Episode Transcript
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(00:10):
What's up you beautiful bastards. Welcometo the basement hangout, coming to you
from somewhere in American suburbia. Myname is chatting with me as always is
Bob. I'm gonna say desonation,a complimation, say what? I don't
(00:35):
know? All right, let meplay this for you. They are the
cursed ones. They are abomba lation. They are an abomba la abombination desolation,
abombination desolation. We're I'm looking foris they are anathemy. They are
an athemy. That means totally inseparation from God. And you don't want
(00:55):
to be part of that. Youdon't want to be part of that annihilation
desolation, abomination desolation. Bob,you are anathemy, anathemy, You're part
of the isolation desolation. That's adonation. So welcome to the hangout,
Bob. Thank you. I havea special treat for you this evening.
(01:19):
If you remember, we've had quitea few people recently tell us that the
fluoridation of the water. Yeah,I've heard about that is an issue.
I know it's been controversial, butwe had even our friend Preston Dennett just
a couple of weeks ago told usthat the reason why they're fluoridating our water
(01:42):
is to dumb us down. Remember, yeah, I do remember that.
That was as ward as the wisdom, wasn't it. Yeah, it was
part of his words of wisdom.We had a couple other people tell us
that the fluoride in the water isa big problem. It's a conspiracy.
They're doing it to fuck us upsomehow. Did they give you fluoride when
you're in elementary school? Remember that? Yeah? Yeah, yeah, yeah,
(02:02):
just tasted like shit. Bubblegum flavoris nasty. I decided because of
that, let's do a podcast onfluoridation of the water. Let's get down
to the bottom of it, shallwe? All right, so here we
are, Bob, how would youlike to start? My friend, I
(02:23):
guess, is it fluoridation like thestate of Florida? No, f l
o U r I d A tI O N. It's flu o r
I d A t I O Nfluoridation fluoride f l u O r I
d E. But didn't you tellme you're dnnists suggests you take floride all
(02:45):
Dennists do. Yeah, so it'sgood for your teeth, back for your
brain, perhaps let's get to thebottom of it. Okay. So I'm
gonna start here, Bob, withwords directly from the NIH, the National
Institutes of Health dot gov website,which is obviously a US governmental agency in
(03:07):
Bethesda, Maryland. Right are theyI don't even know. I'm pretty sure.
Shall we make a visit? No, we can protest out front.
You can hear their communications on likeshortwave radio, Is that right? Like
they have? Yeah? They had? Yeah? Why are they talking on
shortwave radio? Because I think ifshit hits the fan, you can use
(03:28):
shortwave to get like messages from NIH. Really. Oh that's interesting. I
did not know that. All right, So let me go back here.
This is quite a long thing Igot to to communicate to you, Bob,
but it's it's important. It's apretty big story. It's got a
lot of history and controversy. Soadding the floride to the American water,
(03:53):
Yeah, okay, let's hear it. Do you know how it started?
No? I don't remember. Idon't think much. I'm not sure.
I'm glad that you thought you couldremember. I think maybe I knew at
one point, but no, I'mdumb down. Well, all right,
so you're on wellwater, I havethe floride water. So I am on
(04:15):
wellwater. Yes, I feel slow. So I'm a little bit, you
know, on the fence about I'mon the well water, so I'm not
getting the fluoride. Should I beon water that has fluoride in it?
You know what I mean? Like, I don't want to be missing out
if it's good. If it's good, like do sawny water? Doesn't that
(04:36):
flooride? Exactly? Do you drinkyour well water like on the daily?
Well? Yeah, because the wellwater goes into the fridge, the fridge
hat well, so we have afilter for the well water. Then the
wellwater goes to the fridge and thenthe fridge as another filter, and then
it comes out, you know,through the the thing on the fridge and
the ice. So we're not gettingfluoride in our water at all. But
(05:00):
you want it? Well, Idon't know, do I. I don't
know I have it. So let'sget down the rabbit hole. Florida research.
Excuse me, floride. Floride researchhad its beginnings in nineteen oh one,
Bob, What the fuck is florideanyway? Nineteen hundred and one.
Well, we'll get into that aswell, how do they even find it?
(05:23):
Exactly like, we rub it onour teeth and they don't decay.
You're already two steps ahead of me, Bob. Floride research had its beginnings
in nineteen oh one, when ayoung dental school graduate named Frederick McKay left
the East Coast to open a dentalpractice in Colorado Springs. When he arrived,
(05:44):
he was astounded to find scores ofColorado Springs natives with grotesque brown stains
on their teeth. Like, dude, have you seen the remember the water
and back of the future when hewent like way back was like brown fucking
Oh you mean like when they werein the west, to the west and
they served in water at dinner.Yeah, yeah, that's probably why the
(06:08):
teeth a brown. So I havean image of what it looked like in
Colorado Springs, what the teeth lookedlike. Look at that m oh fuck,
there's only like not many left inthe bottom. But see that brown
discoloration on there. Yeah, that'spretty bad. Right. Do you have
a picture of the glass they weredrinking because it was brown? No,
(06:30):
that's just an example of the brownwhatever that he this guy McKay detected or
discovered when he went to Colorado Springsagain back in the early nineteen hundreds.
It was so severe these permanent stainsthat sometimes the entire tooth was splotched with
colors of chocolate candy. It lookedbasically black like chocolate. He searched in
(06:56):
Vain for information. He found nomention of the brown stained teeth in any
of the dental literature. Local residentsblamed the problem on any number of strange
factors, like eating too much pork, consuming inferior milk, whatever that is,
and drinking calcium rich water. Thecondition became known as Colorado brown stain
(07:21):
or modeling modeling of the teeth,which sounds bad. So he researched the
issue off and on for the nexttwenty years. Bob twenty years, like
he was upset his girlfriend or wifehad brown ass teeth, Like I don't
know what's wrong with you, Likehe didn't care about those teeth when she
was going down, right, shedidn't have teeth, so I mean.
(07:46):
He went as far as to includecollaborations with renowned dental researchers. In nineteen
twenty three, McKay trekked across theRocky Mountains to Oakley, Idaho, meet
with parents who had noticed peculiar brownstains on their children's teeth. The parents
told McKay that the stains began appearingshortly after Oakley constructed a communal water pipeline
(08:13):
to a warm spring five miles away. He analyzed the water but found nothing
suspicious in it at all. Nonetheless, he advised town leaders to abandon the
pipeline all together and use another nearbyspring as its water source, which did
the trick. Within a few years, the younger children of Oakley were sprouting
healthy secondary teeth without any of themodeling the extremely brown staining of the teeth.
(08:43):
But he still had no idea whatcaused the issue. Why was one
body of water causing this and theother one wasn't. So he actually reached
out to a doctor from the UnitedStates Public Health Service then known as PHS,
and they traveled to Box Site,Arkansas, where there was another outbreak
(09:05):
and widespread modeling of people's teeth.So it wasn't like sulfur. Well,
I don't know, we'll get there. So Box Site was a town owned
by the Aluminum Company of America otherwiseknown as ALCOA. Okay, I'm sure
you've you've heard of Alcoa. It'sa huge company. No, No,
(09:26):
okay, well you're living under arock. They sell aluminum, So aluminum
was there, you know, theirbig thing back in the early nineteen hundreds.
Alco is a huge company. Nowthey do all kinds of things like
Johnson and Johnson. Yeah, basicallythey might even be owned by Johnson and
Johnson at this point for all,I think maybe contact lens Solutions alcob don't
(09:46):
know, is that right? I'mnot sure, damn it. So they
discovered that the modeling of the teethwas prevalent in children of Box site,
but non existent in another town justfive miles away. Once again, they
suspected it was the water, butthe water analysis came up with nothing to
point to, so the mystery continues. At this point. They then published
(10:09):
a report on the modeling of teethin this town of Box site, which
was run by Alcoa, and itlanded on the desk of Alcoa's chief chemist,
HV. Churchill, who spent thepast few years refuting claims that the
company's aluminum cookwear was poisonous. Alcoastarted building cookwear pots and pans with aluminum,
(10:35):
and there was all this conspiracy againearly nineteen hundreds that it was poisonous
to use aluminum for your cookwear.He was worried that this report would give
more ammunition to those making the poisonouscookwear claim. So what did he do?
He sent a research assistant to boxSite to test the water using photo
(10:58):
spectrographic analysis, which is a muchmore sophisticated analysis than what McKay had been
able to do. The research assistantreported that there were high levels of fluoride
in the water, making people's teethbrown in Boxite, Arkansas, which was
the hometown of Alcoa, who createdaluminum products. Churchill was incredulous, saying
(11:26):
there's no reason for fluoride to bein the water and that the sample must
have been contaminated. He ordered anew specimen, same result. He then
sent a letter to McKay informing himof the discovery and suggested that McKay test
samples from all the other towns hehad been investigating over the last twenty years,
(11:46):
and sure enough, every single oneof those towns had high levels of
fluoride in the water, making chitteeth, making these modeled teeth which eventually
became known as shit teeth. Ithink it's called flora fluoricis or floralysis of
(12:07):
the teeth is. What is thisyou say, though, Well, yes,
so waterborne fluoride indeed caused the discolorationof tooth enamel. Due to this
discovery, dedicated governmental research into theissue of fluoridated water. Thus began Okay,
(12:30):
headed by doctor H. Trendley,dean head of the Dental Hygiene Unit
at the National Institutes of Health orNIH. Eventually they developed a new method
of measuring fluoride levels and water downto the accuracy of zero point one parts
per million. So now they're ableto take samples of water and detect fluoride
(12:56):
at zero point one per million,really minuscule. Using this new measuring methodology,
they set out across the country testingand measuring fluoride levels. What they
found was that levels up to onepart per million like demodeled the teeth.
(13:16):
No. What they found was thatlevels up to one part per million in
drinking water caused no fleurosis which isthe modeling of the teeth in most people,
and very mild like almost undetectable florosisin a small percentage of people.
But one thing that Dean recalled fromMcKay's previous studies was that modeled teeth did
(13:41):
not decay. They just turned brown. They turned brown, but they did
not decay. So think about this. This is back in World War One
and eventually World War Two, wherethe US military they had to turn back
ten percent of all candidates from theirteeth because their teeth were so bad.
(14:03):
They had a requirement that you hadget this white teeth. They had a
requirement that you had six opposing teethin your mouth in order to join the
military to chew mrs. And theyhad to turn back ten percent of candidates.
So that's how bad teeth were backin the day, right, So
(14:26):
it was a big deal to finda substance that caused teeth to be decay
resistant, but brown, but brown. But what they found was that levels
up to one part per million indrinking water claw caused no fluosis. So
if you had one part per millionof fluoride in the water or less,
(14:48):
didn't get the browning of the teeth, but you still had the anti decaying
effect. Okay, the hypothesis Deantold his CAU colleagues would need to be
tested. So in nineteen forty four, Dean got his wish. That year,
the City Commission of Grand Rapids,Michigan, after numerous discussions with researchers
(15:11):
from the PHS to Public Health Service, the Michigan Department of Health, and
other public health organizations, voted toadd fluoride to its water supply that served
the public in the following year.Okay, in nineteen forty five, Grand
Rapids became the first city in theworld to officially fluoridate its drinking water.
(15:35):
During the fifteen year project, researchersmonitored the rate of tooth decay among Grand
Rapids almost thirty thousand school children.After eleven years, Dean announced an amazing
finding the decay and cavities rate amongGrand Rapids children born after floride was added
(15:58):
to the water supplied more than sixtypercent. And how what is Dean at
this point? What the fuck?Seriously? I have no idea like ninety
ye. This finding, considering thethousands of participants in the study, amounted
to a giant scientific breakthrough that promisedto revolutionize dental care, making tooth decay
(16:22):
for the first time in history,a preventable disease for most people with no
detectable negative health effects at all.Almost thirty years after the conclusion of the
Grand Rapids Fluoridation's study, fluoride continuesto be dental science's main weapon in the
(16:45):
battle against tooth decay. Today,just about every toothpaste on the market contains
fluoride as its active ingredient. Waterfluoridation projects currently benefit over two hundred million
Americans, and thirty million school childrennow participate in school based fluoride mouth rinse
(17:06):
programs, which you just do ourkids take that? I don't think.
I don't. I don't think mykids have had that. They don't,
haven't. I remember that in lifechecks. Yeah, so I think a
lot of that's changed because floride isso prevalent now and we're much better and
we're much better at taking our kidsto the dentist for their you know,
bi annual checkups and getting that wholefluoride. Remember, you know they put
(17:29):
that flouride all over your teeth.Makes my teeth hurt thinking about it.
Yeah, So I don't think theyare doing it in school as much as
they used to. So that wasagain, that was the NIH website.
Okay, so all the positivity thereright now, take it with a grain
of salt, because we're gonna exploreboth sides of the issue, right right,
(17:51):
So let me just tell you this. This is from nature dot com.
Based on all of that, othercountries all eventually followed suit and they
conducted their own studies. Currently,some forty countries have artificial water fluoridation schemes
in existence, artificial meaning they're addingfluoride to the water. In some cases,
(18:15):
only a small proportion of the populationis covered by the schemes. Most
recently published estimates of population coverage includeUSA sixty four percent of the population is
covered with fluoridation schemes in their watersupply, Canada forty three percent, Panama
eighteen percent, Republic of Ireland seventythree percent, Australia sixty one percent,
(18:41):
New Zealand sixty one percent, Israelseventy five, Malaysia seventy United Kingdom ten
ten percent in United Kingdom, whatare the UK folks known for? Bad
teeth? Bad teeth? Just throwingthat out there. Super smart and beautiful
Singapore one hundred percent, damn Brazilforty one, Argentina twenty one, Chile
(19:07):
forty, Spain ten, Columbia eightyHong Kong one hundred percent. Damn.
Yeah, that's a city. Butyeah, good job. Yeah, so
that's that's the positive side of thething. I need to take a break
because the fluoridated water is making mehave to piss. So I was going
to ask you, do you thinkthat celtza you're drinking has floridated water in
(19:30):
it? That's a good question.I don't know. They probably take it
straight from the spicket. We shouldfind out where the fuck's it from.
Mine's from Seattle, Washington. TheKirkland brand wait brewed by Patco Brand's Columbia
Street Hood River, Oregon, HoodRiver, Oregon. Let's see what is
(19:51):
this? Where do I even findthat information on here? Right underneath the
nutrition facts saying it's super good?It doesn't say that here, man,
mine contained zero percent? And juice? What the fuck? How did they
get How does the grape juice flavorartificial flavors? Man? What do you
think how do they get that?Not from juice? From chemicals? Man?
Chemicals? Yeah, here, giveme your shit. I know where
(20:12):
to look. I don't think itsays it here. It has to let
the America. God, damn it. See it doesn't. No, Yeah,
it does, it says m let'ssee manufactured by Mark Anthony Brewing Ink
doing business as white Cloth, SultzerWorks, Waddell, Arizona and Hillside in
(20:33):
New Jersey. It's a probe fromNew Jersey. Drink responsibly. Pregnant women
should not drink it. Well.I don't know what that means, but
it's not gonna tell off tell usif it's got fluoride in it or not.
I think mine does. Ingredients includesodium that's it, carbohydrate and sugar.
It's sodium. No, it's tenmilligrammers is less than one percent.
(20:59):
Two horrified carbonated water, alcohol,natural flavors, cane sugar, citric acid,
natural grapefruit, juice, concentrate thefuck costco holy shit, and sodium
citrate. So White Claw has realjuice in it and Kirkland has no real
juice. Purified carbonated water, alcohol, cane sugar, natural flavored citrate,
(21:23):
citric acid that's not natural is it? Sodium citrate and a scorebic acid as
preservatives to make sure like if itgets warm and cold again, doesn't taste
like shit. So no juice.No, it says zero points fucking zero
percent. Drink up, but itis goddamn cheap. So that's positive.
(21:45):
And White Claw was the first todo that and then everyone called I think
white Claw was the first number onesuper popular. Yeah, so have you
ever had the White Claw serge?The blue cans they get it's like bud
Light Platinum. It gets you fuckingfucked up. You remember that they were
going to come out with like theTruly Extra whatever. It never showed up.
(22:06):
We were gonna do a whole showor something. Yeah, it was
gonna be like our next what wasthat thing called we did the fucking ship
from Sam Malem? Yeah, Goddamn that shit was ill with a caffeine.
Uh y that will we we samMalon? Now what was that ship
(22:26):
called? Stuff that kids were dyingfrom? Yeah, and we got super
tossed on it. Yeah, wedid an alcohol that caffeinated. I'm pretty
sure that's when like the podcast almostgot canceled by our Why Yeah that was
bad. When we would go upstairsfrom the basement like stumbling, we're just
(22:47):
getting steak now, honey, it'sokay. You wink your whees like one
of our defining moments in this podcast. Damn it right, Yeah, why
can't I remember the fucking florides hittingme. It was like bumm juice.
I remember, Yeah, I mean, all right, anyway, I need
(23:11):
to piss man. Words of wisdomfucking drink fluorinated water. Apparently I don't
know well according to part one,well exactly, so you don't know if
you want it in you know partone? In two, well I do,
I do? Oh, I know, I know my answer. I
just don't want to give it upyet. So my answer, I'm sorry.
My words are wisdom are that Ihate the fucking dentist. But I
(23:32):
know it's important, but I fuckinghate one. You avoid the dentist,
Yeah, like a motherfucker. Doyou go at all or you I go?
I went like two years ago,but I fun like two years ago.
They sent me a happy birthday text. I'm right. When I saw
the text, I'm like, Ifelt sick to my stomach. I hate
some lady that I don't know openingmy mouth and like they put like wedgers
in there and I'm like a highsali coat issue maybe, but I produce
(23:57):
a lot of saliva, so theyalways have that. Fuck They're always like
wow, like not that my mouthis squirting, but they always had like
suction like a mother, Like theykeep the suction thing in like on both
sides, squirting. Actually, butthey're like, this is great for like
anti tooth decay. But wow,you're really salivating, Like I guess,
(24:17):
but I maybe that's why I hateit and it hurts. Yeah, They're
like, this isn't gonna hurt.Do you want numbing? Like, yeah,
give me the numbing. Then thatfucking still hurts. Yeah, all
right, Well my words a wisdom. I go to the dentist twice a
year, you bitches. If youwant to keep your teeth, I honestly
want to get them all pool andget like fake teeth. That'd be nice,
would it. I don't know ifit is a I mean that experience
(24:38):
has to be whore. I mean, it'd be super expensive. I think
it's like to get to get animplant. I think it's like a thousand
dollars. So I knew a copin DC. His wife was Essential America.
He ordered the ship and had topretend like he was a doctor,
had it all the stuff delivered toCentral America, flew down there for two
(24:59):
weeks, had to surgery on thesecond day, like provided all the ship
to the Dennist. Dennis told himwhat to do and it was like four
thousand dollars. Oh wow. Andthen he went back to his dentists after
six months and was like because hegot like a thirty thousand dollars quote in
the US. Then dc SA madea little more expensive and then Dennist was
like what the fuck? Like theydid everything like we would have this perfect
and he's like, I spent fourgrand. The Dennist couldn't believe it.
(25:19):
All his teeth, all of them, yeah, he said, he had
like huge like grinding, like allhis teeth were grinded way down, Holy
shit. And you couldn't tell you, like best. Where did he go?
Mexico? Sent He went to Salador, Oh damn. But he I
remember they called and said they sohe made the order. They called and
(25:40):
said, we can't deliver if youknow a dednists, like I am a
dentist. And then he like that'sit, yeah, that's it, Like
what do you mean I am adnnist? N Yeah, yeah, like
I am a DNI. I don'tknow that. I don't know why you
didn't say doctor when you mentioned myname. M all right, we're back
(26:32):
you beautiful, Yes, sir,so hold on, so on the dentist
if I want to tell you this. So I was. I listened to
talk radio, I listened to sportsradio. I pulled up to my office
and there was a commercial for sedation, Yes, sedation dentistry. So I'm
like, oh fuck if they knockedme out. I love the dentist.
So I called the number and theygot it. Was just a normal dentist,
(26:53):
and I'm like, hey, Ijust listened to the ad about the
sedation. What's up with that?He'sa hold on, hold on, let
me transfer you, and a supernice person, a guy came on the
phone. I'm like, you knowwhat, I don't like. He's like,
why do you want the sedation?But I don't like dannisk blah blah
blah, Like okay, like doyou want to when do you want to
come? Like honest, I justwant to do it, like as quick
as possible. So I go tothe dentist in our area. Yeah.
(27:15):
Yeah. So I go there andthen like, oh, you're the one
who called the sedation line, likehold on, hold on, And then
they took me to an office andthen they brought like the new manager in
and they were acting like like Iwas like, like, they started asking
all these fucking questions, and Iwas like, you know what I asked,
I was like, how much isit for a sedation? Like fivells?
Like oh, fuck, no,don't do that. Then they're like,
(27:37):
okay, we'll go in there.We just want to talk to you.
And then they had like a wholequestionnaire of like all these weird ass
fucking questions and I was like,you know what, I don't want the
sedation. Why don't we just havea normal dentist. She's like, well,
no, no, no, sir, let's calm down, like want
to talk. And I'm like,okay, this is making it work.
I was like, what the fuck? So it like totally made the experience
way worse. Yeah, just whatthe fucking dentist. It's not so bad,
(28:02):
man, I don't know. Idon't like it all right. So
this next part is from OSU dotedu like Ohio State, Ohio State University.
Okay, so this is not likeColorado Fringe, Okay, is like
fucking Alex Jones, you know whatI mean? Speaking of which I do
before I get started here, wantto play this clip. I don't know
(28:26):
how to explain this for me,for my taste, this is a little
extreme, but this is where thedebate has gone with regards to floridation.
And again these videos will be linkedin the show notes. Why aren't people
faking hate crimes? What is that? What? What? What? What
(28:48):
is that? What ideology is that? Where does that come from? Faking
a hate crime? Yeah, threesake hate crimes? In a week,
black man arrested for N word graffitiswastikas at Emory University fakes a hate crime?
A black man fakes hate crime?Why what is that? What does
that ideology? Where does that comefrom? Black woman accused of pretending to
(29:11):
be white KKK member to terrorize herneighbors. Criminal charges filed against Teresia Lucas,
thirty year old black woman. Inan unexpected turn of events, this
week, authorities in Georgia revealed theybelieve a black woman is behind the racially
charged notes that have been terrorizing herneighbor. So now you might be wondering
at this point, what does thisracial yea, what the has to do?
(29:34):
This took a turn floridation of thewater just states black neighbor terrorized by
KKK member, except it turned outto be a black woman posing as that.
What is that? What does thatideology? Where does that come from?
Who does that? Let me justpoint out that this is Owen Stroyer,
who is one of the people onAlex Jones's channel band dot video.
(29:56):
Who does this? Where does thiscome from? This is part of the
insane behavior, and I think reallycan only be added up by just the
brainwashing of society, the mental illnessand and and made possible by the fluoride
in the water and the poison offood making you stupid. So the fluoride
in the water, poisoning of foodmaking you stupid, and the poisoning of
(30:18):
food is what causes people to fakeracism on the bathroom walls. So that's
where we are in the debate onfluoridation of water. Okay, are you
with me so far? I'm withyou, Okay, So I would I
(30:40):
would call that the fringe, right, right, that's a little extreme for
me. I don't know what thefluoridation of water has to do with black
people faking racism on the bathroom wallsor whatever the fuck he was talking about.
Right, So backup OSU Ohio StateUniversity dot edu. This is an
(31:04):
article off of their website. Itdoesn't cite the author. It must be
a PhD student because it's very intelligent, and it goes like this. Highly
toxic hydrogen fluoride and silicon tetrafluoride gasesare byproducts of fertilizer production prior to the
(31:32):
nineteen seventies. And now remember whatwe were talking about, occurred in the
nineteen twenties, nineteen thirties, nineteenfifties, etc. Prior to the nineteen
seventies, these pollutants were vented intothe atmosphere and gave Central Florida some of
the most noxious error pollution in thecountry during the nineteen sixties. However,
(31:55):
complaints by farmers and ranchers eventually forcedreluctant manufactures to invest in pollution abatement scrubbers
that converted toxic vapors into floracillicic fluoracilicicacid FSA, a dangerous but more containable
(32:16):
liquid waste. The US National Institutefor Occupational Safety and Health or OSHA,
cautious that FASA and inorganic fluoride CAMPcompound has dire health consequences for any worker
that comes into contact with it breathingits fumes. Causes severe lung damage or
(32:39):
death, and an accidental splash onbare skin will lead to burning and excruciating
pain. Fortunately, it can becontained in high density, cross linked polyethylene
storage tanks. It is in suchtanks that floracilicic fluoracilicic acid I don't know
(33:07):
has for the past half century beentransported from Florida fertilizer factories to water reservoirs
throughout the United States. Once there, it is drip fed into drinking water.
This is a practice that the AmericanDental Association and numerous scientists and public
(33:31):
health officials describe as quote the preciseadjustment of the existing, naturally occurring fluoride
levels in drinking water to an optimalfluoride level for the prevention of dental decay.
The practice of adding fluoride compounds,mostly FSA and occasionally sodium fluoride,
(33:55):
to drinking water is known as communitywater fluoridation. It has been a mainstay
of American public health policy since nineteenfifty and continues to enjoy the support of
government health agencies, dentists, andnumerous others in the medical and scientific community.
(34:19):
As with many chemical additives in themodern world, few people know much
about it. Many are surprised tolearn that, unlike pharmaceutical grade fluoride in
their toothpaste, the fluoride in theirwater is an untreated industrial waste product,
one that contains trace elements of arsenicand lead. Without the phosphate industries,
(34:45):
affluent water fluoridation would be prohibitively expensive. In other words, if you take
the medical grade fluoride that they putin toothpaste and you try to add that
to the water, it would beso expensive as to be tenable, and
without floridation, the phosphate industry wouldbe stuck with an expensive waste disposal problem.
(35:08):
They stick it in the water,so they stick it in our drinking
water. Only a handful of countriesfluoridate their water. And I remember we
talked about which countries do it,right, this article is saying only handful
such as Australia, Ireland, Singapore, Singapore was one hundred percent, and
Brazil and of course the United States. Western European nations, so that's going
(35:31):
to be France, Germany, etc. Have largely rejected the practice. Nonetheless,
dental decay in Western Europe has declinedat the same rate as in the
United States over the half past century. In fact, the more one looks
(35:52):
at the history of floridation, themore it appears to be a relic of
the sort of mid twentieth century scientificin caution that gave us DDT, tholidamide
and other attempts at better living throughchemistry. And this is really interesting.
(36:13):
This is an ad from back inthe day. You can see DDT is
good for me. Now, ifyou remember, DDT now is banned basically
because it's cancer causing and everything else. So and this one says, protect
your children against disease carrying insects bybasically using DDT wallpaper, which, yeah,
(36:37):
wallpaper in the bedroom of your children, which has now been banned.
So is that with lead or what? What's DDT? It's a cancer causing
chemical. It's just like the doctorsused to recommend smoking cigarettes, right right,
So here we go, Bob,It's it's not as cut and dry
as as we thought. This isnot to vilify the early fluoridationists, who
(37:01):
had legitimate reason to believe that theyhad found an easy and affordable way to
counter a significant public health problem,which, as we discussed, was that
ten percent of Americans barely had sixteeth in their head. However, the
arguments and data used to justify fluoridationin the mid twentieth century, as well
(37:22):
as the fierce commitment to the practice, remain largely unchanged, failing to take
into account a shifting environmental context thatmay well have rendered it unnecessary or possibly
worse. By the late twentieth century, fluoride was commonly added to most toothpaste
(37:43):
and various other dental products, whilenumerous foods were fumigated with fluoride chemicals.
Fluoride compounds also appear, for example, in fast food wrappers. Did you
know that? No? I didn'tknow that either. Why. Despite the
mid twentieth century scientific consensus, fluorideskepticism did not disappear. Scientists, dentists,
(38:09):
and medical doctors who opposed the practicecontinued to publish books and articles insisting
that floridation was problematic. Paul Aerlicexpressed his concern in nineteen seventy seven.
The scientific evidence supporting the efficacy andsafety of mass fluoridation at the generally recommended
(38:31):
level is not as good as itought to be. Some skeptics have claimed
that it causes various cancers or evendown syndrome. Others contend that it is
likely responsible for a raft of lowlevel chronic conditions. For example, people
(38:51):
suffering from mild forms of skeletal fluorosisexhibited the same symptoms as those with arthritis.
So if you, if you thinkabout, we have quite a few
conditions that never existed in that thatnobody had ever heard of that have to
do with arthritic like symptoms like fibromyalgia, right, and nobody knows where the
(39:19):
heck it comes from. So thisis saying that potentially those could be coming
from fluoridated water those afflicted with arthritis, and most physicians were not trained to
distinguish between arthritis and these other issuessuch as fibromyalgia. In addition, several
(39:39):
high profile experts who had previously supportedfluoridation changed sides and began to oppose the
practice by the early twenty first century, which is the century we're in now,
bob, in case you forgot.Even some fluoridationists have become concerned that
people were being exposed to too muchfluoride, a fact reflected in the twenty
(40:05):
eleven EPA recommendation that water authorities reducefluoride levels in the drinking water from one
part per million two point seven partper million, so they decreased it.
So they wanted to decrease the levelsof fluoridation in the water by point three
because if now we're getting in withtoothpaste and our fucking fast food wrappers,
(40:27):
that's exactly right. Because FSA,which is the compound which became the most
commonly used water fluoridation project product fromthe nineteen seventies onward, also became under
renewed scrutiny. William Hersey, aformer senior scientist at the APA, argue
(40:51):
that the arsenic present in FSA likelycontributed annually two hundreds of cases of long
bladder cancer. Hersey insisted that onlypharmaceutical grade sodium fluoride should be added to
drinking water, a change that wouldbe prohibitively expensive to the cost of fluoridation.
(41:15):
Meanwhile, claims for fluoridation's efficacy inreducing cavities have been revised downwards significantly.
In the nineteen fifties, Dennis claimedit reduced carries. Carries is basically
cavities and tooth decay. They wereDennis claimed it reduced carries by over sixty
(41:37):
percent, while today they are nowoffering a more modest twenty five percent.
Meta studies over the past two decadessuggest that both figures are inflated. Moreover,
rates of denyl thorosis have increased markedlyin the past quarter of a century.
Despite all the changes in mounting evidence, pro fluoridationists continue to insist that
(42:02):
fluoridation remains a safe and necessary publichealth measure. Non fluoridating nations such as
Sweden and France have shown that itis possible to reduce dental carries without having
to engage in a practice with whicha substantial portion of the population has always
(42:23):
felt uneasy. No doubt, thosecountries owe a debt to people such as
McKay and Dean for demonstrating a linkbetween fluoride and dental caries. However,
it is now clear that the benefitsof fluoride are primarily topical, which means
directly on the teeth, not ingesting. Thus, fluoridated toothpaste, rather than
(42:46):
drinking water, has in all likelihoodbeen the greatest contributor to fighting cavities,
along with improvements in diet and overalldental health. In fact, community that
have stopped fluoridation have not experienced anincrease in dental carries. Furthermore, dental
(43:07):
health and regions which have never fluoridatedtheir water is not significantly different from fluoridated
regions in Canada. For example,non fluoridated British Columbia British Columbians actually have
fewer cavities than fluoridated on Terians.One result of the long term argument is
(43:28):
that the fluoridationists, who are understandablyfrustrated by the worst excesses of the anti
fluoridationists, treat fluoridation like a sacredcause to be defended at all costs.
As a result, they cling toan ahistorical view that ignores the context in
which fluoridation was initially promoted and ecologicaland scientific changes that have occurred since.
(43:57):
One can accept that fluoridation was adefendable public health measure in the mid twentieth
century. Tooth decay was a seriousproblem, and it was arguably worth taking
some risks in order to tackle it. However, the continued insistence among public
health authorities and dentists that community waterfluoridation remains essential to good dental health is
(44:20):
incommensurate with evidence for its effectiveness,as well as downplaying the harm of fluorosis
and other problems. In all likelihood, the only significant problem that would arise
from an end to fluoridation is thatthe Florida phosphate industry would have to find
a different way, no doubt moreexpensive and less convenient to dispose of its
(44:45):
toxic waste. So there you haveit. So would you want to add
to your water? No? Somy answer is that now that we know
it's toppical, it does have benefitsfor teeth. We have less decay.
But our toothpaste has it, ormouthwash has it, we don't need to
(45:09):
ingest it in our water. SoI think fluoride is good for teeth.
I agree with the original you knowwhere they detected these people who had all
this fluoride and their teeth were turningbrown, but they wouldn't decay, So
it has anti decaying effects. Butnow that we know it's topical, why
(45:31):
are we drinking it? Right?It just needs to go on the teeth
every once in a while, orperhaps every day. All our toothpaste has
it. So my answer is usetoothpaste that has fluoride. Now, Alex
Jones and the conspiracists and Alex Jay'sdad as a dentist. Yeah. Now,
(45:54):
the thing is, the conspiracists say, get fluoride out of your diet
completely. He sells an anti fluoridetoothpaste right in addition to the filters he
sells that supposedly take floride out ofthe water, which I am skeptical about
considering that the floride is zero pointseven parts by a million. How are
(46:16):
they taking that out of the waterfor real? I don't know. So
you should have toothpaste with fluoride,but you don't necessarily. We don't eat
our toothpaste. We spit it out. You don't swallow it. No,
I don't. I might consider itnow though. The other thing that conspiracists
(46:40):
like to say, and I'm gonnaI'm gonna beat up on our friend pressing
down a little bit here because hesaid they put floride in our water to
dumb us down, right. Idon't believe that it is a conspiracy of
that sort. It's a conspiracy ofgovernment ineptitude, which as we know,
(47:01):
is prevalent, right right. Sothey've done this forever and they're still doing
it, and they're still doing it, and they're still backing it up,
and they're not going to change untilsomebody sues somebody, and then they'll say,
Okay, we're gonna stop fluoridating thewater, but you should still use
it on your toothpaste, which sordyin there. So that's what I believe.
(47:24):
Interesting, I don't believe that theSatanists and the Luciferians are feeding us
fluoride to keep us dumb, tomake us done. Sorry, Alex,
I just don't that. I don'tstand on that on that ground. I'm
sorry, I am sorry, Alex. He's upset. Well, he definitely
(47:50):
disagrees with me. He has somethingto say. They are the cursed ones.
They are an abomba lation, theyare an abomba late abombination, desolation,
abomination, desolation. What I'm lookingfor is they are ANATHEMI yes,
I mean totally in separation from God. And you don't want to be part
of that. You don't want tobe part of that annihilation desolation, correctslation.
(48:19):
So Alex, what do you think? Do you think do you agree
with what I said? Or doyou think I have to disagree with that?
Okay, I'm sorry. I wonderwhat a dad, his dad would
say. He's a you know,I mean he's selling product. So right,
if you're selling product, do yougo with whatever sells the product?
Right? But he could sell fluoride, I mean, shit, he's choosing
(48:42):
not to true, I mean hecould sell we how's he gonna sell toothpaste?
Like? We have fluoride in ourtoothpaste? Like, so does all
the ship you buy the store butbetter fluoride? Yeah? So the thing
is, what's in the toothpaste ismedical grade flora, which is better,
yeah, which is better than thetoxic waste that they are a court apparently
(49:07):
drip feeding into our public water systems. So I wonder if those dudes like
spill it on themselves and get sicklike the ones like bringing the big gass
barrel up to the fucking yeah maybe, or get all burned up and shit
or yeah. So where do youstand? What do you think now my
words of wisdom are gonna change todrink well water? What were your words
of wisdom going to before? Drinkfloride? Water? Was my one earlier?
(49:30):
Was it? So? Yeah?Step yeah, because now I'm informed,
thankfully to this pall KOs. Yes, well, we aim to please,
right, So I'm gonna need tofill up like a bunch of like
milk gallon jugs tick to my housefrom your nice well water. Yeah,
yeah, no, I think you'llbe fine. Man. Remember it's very
small parts per million. It maybe doing nothing basically. So what they
(49:55):
claim is that when you drink fluoridatedwater, you ingested but the saliva your
body produces, which you said youhave much of. True, and I
just remember now I'm thinking anti florida. It's called four loco. Oh yes,
four large drink. Finally, yes, it's highly fluoridated. Now,
what they say is when you ingestfluoridated water that the saliva your body produces
(50:21):
has the fluoride in it, andso when it's coating your teeth, it's
protecting your teeth from decay. Soif you have mouth squirt like I do,
super hot, could you ever gleaklike like put like spring? So
I always try it. I meanneither if I'm like about to put a
big mac to my mouth at gleaklike once every six months. Man,
(50:42):
I haven't heard the word gleek inthirty years. Because some kids could do
it all the fucking time, Likewhat the fuck? There was one guy
who could not only glee, hecould blow spit bubbles that would actually float
in the air. Jesus. Yeah, I almost like, how is this
possible, dude? I actually haddone that before. I could do that
when I was young, but itcould never gleak. Yeah, you could
(51:05):
blow spit bubbles. What you dois you create a bubble on your tongue
and then like breed lightly and thenit takes air and then fects everyone around
here. Those were before the daysof COVID. Yeah. So luckily,
so last week the US government officiallysaid COVID pandemic is over. Yes,
(51:25):
I saw that. So is thatto like stop all funding or I think
it's to stop everything? Yeah?But so how much money are they dishing
out because they still called it apandemic. No, I think they're done
dishing out anything at this point.But were they done? I think they
are now now well after they saythat, Yeah, I was wondering how
(51:45):
much they're spending because it was stillquote unquote a pandemic. I don't know,
but they should save that money andsend it to Ukraine. Well,
you, like I told you earlier, they have an accounting adjustment. They're
gonna send three billion more dollars becausethey when they did the original quote it
was for new weapons, not used, and they're all used apparently. Yeah,
(52:06):
I'm whatever. I'm all for itas long as we win. Do
they have fluoride in their fucking water? I don't know, but we should
put it in there, like twoparts per million, just to like make
their teeth all shitty. All theRussians will have brown teeth and be very
disaffected. Like this sucks. I'mleaving. I thought you're talking about Ukraine,
Goude, You're talk about Russia.Yea, yeah, Russia. I'm
(52:28):
sorry Russians. I'm not against you, I'm against Putin and the whole deal
whatever. And many Russians are disaffectedalready. They're calling the CIA like can
I can I spy for you?It doesn't have to be like super high
up Russians. Well, preferably yes, the higher up the better, obviously,
(52:49):
right. Somebody who knows like youdon't want your average like Russian farm
or like, hello, I haveinformation like Putin is bad, like sir,
what else you know? Like that'spretty much all I know. In
Russia. Corn only grows in August, thank you, sir, and our
vodka is very good, So donot stop that yeah, all right,
(53:13):
man, what are your new wordswisdom? I guess do not drink floride
fucking water? Do not drink it? Yeah, just swish it and then
spit. If you're at someone's house, so has city water like mine,
rints and spit. So well,what are you gonna do? Like buy
a tank. I'm gonna fill itup when I come over here, like
every day. Well, there mightbe other shit in my well water.
(53:35):
You don't know. So when Iwas little, the kids with well water,
their teeth had like what looked likewhite scratches on them. Really all
the kids. Yeah, like ifthey you could tell the ones that little
in the country had, like itwould be almost like if you took a
tooth and scratched it, and wherethe scratches were on the front two specifically,
we're white. Damn, I'm selfconscious. I'm gonna go, look,
(53:57):
you don't have it. I wouldtell you. That's interesting. I
wonder what causes that. I don'tknow, minerals in the well water.
Maybe I'd never ask because I justnoticed. And it was always the kids
who had to take a super longbus ride home, which I'm assuming was
because they're out in the country.Well country, Yeah, yeah, probably
so all right, Well, mywords of wisdom are you're fine, keep
(54:22):
doing what you do. You don'thave fucking floride in your water, you
bitch? No, I mean Ithink everybody's fine. You know, it's
not that big of a deal.I think we should probably start the process
towards no longer fluoridating the water becausethere's not really that much benefit to it
anymore. Since everything else we dohas fluoride for so why don't they put
(54:43):
the good shit in it? They'regonna do it. It's too expensive,
I mean, you want your waterbill to go up, like, well,
I don't need floride in my shower. I need flooride, maybe just
the drinking. Well, then you'dhave to install a contraption that separates the
water and flooridates some and not.Well, it's gonna get more expensive.
Maybe we have two hookups of thehouse, one for the The answer is,
(55:05):
don't fluoridate the water. That's it. Yeah, but it sounds like
that's not going to happen. Keepthe medical grade fluoride in the toothpaste,
which we're already at this point payinglike seven dollars a tube for not a
costco and ship you go to thedentist and they do the fluoride thing,
the medical grade fluoride thing on yourteeth twice a year, or once a
year, or once every two yearsif you're Bob right, and and that's
(55:32):
good enough. But we can startthe process of stopping the fluoridation of the
water. But that doesn't mean thatif you have city water fluoridated water,
that you're gonna like die of cancertomorrow. It's so minuscule. But I
think the answer is that it's benefitsare negligible. There's no reason to do
(55:52):
it anymore now that we have allthese other things. In the nineteen tens
and twenty, they didn't have fuckingThey probably didn't even brush her teeth,
God damn it. They rubbed likea towel on them. Yeah. They
probably just like poured pork juice intheir mouth and called it a day and
swallowed it and it was yummy.I had a run in with a lady
(56:17):
who had fiber milja. She wasin a hotel right to like collect she
would never pay her fucking bill becauseshe would just literally had to stay naked.
So she would call I'd be like, hey, her, she had
a two hot. No, shewas old and she would never pay a
fucking bill, and she'd be like, I want Bob to come to my
(56:37):
room. And she had a twotwo room sweet and one room was filled
with like fiber milja pills like literallyfrom the door to the back. And
then she would robe up to handme a check from SunTrust Bank, which
is always I don't know why,said for some reason Suntra's bank. Scammers
(57:00):
always used that bank. I don'tknow why, but she literally would have.
She claims she had to stay nakedbecause fiber milage. Wait, wait,
hold on, did you walk inand say or did you walk in
all hot? Like fuck? Whatis that room with all those peels super
(57:21):
super hot? Ye rubbing your bellybutton? But it does fiber milagi?
Is it like ill on the skin? Or was she just like a nudist?
I wonder because isn't that like boneslike arthritic? Yeah, fiber o
milage is like, uh, superarthritis like at an early age old if
(57:45):
you're old and you basically have arthritis. But if you're like thirty five forty
five years old and you you can'tmove any of your joints. I haven't
met anyone like that. Yet they'llcall that like fiber biologia, but it
manifested some different ways. There's likefrozen shoulder, you know, back issues,
somebody who can't move their knee allof a sudden. There's all kinds
(58:07):
of shit like that. It's fibro, but fibrow my algia would be like
all of that combined all the time, all the joint. Yeah, just
like like Dick hard, like whyit's not a joint. But maybe that
would help you. So all right, man, well it's very informative.
(58:30):
Thank you for the research. You'rewelcome that you put in. I don't
know that we have an ultimate answer, but please call into Alex Jones tomorrow
just to tell him what you learned. So there is a you know that
guy who he has that does thoselike video reports on Alex Jones on out
on the bandoff video all the time. Yeah, I can't remember what it's
(58:52):
called. Oh, the rest Report. There's a rest report about fluoridated water.
It's super into some of what wetalked about, and the spin that
he puts on it is that theindustry, like Alcoa and the ones in
Florida needed a way to get ridof their toxic waste. Doesn't make sense.
(59:19):
Yeah, it wouldn't cost them money. So they lobbied Congress to cause
the fluoridation of water, saying itwould be beneficial for health, so that
they could dump their waste into thewater and dispose of it through the human
body. Like, how much fuckingwaste are they dripping in? I mean,
if it's dripping right, like drop? But that was what the Reese
(59:40):
report was about, Okay, Soit was a conspiracy to make money and
poison the humans, and then AlexJones pivots from that too. It's the
Luciferian Satanists who are doing this tomake us infertile and dumb and lower IQ
(01:00:04):
because there's some control methodology keep thepeople down. Blah blah blah blah.
Okay, that's too much for me, that's bullshit. The conspiracy to me
is government ineptitude. Something they startedone hundred years ago and they're still doing
it. That's it. Yeah,I mean the end of story, you'd
(01:00:25):
think a huge ass like those hugeass water towers, how much could you
drip in anyway? And they're not, Like, I mean, they gotta
have more waste than that, Yeah, exactly. So they're stockpiling and slowly
dripping it in like they have warehousespool Yeah. How much money are they
making off that? So? Idon't know? And how much? So?
How much? Yeah? How muchwould it cost to like, I
don't know how to destroy the wasteor they have to like and you're pissing
(01:00:50):
it out right now? Oh fuck, I am being my diapers fool.
You'd drink floridated water, you don'teven know? Yeah, this money ass
florid'd piss I'm gonna sell it toUkraine. Geards are the Russians. They're
(01:01:12):
gonna pour it on the Russians wallthough I see the whole supply chain.
Bob's pissed to Ukraine. Ukraine poursit into the Russian drinking water and their
teeth turned brown like shit. Andthat's the uh, that's the straw that
(01:01:34):
breaks the camels down, Russia.Can we win the war Ukraine? Thank
you, Bob? All right?Peace? O my my my, m
(01:03:00):
m m m m it out offood and you and out of boo and
(01:04:18):
you and it out and out