Environmental Health Perspectives published the study “Prenatal Fluoride Exposure and Cognitive Outcomes in Children at 4 and 6–12 Years of Age in Mexico,” examining the results of prenatal exposure to fluoride and the potential health concerns. The researchers called the study “one of the first and largest longitudinal epidemiological studies to exist that either address the association of early life exposure to fluoride to childhood intelligence or study the association of fluoride and cognition using individual biomarker of fluoride exposure.” The study was funded in part by the U.S. National Institutes of Health.

The researchers found that higher prenatal fluoride exposure was associated with lower scores on tests for cognitive function at age four, and between ages six and twelve. The researchers acknowledge that their results are “somewhat consistent” with past ecological studies which indicate children living in areas of high fluoride exposure have lower IQ scores than those in low-exposure areas.

A study published in the journal General Dentistry warns that infants are at risk of dental fluorosis due to overexposure from fluoride in commercially available infant foods. The researchers analyzed 360 different samples of 20 different foods ranging from fruits and vegetables, chicken, turkey, beef, and vegetarian dinners. Chicken products had the highest concentrations of fluoride, followed by turkey. The New York State Coalition Opposed to Fluoridation (NYSCOF) reports that the fluoride levels were due to pesticides, fertilizers, soil, groundwater, and/or fluoridated water. The high levels found in the chicken and turkey can be attributed to “fluoride-saturated bone dust” involved in the process of mechanically separating the meat.

Another study published in Environmental Health found a potential connection between fluoride exposure and the prevalence of adult attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in children. The researchers studied data on ADHD among children age four to seventeen collected in 2003, 2007 and 2011 as part of the National Survey of Children’s Health, as well as state water fluoridation data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) collected between 1992 and 2008 . It is the first study to analyze the relationship between exposure to fluoridated water and ADHD prevalence.

The team discovered that children living in areas with a majority of the population receiving fluoridated water from public water systems “tended to have a greater proportion of children and adolescents diagnosed with ADHD. ” The researchers concluded that:

“this study has empirically demonstrated an association between more widespread exposure to fluoridated water and increased ADHD prevalence in U.S. children and adolescents, even after controlling for socioeconomic status (SES). The findings suggest that fluoridated water may be an environmental risk factor for ADHD.”

In addition to these studies related to fluoride and children, dozens of other studies have indicated a variety of health problems. A recent study published in the Journal of Analytical Chemistry indicates that fluoride ions found in fluoridated water and toothpaste may lead to an increase in Urinary Stone Disease (USD). The study was conducted by chemists from Russia and Australia, led by Pavel Nesterenko at the University of Tasmania. The team studied 20 urinary stones from patients at a Russian hospital and discovered fluoride ions in 80% of the stones. This could be due to high levels of fluoride in patients’ urine, possibly from drinking water containing fluorides and ingesting fluoride toothpaste.

A study published in the BMJ’s Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health confirmed fluoride’s negative effect on the thyroid gland and a possible connection to depression, weight gain, and other negative health effects. Researchers with the University of Kent in England examined thyroid activity for those in areas with fluoridated water and those without. The team examined 95 percent of the English population in 2012 and 2013 and found that high rates of underactive thyroid were 30% more likely in areas with high fluoride concentration. An underactive thyroid can lead to depression, weight gain, fatigue and aching muscles.
 

Extreme fluoride toxicity exposed in federal lawsuit against the EPA​

STATION GOSSIP 11:14

Link: http://www.stationgossip.com/2023/05/extreme-fluoride-toxicity-exposed-in.html

A November 2016 petition filed with the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) brought light to the negative health effects associated ...​


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A November 2016 petition filed with the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) brought light to the negative health effects associated with water fluoridation. The petition called on the EPA to “protect the public and susceptible subpopulations from the neurotoxic risks of fluoride by banning the addition of fluoridation chemicals to water.”
For decades, municipal water sources have been “medicated” with fluoride (and arsenic) byproducts. This decades-long medical experiment is intended to prevent tooth decay in the general population, but this mass experiment comes with its own set of health risks and completely bypasses the informed consent principle.

EPA ignores fluoride petition, paving way for historic lawsuit that could ban water fluoridation​

The 2016 petition against fluoride was ignored by the EPA. This prompted the Fluoride Action Network (FAN) and the Food & Water Watch to sue the EPA. Under the Toxic Substances Control Act, any citizen can sue the EPA if the agency rejects a petition to ban or regulate a toxic substance. There is more than enough evidence included with the petition to prove that mass water fluoridation causes harmful neurotoxic effects in the population. The petition included 180 published studies and approximately 2,500 pages of reference material showing that fluoride causes neurotoxicity and reduces IQ.
This is the first time in 44 years that citizens have brought a suit to the EPA using the Toxic Substances Control Act. This lawsuit includes expert testimony from within the CDC and EPA. These testimonies concur that fluoride is an environmental and human health toxin that is linked to specific harms in the human brain. The lawsuit has even revealed government interference that sought to hide important scientific findings on the toxicity of fluoride.

The next phase of the trial will include a systematic review of fluoride’s neurotoxicity, taken directly from the National Toxicology Program. The report draft was publicized on March 15, 2022. According to a Freedom of Information Act request, there was significant government interference, preventing the release of the data. The trial will also publicize an analysis titled, “A Benchmark Dose Analysis for Maternal Pregnancy Urine-Fluoride and IQ in Children” by Dr. Philippe Grandjean et al., published June 8, 2021 in the journal Risk Analysis.

Expert witnesses and scientists present compelling case to ban fluoridation of municipal water supplies​

The EPA has made repeated efforts to have the case dismissed, but these new studies have prompted the judge to prolong the case. “So much has changed since the petition was filed … two significant series of studies—respective cohort studies—which everybody agrees is the best methodology,” said Judge Edward M. Chen of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California. “Everybody agrees that these were rigorous studies and everybody agrees that these studies would be part of the best available scientific evidence.”
The experts in this case include Dr. Grandjean, who has published 500 scientific papers. His work exposed the neurodevelopmental effects of prenatal mercury and was eventually used by the EPA to establish a reference dose for methyl-mercury. Grandjean concluded for the trial: “With a reasonable degree of scientific certainty, I therefore consider the elevated levels of fluoride exposure in the U.S. population as a serious public health concern.”
Other leading experts include Dr. Howard Hu and Dr. Bruce Lanphear. They are known for their research on lead, which ultimately set EPA standards and regulations for lead exposure. In their latest work on fluoride and neurodevelopment, Hu maintains that the amount of fluoride used in the water poses a threat to neurodevelopment, similar to lead exposure. “It is my opinion to a reasonable degree of scientific certainty, that the results of the element studies support the conclusion that fluoride is a developmental neurotoxicant at levels of internalized exposure seen in water fluoridated communities,” Hu concluded.
This historic case could force the EPA to establish a new reference level for fluoride, making it illegal to add the toxin to municipal water supplies.
 

EPA Seeks to Discredit Testimony of Expert Witness Who Says Studies Prove Fluoride Is a Neurotoxin​

by Brenda Baletti, Ph.D. | The Defender
February 6th 2024, 5:40 am

Link: https://www.infowars.com/posts/epa-...-says-studies-prove-fluoride-is-a-neurotoxin/

The third day of the landmark fluoride trial included tense exchanges between scientists and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), as the agency sought to discredit statements made by a key witness for the plaintiffs and the plaintiffs called one of the EPA’s own experts to testify.
Editor’s note: The Defender is providing daily updates on the landmark trial pitting Fluoride Action Network against the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. The trial started Feb. 1. To read previous coverage, click here.
The third day of the landmark fluoride trial included tense exchanges between scientists and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), as the agency sought to discredit statements made by a key witness for the plaintiffs and the plaintiffs called one of the EPA’s own experts to testify.

Food & Water Watch, Fluoride Action Network, Moms Against Fluoridation and other advocacy groups and individuals are suing the EPA in a bid to force the agency to prohibit water fluoridation in the U.S. due to fluoride’s toxic effects on children’s developing brains.
Expert witness Philippe Grandjean, M.D., Ph.D., returned to the stand for a second day to provide his assessment of several recently published studies finding no significant link between fluoride exposure and neurotoxicity.
Grandjean, chair of environmental medicine at the University of Southern Denmark and adjunct professor in environmental health at Harvard, is a leading world expert on environmental toxins. He has worked as an adviser to the EPA setting benchmark toxicity levels for mercury and lead.
In his first day of testimony, Grandjean provided a long history of research on fluoride’s neurotoxicity, including his own research linking fluoride exposure to cognitive deficits and key findings from the National Toxicology Program’s (NTP) report linking higher fluoride exposure to lowered IQ in children.
During cross-examination, attorneys for the EPA challenged Grandjean’s critiques of studies that didn’t find links between fluoride and neurotoxicity in children, sometimes drawing on statements from his deposition.
The agency attempted to show that some studies linking fluoride to neurotoxicity at low levels have a “risk of bias” and that one study in particular — the “Spanish study,” which did not find a link between fluoride exposure and lowered IQ among children in a birth cohort in northern Spain — was a “high-quality study” that ought to be taken seriously.

Grandjean disagreed and reiterated his analysis of those studies.
Next, the plaintiffs called one of the EPA’s expert witnesses, Stanley Barone, Ph.D., a risk assessment scientist from the Office of Chemical Safety and Pollution Prevention, to establish EPA’s methods for risk evaluation under the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA).
Through questioning, Barone explained the EPA’s risk assessment method — the method plaintiffs charge the EPA is failing to apply in the case of fluoride.
The day ended partway through his testimony and was scheduled to continue today.
“I’m very happy with how the evidence has come in the first three days with our first three expert witnesses,” plaintiff’s attorney Michael Connett told The Defender after the hearing.
He said the witnesses have established that the levels of fluoride exposure experienced by pregnant mothers in some fluoridated areas exceed the levels associated with significant decreases in IQ.
Second, he said, “I think the evidence has demonstrated that there is every reason to expect that some susceptible members of the population will be particularly vulnerable to fluoride’s neurotoxic effects and that any safety standards for fluoride really need to take that into account.”
“And certainly EPA needs to take that into account given the command of the Toxic Substances Control Act that susceptible populations be protected,” he added.
Expert witness defends analyses of key studies
Grandjean — known for his work on the neurotoxicity of mercury and lead for the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and other global health organizations — walked through issues of author and journal credibility and methods in one case and study design and data in another that compromised the findings and conclusions of the studies, he said.
Connett asked Grandjean about the “Spanish study” conducted by Jesús Ibarluzea, Ph.D. It is one of the primary cohort studies the EPA’s case relies on, which found no link between prenatal exposure to low levels of fluoride and lowered IQ among children in coastal Spain, but did find that fluoride exposure increased IQ for boys by an “implausible” 15 points.
“The study makes absolutely no sense,” Grandjean told Connett. He added that he wasn’t accusing the authors of fraud, but thought there had been a major error, perhaps in the lab analysis.
Ibarluzea himself was originally set to testify on behalf of the EPA, but after being deposed by the plaintiffs’ attorneys, he withdrew from further participation in the case. His deposition videos will be used as evidence by the EPA.
Finally, Connett asked Grandjean to walk the court through findings from a new pilot study by researchers at Tulane University that found children with chronic exposure to high levels of fluoride in drinking water made more errors on drawing and cognitive tests.
Connett ended his questioning by referring Grandjean back to the early studies by Kaj Roholm that identified a causal relationship between fluoride and skeletal fluorosis.
Based on the available evidence, Connett asked, “Do you think impacts on neurodevelopment are more threatening than on skeletal fluorosis?”
“Yes, I do,” Grandjean responded.
EPA tries to build its case
EPA attorneys spent much of the day building their case, which hinges on the idea that fluoride’s neurotoxicity is uncertain at low concentration levels based on the available evidence.
They used Grandjean’s testimony to cast doubt on the NTP’s findings and to suggest that Grandjean may be biased in his assessment of the Spanish study.
On the first day of Grandjean’s testimony, Connett had him review the outcomes of the high-quality studies, the vast majority of which found evidence of fluoride’s neurotoxicity at different levels, including low levels.
The EPA referred to a table from the NTP monograph showing the high-risk-of-bias versus low-risk-of-bias studies and argued that the studies used by the NTP showed a high risk of bias or were not statistically significant according to one method of analyzing that data — an assertion plaintiffs attorney countered in his re-directed questioning.
Throughout the day, Grandjean appeared annoyed by the line of questioning, particularly by the EPA’s attempts to find discrepancies in his statements by comparing them to statements made in his deposition, in response to questions he said were posed somewhat differently.
The EPA also pushed Grandjean to discuss the Danish cohort study, called the Odense study, where Grandjean and his colleagues did not find a statistically significant impact of fluoride exposure on IQ at low levels of exposure.
Grandjean explained that the Danish study, pooled with other studies, offered important insight into fluoride’s neurotoxicity, as he outlined the first day of testimony.
Finally, the EPA tried to get Grandjean to affirm the validity of the Spanish study by acknowledging that its authors were credible researchers — which Grandjean acknowledged, by acknowledging it was a high-quality study with low risk of bias, as evaluated by the NTP.
Then attorneys for the EPA suggested that because the NTP report contained a study that Grandjean didn’t find credible, he ought to find the NTP report itself questionable.
Federal Judge Edward Chen posed a key final question to the witness: “Is it common to find contrary studies after studies have shown toxicity from a chemical?”
Grandjean said this same phenomenon happened with lead, where some studies indicated lead had no toxic effect on children. He also said those studies were often funded by industry.
Drs. Howard Hu and Bruce Lanphear also spoke to this question in their testimonies on days one and two of the trial.
After the hearing, Connett summed up what the three witnesses argued: “The absence of a detectable effect doesn’t mean there’s no harm. Testimony thus far has shown that populations can differ significantly and different factors can influence how neurotoxicity manifests.”
Connett said variations in the association between fluoride and IQ in different populations would be expected, including null effects in some studies and findings of associations and others.
“So what may appear initially contradictory may in fact not be contradictory,” he said.
He explained:
“The EPA really wants to see the low-dose studies finding significant effects. And if we don’t have low-dose studies finding significant effects, then they want to dismiss it entirely.
“The problem with that is when you’re studying lower exposures in a population, it’s much harder to detect an effect because you have lower exposure contrasts, which thereby reduce the power of the study to find the effect.
“It’s like using a lower powered magnifying glass — you’re not going to see as much as you will if you use a higher powered magnifying glass. When you’re studying populations that have more distinct exposure contrasts, you’re better able to tease out the effect of fluoride, which is one of the strengths of high-dose studies or higher-dose studies.
“So EPA on one hand wants to eliminate from its consideration all high-dose studies and then say there’s no risk based on low-dose studies, not finding the effect. And effectively what that means is EPA is discarding the higher powered magnifying glass in exchange for a lower powered magnifying glass, and then using that lesser sensitivity to claim there’s no effect.”
Is EPA following its own methodology for evaluating risk?
For the last 30 minutes of Friday’s testimony, Connett called Barone to establish the EPA’s methods for risk evaluation under the TSCA.
Barone, an EPA developmental toxicologist, was heavily involved in the TSCA’s first 10 risk evaluations. Before the trial, the plaintiffs asked him to establish the risk evaluation process for the record.
Their case rests in part on the allegation that the EPA is failing to follow its own risk-evaluation procedures in the case of fluoride.
Connett questioned Barone on key elements of the hazard assessment.
First, he asked Barone to confirm that to determine whether a chemical is a hazard — one step in the risk assessment process — there is no need to prove causation. To establish a chemical is a hazard, the EPA requires proof of association, not causation.
Barone agreed.
Next, Connett asked Barone whether the EPA had ever made a different hazard evaluation for high-dose versus low-dose exposure in all of the risk evaluations it had done to date under TSCA.
Barone said he was confused by the question.
Chen interjected to pose the question himself. “In the hazard evaluation, is it a binary decision?”
Barone said it was. In other words, a chemical poses a hazard or it doesn’t. The EPA doesn’t differentiate between high and low doses in determining whether something is a hazard.
Barone also confirmed that once something has been confirmed as a hazard, medium- and high-quality studies are then used to identify a hazard level.
These are points Connett also laid out in his opening remarks.


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Fluoride does NOT protect teeth from cavities, large-scale government study proves​

MARCH 08, 2024

Link: https://www.yourdestinationnow.com/2024/03/fluoride-does-not-protect-teeth-from.html/

A recently published and very large government study has revealed that there is zero benefit to drinking fluoridated water as far as dental health is concerned.

The paper out of England states that fluoridation results in a mere two percent fewer cavities than non-fluoridation, two percent being a statistically insignificant figure that might as well be zero percent. Also, fluoridation does not prevent teeth from falling out.

The longstanding claim that artificially fluoridating water results in net economic benefits by lowering public dental costs is also a myth, the study states. To the contrary, fluoridating water results in a net economic loss when considering the capital costs of doing it.

Using the dental insurance records of 6.4 million adults living in England, the study found that those living in fluoridated areas show no reduction in tooth decay compared to those living in non-fluoridated areas.

"It's the largest ever study of the effects of fluoridation on the dental health of adults," wrote filmmaker and architect Robin Monotti on X.

"The LOTUS study, funded by the UK Department of Health, was intended to inform policy-makers of what to expect for future dental and economic outcomes from the current plan to expand fluoridation to all of England. Currently, only 10% of England is fluoridated. The study found 'exceedingly small' reductions in caries most people would not consider meaningful."

Fluoridated water kills​

In a best-case scenario, consuming fluoridated water as opposed to non-fluoridated water might save a person $1 per year in dental care costs. This does not take into consideration the costs of expanding England's fluoridation program, which as previously mentioned would more than likely lead to net economic losses.

On the other hand, the risks of consuming fluoridated water far outweigh any best-case scenario savings of $1 per person, per year, not the least of which include dental fluorosis, or the discoloration and breakdown of teeth and tooth enamel.

In areas of the United States where public drinking water is fluoridated, upwards of 70 percent of children now suffer from dental fluorosis, the cost of which to fix through cosmetic dentistry can be enormous. Not only that, fluoridated water damages brain tissue and leads to a reduction in IQ in children.

"The economic cost of nation-wide 'brain drain' would certainly dwarf the costs of filling a few cavities," Monotti notes.

These findings from the LOTUS study come not long after those of the CATFISH study, which similarly found that water fluoridation is a pointless endeavor in terms of providing any actual benefits to dental health.

"That study found only 0.3 fewer cavities per child from fluoridation, and there was confounding in the study that might have caused even that small benefit to be exaggerated," Monotti explains.

"Fluoride also calcifies your pineal gland or 'third eye,'" responded someone on X to Monotti's post.

When someone else responded in defense of continuing to fluoridate public water supplies, another responded that applying fluoride to tooth enamel is a whole lot different than consuming fluoride in water.

"Fluoride doesn't do anything good for your teeth when it's in your liver," the second responder said. "Water isn't mouthwash."

"If it is not good for the public then it is good for the elites," said someone else.

"Fluoridation in the brain attracts aluminum, which is believed to cause Alzheimer's," noted another about the link between fluoride consumption and dementia.

"It affects thyroid, pineal gland and most importantly for the global cartel, the brain and intelligence," said another.
 
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