WelcomeUser Guide
ToSPrivacyCanary
DonateBugsLicense

©2026 Poal.co

(post is archived)

[–] 1 pt (edited )

Silicofluorides, widely used in water fluoridation, are unlicensed medicinal substances, administered to large populations without informed consent or supervision by a qualified medical practitioner. Fluoridation fails the test of reliability and specificity, and, lacking toxicity testing of silicofluorides, constitutes unlawful medical research. It is banned in most of Europe; European Union human rights legislation makes it illegal. Silicofluorides have never been submitted to the U.S. FDA for approval as medicines. The ethical validity of fluoridation policy does not stand up to scrutiny relative to the Nuremberg Code and other codes of medical ethics, including the Council of Europe's Biomedical Convention of 1999. The police power of the State has been used in the United States to override health concerns, with the support of the courts, which have given deference to health authorities.

That was copies pasted from:

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/12749628/

This is point 8 of the nuremburg code: The experiment should be conducted only by scientifically qualified persons. The highest degree of skill and care should be required through all stages of the experiment of those who conduct or engage in the experiment.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuremberg_Code

They put flouride in the water and that is it. There is no degree of skill or care after that. How do they know how many people are using flouridated toothpaste or drinking concetrated forms of flouride or getting other sources of flouride? There is no close observation of the patient to see if there are any side effects or other problems (skeletal fluorosis)ect...

And this from :https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_fluoridation#Implementation

Sodium fluorosilicate (Na2SiF6) is the sodium salt of fluorosilicic acid. It is a powder or very fine crystal that is easier to ship than fluorosilicic acid. It is also known as sodium silicofluoride.[36]

[–] 0 pt

The issue you're having is your ignoring the chemical reaction that takes place once it's introduced to the body. It ceases to be fluoride once the chemical reaction takes place, it becomes flouroapetite. Which is a mineralized substance. Secondly the test WAS given with the care, the trials were done in areas that did not have naturally occurring fluoride in the water wells. And it is regulated to ensure it is intact. 7 MG per liter. And finally there's no such thing as concentrated fluoride levels in juice. One liter is one liter is one liter and .7 MG etc... it took 2 decades to publish the findings which all began with a noticeable difference in Tooth decay levels from populations that already had naturally occurring fluoride in the water vs. No fluoride. It was carefully done research program done with adherence to the scientific method that underwent peer review. And finally 95% of all toothpaste sold is fluoridated which means it's safe to assume in the regulated water levels won't cause excess fluoride. Toddlers have eaten entire tunes of toothpaste which is 2,000 times more concentrated than water with no fatal effects. Dose makes the poison. Too much fluoride will kill you, yes. So will too much water without fluoride, so will too much oxygen, so will too many apple seeds. You're complete disregard that what is in your body is NOT sodium silicofluoride once the chemical reaction is complete is wilful ignorance on your part.

[–] 0 pt

Why does my toothpaste say not to swallow. Why do fluoride pills say the same. It's toxic. Film yourself eating a bottle of fluoride pills.

[–] 0 pt (edited )

And finally there's no such thing as concentrated fluoride levels in juice

If fluoridated water is cooked down, the end result is water with higher concentrations of flouride. Concentrated juice is made with municipal water (which has flouride) cooked down. I know I have called the companies of ocenspray juice and v8 juice.

I am gonna look into flouroapetite, but regardless flouride is added as a medicine and as I posted with sources earlier, it is medically unethical; which was the point I originally made, That you refuted.

As far as flouroapatite being nothing to worry about, where does skeletalflourosis come into play if it is harmless?

[–] 0 pt

Toothpaste is 2000x more concentrated that a liter of water. And you can eat a tube of toothpaste with a low risk of any life threatening issues. Which means you would need the concentration 2000 liters of water into a juice drink you can drink in one sitting to have a snowballs chance of injuring someone. So that's a an irrelevant point. You would have to actively go out of your way to consume dangerous amounts of fluoride just like you'd need to actively try to poison yourself with water. Use your head. And unethical is clearly subjective when it was approved by the public, rigorously tested, regulated, and made dramatic increases in oral health all across the country. But hey.