Harvard now ridiculously insists that fluoride only lowers IQ levels outside the United States
(NaturalNews) Intense industry pressure to continue mass medicating
Americans with fluoride chemicals via public water supplies has
apparently influenced
Harvard University researchers to backtrack
on a recent study they conducted that verified fluoride chemicals lower
IQ levels in children. We are now being told
the absurd lie that fluoride is only detrimental to people in other countries, and that Americans need not worry about ingesting and bathing in the toxic brew here in the states.
A recent pro-fluoride article published by the industry-backed
Wichita Eagle petitions Wichitans, who will soon vote on whether or not to fluoridate their local water supply,
not to oppose the city's upcoming fluoride measure based on the
Harvard study because the study's findings allegedly only apply to Chinese children. The piece encourages Wichitans to essentially
ignore this and other science showing the dangers of fluoride, or at least pretend as though none of it applies to them.
And the reason these pro-fluoride fanatics are using to make the ridiculous claim that the
Harvard study's findings do not apply in the U.S. is that the fluoride levels
evaluated in China were supposedly far higher than they typically are in
domestic water supplies. Thus, consuming or bathing in fluoridated
municipal water poses little risk, they say, so drink up!
Fluoride levels used in Harvard study comparable to those used in U.S.But is this even true? The
Harvard review, which was published in the journal
Environmental Health Perspectives, includes a comparison of IQ levels among children living in a village with an average
fluoride concentration of 0.36 milligrams per liter (mg/L) to the IQ levels of
children in another village with a fluoride concentration of 2.47 mg/L.
Clearly, neither of these levels is above the federal government's
maximum allowable concentration of 4 mg/L. (
http://www.prnewswire.com)
A
2.47 mg/L concentration of fluoride, which is considered "high," is
hardly "ten times what we see here in the U.S.," an erroneous claim made
by pro-fluoride fanatic Larry Hund, a Wichita-based pediatrician and
leader of
Wichitans for Healthy Teeth, the primary group in
Wichita pushing for water fluoridation. Some U.S. cities, in fact, have
fluoride levels that exceed the 2.47 mg/L level of fluoride evaluated in
the
Harvard study, which means
it most definitely has relevance in the current debate over whether or not to fluoridate. (
http://www.thenewamerican.com)
Even
if you buy into the claim that the roughly 0.7 mg/L of fluoride that
Wichita plans to add to its water supply is less than what was used in
the
Harvard fluoride study, there is still no solid evidence proving that even this lower level is safe. Since fluoride tends to
accumulate in glands and tissue over time,
any level of repeated exposure appears to be dangerous, not to mention the fact
that the jury is still out about whether or not ingesting fluoride
provides any legitimate oral health benefits whatsoever.
"The key takeaway for me in the (
Harvard)
study is, one, they didn't rule out the danger (of fluoride), and two,
they said further research is necessary," said Don Landis, a spokesman
for the group
Wichitans Opposed to Fluoridation. "That's what we're saying; the science is not settled. No research is done on low-dosage fluoride, (and) the
Harvard study is very valuable in pointing that out."
To learn more about the dangers of fluoride, visit:
http://www.fluoridealert.org/Source:-
http://www.naturalnews.com/037313_fluoride_lower_IQ_Harvard.html