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ANOTHER TOOTHPASTE
Scientists in selected positions, keep
fluoridation at a distance for reasons well known to themselves, there is
little "promotion" prospect in honest research or discussion on such a well
controlled process under sponsorship by Politicians, with unlimited power,
manpower, bureaucrats and public money.
However, scientists away from the public
and political scene are striving to find a cure for dental decay.
Today, people talk about these times of
scientific advancement, actually beyond general comprehension, but lacking
the understanding of real honest science. Possibly the greatest scientific
misunderstanding is the mass drugging of populations with poisonous fluoride
pollutant chemicals, which have no medical qualifications relative to public
health safety, (F.D.A., E.P.A.) or controlled dose.
From time to time news leaks out to the
public that scientists are really working on ways to stop tooth decay after
60 years of false propaganda.
Those few would possibly be 1% of medical
scientists, the other 99% blindly endorse and believe fluoridation has
stopped dental decay but suggest much more research is needed. (U.K., M.R.C.
2002, Irish Government Report 2002).
It is reported Herald-Sun 24th September,
2002, that a Doctor at Portsmouth University has developed a new special
toothpaste containing crab shell as a "weapon against decay and gum
disease".
Logic! As at this date there is no data
proving fluoridation stops tooth decay, so the market is wide open for a
proven chemical process without strings attached.
Real Dental Doctors
We have published many articles on dentists
using the title of Doctor. Our feed-back has been remarkable, people
questioning their dentist with a Bachelors Degree using the title of Doctor
without the academic qualifications.
The feed-back lacked even one question from
a politician, a University, a dentist, the Civil Rights Group, or even a
Dogooder Organisation, but we did really expect a question from the Legal
Institute.
The situation is made clear in a TV
interview in the U.S.A. between David Letterman and Edward Bernays during
1984:
"Letterman: Doctor, what, er tell me
again, what the doctor is, what are we dealing with? You are the
father of public relations. (including fluoridation).
Bernays: Well what we are dealing with
really is the concept that people will believe me more if you call me
doctor.
Letterman: Oh, I see (laughter from
Letterman and audience) so it's a good idea!"
[Interview information provided by:
www.fluoride.org.uk]
(Copy in colour of interview in our
file)
The gratuitous title use of the highest
academic "qualification" selectively presented only to dentists;
other such users, in the health industry, go to jail for such corruption!
What a gem for merchandising a product such
as fluoridation, and Bernays put it so unambiguously perfect in so few
words.
LESS FLUORIDE AIR POLLUTION FOR
WESTERN AUSTRALIA, MORE FOR JAMAICA
It is likely that the proposed $1 billion
expansion of Western Australia's Wangerup alumina refinery, which would have
increased production (and probably air pollution levels) by over 70%, will
at least be deferred.
Instead, AWAC's Jamaican plant, already
being expanded, may be expanded even further.
There have been hundreds of complaints from
residents about emissions from the existing Wangerup alumina plant, the 24
hour a day toxins including arsenic, mercury, lead, hydrocarbons, sulphur
dioxide, fluoride and nitrogen. (Australian Fluoridation News, Vol. 38, No
2. March-April 2002) .
Alcoa is the major partner in Alcoa World
Alumina and Chemicals (AWAC), which operates the alumina refinery in
Clarendon, Jamaica, a joint venture between the Government of Jamaica and
AWAC.
The chairman of Alcoa, Alain Belda, after
commenting on the bad publicity in Wangerup due to emission problems from
the alumina refinery, stated:
"But you have people that have now
been oversensitised and so you're getting a lot of bad publicity. It
doesn't take much these days to get bad publicity on these kind of
things." (Sydney Morning Herald, 19 July 2002).
When exposed to unacceptably high
concentrations of a substance, including ingestion of toxins from exposure
to air pollution, people can become more sensitive than normal to further
exposure to that substance and consequently are oversensitised to such
toxins. While it is gratifying to know that Alcoa now admits its operations
have affected residents, this is little comfort to residents who continue to
be affected.
Chairman Belda also commented that the
emission problems had been corrected, however, that is unlikely to be the
view of affected residents. The Federal Government's National Pollution
Database shows that 390 kg of fluoride is released annually through the
Wangerup refinery smokestacks. Fluoride is not measured, even though it is
one of the most toxic contaminants.
Queenslanders next
The feasibility of construction of an
aluminium smelter in Rockhampton, Queensland, is being assessed, with
construction possibly commencing in 2003. The $3.8 billion project is a
joint venture between the US Company Fluor and Leighton Contractors. (The
Sydney Morning Herald, 17 October 2002).
Residents of Lithgow, NSW, where the
smelter had earlier been proposed, had fortunately missed getting the
smelter and the notorious pollution which aluminium smelters produce.
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WATER QUALITY
Note by owner of Grand Ridge Brewery,
winner of many awards for their beer at the International Beer Awards:
"We are here for the water; it is
spring water that, at this height is free of impurities and residual
farm chemicals found elsewhere."
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