EPA DOES 180: Flouride not good for health!, page 1


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Topic started on 6-8-2012 @ 11:23 AM by wearewatchingyouman


reply posted on 6-8-2012 @ 11:35 AM by Dustytoad
reply to post by wearewatchingyouman



I found this at the bottom of the Article..


NOTE: A reverse osmosis system is needed to remove fluoride from drinking water.


Strange actually reading truth like this. It feels so, foreign.
Nice though.


reply posted on 6-8-2012 @ 11:39 AM by wearewatchingyouman
reply to post by g0dhims3lf



wow... thanks for pointing that out. It was posted on Fb by a friend and I didn't look at the date. Thanks.


reply posted on 6-8-2012 @ 11:39 AM by g0dhims3lf
reply to post by Dustytoad



Yeah I think this should be illegal. Water is a natural resource that is free to all but by adding fluoride it becomes unnatural and is not the same as taking out contaminants that shouldn't be there. So in order to make it natural again we have to go out and buy something like bottled water or a filter. Most ridiculous thing ever, not only that you have to continuously buy new filters yearly.


reply posted on 6-8-2012 @ 05:32 PM by Swills
reply to post by wearewatchingyouman



No worries, but yeah, this is kind of old news and Fox wrote the article because...

www.hhs.gov...

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
January 7, 2011

HHS and EPA announce new scientific assessments and actions on fluoride

Agencies working together to maintain benefits of preventing tooth decay
while preventing excessive exposure

WASHINGTON – The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) today are announcing important steps to ensure that standards and guidelines on fluoride in drinking water continue to provide the maximum protection to the American people to support good dental health, especially in children. HHS is proposing that the recommended level of fluoride in drinking water can be set at the lowest end of the current optimal range to prevent tooth decay, and EPA is initiating review of the maximum amount of fluoride allowed in drinking water.

These actions will maximize the health benefits of water fluoridation, an important tool in the prevention of tooth decay while reducing the possibility of children receiving too much fluoride. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention named the fluoridation of drinking water one of the ten great public health achievements of the 20th century.

“One of water fluoridation’s biggest advantages is that it benefits all residents of a community—at home, work, school, or play,” said HHS Assistant Secretary for Health Howard K. Koh, MD, MPH. “Today’s announcement is part of our ongoing support of appropriate fluoridation for community water systems, and its effectiveness in preventing tooth decay throughout one’s lifetime.”

“Today both HHS and EPA are making announcements on fluoride based on the most up to date scientific data,” said EPA Assistant Administrator for the Office of Water, Peter Silva. “EPA’s new analysis will help us make sure that people benefit from tooth decay prevention while at the same time avoiding the unwanted health effects from too much fluoride.”


edit on 6-8-2012 by Swills because: (no reason given)



reply posted on 6-8-2012 @ 05:43 PM by Swills
reply to post by igor_ats



Which bottled water? Is it spring water or purified water? Are you aware of the garbage in the so called purified water?


reply posted on 6-8-2012 @ 09:34 PM by JibbyJedi
Originally posted by Swills
reply to
post by igor_ats



Which bottled water? Is it spring water or purified water? Are you aware of the garbage in the so called purified water?


I personally called Poland Springs.
They said their bottled water is not fluoridated, unless specifically stated so on their label.
That seems to be a safer alternative to the other brands.

I get my spring water from the local mountain spring, but I always enjoyed Poland Springs.
Don't be afraid to call these companies and straight up ask them what's in their water.


reply posted on 6-8-2012 @ 09:59 PM by Swills
reply to post by JibbyJedi



Well I have seen a picture of bottle water now advertising fluoride is in their water but would you be surprised to learn other nasties make their way into the purified bottle water? Drinking spring water is my choice of bottled water too, Poland Spring to be exact, but it's the purified bottled water that could be full of god knows what.

Bottled Water Pure Drink or Pure Hype? | Natural Resource Defense Council

This is the online version of NRDC's March 1999 petition to the FDA and attached report on the results of our four-year study of the bottled water industry, including its bacterial and chemical contamination problems. The petition and report find major gaps in bottled water regulation and conclude that bottled water is not necessarily safer than tap water. The online version contains all of the report's text, tables and figures; it does not include the accompanying Technical Report or additional attachments to the petition.



Bottled water contains disinfection byproducts, fertilizer residue, and pain medication | Environmental Working Group

October 2008

The bottled water industry promotes an image of purity, but comprehensive testing by the Environmental Working Group (EWG) reveals a surprising array of chemical contaminants in every bottled water brand analyzed, including toxic byproducts of chlorination in Walmart’s Sam’s Choice and Giant Supermarket's Acadia brands, at levels no different than routinely found in tap water. Several Sam's Choice samples purchased in California exceeded legal limits for bottled water contaminants in that state. Cancer-causing contaminants in bottled water purchased in 5 states (North Carolina, California, Virginia, Delaware and Maryland) and the District of Columbia substantially exceeded the voluntary standards established by the bottled water industry.

edit on 6-8-2012 by Swills because: (no reason given)



reply posted on 7-8-2012 @ 01:14 AM by Phage
reply to post by JibbyJedi


They said their bottled water is not fluoridated, unless specifically stated so on their label.

Ok. So that means they don't add fluoride. That doesn't necessarily mean there is no fluoride in it (unless it's distilled).

Lowering fluoride limits mostly means that more communities would have to increase treatment to reduce naturally occurring levels, not decrease artificial fluoridation.

The EPA did not reverse anything. There were limits, lower limits were considered.
edit on 8/7/2012 by Phage because: (no reason given)



reply posted on 7-8-2012 @ 01:24 AM by JibbyJedi
reply to post by Phage





Ok. So that means they don't add fluoride. That doesn't necessarily mean there is no fluoride in it (unless it's distilled).


Poland Spring does not add Fluoride unless specifically stated. That doesn't include naturally occurring Calcium Fluoride.

The levels of Sodium Fluoride added to local tap water is still deadly.
In Massachusetts, the levels in some cities have turned the population retarded.
If you're from there, you know what I'm talking about.

Poland Springs is one, if not the THE most cleanest bottled water you can find on the market.
Any other contamination beyond Sodium Fluoride is beyond my knowledge.


edit on 7-8-2012 by JibbyJedi because: Sodium Fluoride toxification



reply posted on 7-8-2012 @ 01:27 AM by Phage
reply to post by JibbyJedi


Poland Spring does not add Fluoride unless specifically stated. That doesn't include naturally occurring Calcium Fluoride.

Isn't that what I said?


The levels of Sodium Fluoride added to local tap water is still deadly.
In Massachusetts, the levels in some cities have turned to population retarded.

How can you be "retarded" if you're dead?


edit on 8/7/2012 by Phage because: (no reason given)



reply posted on 7-8-2012 @ 01:49 AM by JibbyJedi
reply to post by Phage





How can you be "retarded" if you're dead?


Slow kill it's called.

One becomes retarded before cancer sets in.
I am from MA. and I can attest to the chemical smell in the water, along with the infuriating results of the population's mentality. Visit MA. sometime, there will be no doubt.

One example of the incompetence of the workers' mentality...
start at 0:35



1 example. No one read the bag's warnings apparently.

ETA-
Reluctantly, I've added an example of the results of Massachusetts Fluoride....
edit on 7-8-2012 by JibbyJedi because: (no reason given)



reply posted on 7-8-2012 @ 02:01 AM by Phage
reply to post by JibbyJedi


I am from MA. and I can attest to the chemical smell in the water, along with the infuriating results of the population's mentality.

I wouldn't drink smelly water but sodium fluoride is odorless.
It doesn't take bad water to make stupid people.
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