"Controversial fluoride is one of the basic ingredients in both PROZAC (FLUoxetene Hydrochloride) and Sarin nerve gas (Isopropyl-Methyl-Phosphoryl FLUoride).
Sodium fluoride, a hazardous-waste by-product from the manufacture of aluminum, is a common ingredient in rat and cockroach poisons, anesthetics, hypnotics, psychiatric drugs, and military nerve gas. It's historically been quite expensive to properly dispose of, until some aluminum industries with an overabundance of the stuff sold the public on the terrifically insane but highly profitable idea of buying it at a 20,000% markup, injecting it into our water supplies, and then DRINKING it.
Yes, a 20,000% markup: Fluoride - intended only for human consumption by people under 14 years of age - is injected into our drinking water supply at approx. 1 part-per-million (ppm), but since we only drink half of one percent of the total water supply, the rest literally goes down the drain as a free hazardous-waste disposal for the chemical industry, where we PAY them so that we can flush their expensive hazardous waste down our toilets. How many salesmen dream of such a deal? (Follow the money.)
Independent scientific evidence repeatedly showing up over the past 50 years reveals that fluoride allegedly shortens our life span, promotes cancer and various mental disturbances, accelerates osteoporosis and broken hips in old folks, and makes us stupid, docile, and subservient, all in one package. There are reports of aluminum in the brain possibly being a causative factor in Alzheimer's Disease, and evidence points towards fluoride's strong affinity for aluminum and also its ability to "trick" the blood-brain barrier by looking like the hydrogen ion, and thus allowing chemical access to brain tissue.
Do you have diabetes or kidney disease? There are reportedly more than 11 million Americans with diabetes. Since many diabetics drink more liquids than other people, then according to the Physicians Desk Reference these 11 million Americans probably shouldn't drink fluoridated water, because in doing so, they'll receive an excessive dose of fluoride.
Kidney disease, by definition, lowers the efficiency of the kidneys, which is your main route of fluoride elimination. So those people with kidney disease also shouldn't drink fluoridated water. Cases are on record (Annapolis, Maryland, 1979) where kidney patients on dialysis machines died, due to a fluoride overdose in the city water supply.
Let's begin at the beginning:
The first occurrence of fluoridated drinking water on Earth was found in Germany's Nazi prison camps. The Gestapo had little concern about fluoride's supposed effect on children's teeth; their alleged reason for mass-medicating water with sodium fluoride was to sterilize humans and force the people in their concentration camps into calm submission. (Ref. book: "The Crime and Punishment of I.G. Farben" by Joseph Borkin. And for more on I.G. Farben you might also care to see "Can I pour you a cup?".)
The following letter was received by the Lee Foundation for Nutritional Research, Milwaukee Wisconsin, on 2 October 1954, from Mr. Charles Perkins, a chemist:
"I have your letter of September 29 asking for further documentation regarding a statement made in my book, The Truth About Water Fluoridation, to the effect that the idea of water fluoridation was brought to England from Russia by the Russian Communist Kreminoff. "In the 1930's, Hitler and the German Nazi's envisioned a world to be dominated and controlled by a Nazi philosophy of pan-Germanism. The German chemists worked out a very ingenious and far-reaching plan of mass-control which was submitted to and adopted by the German General Staff. This plan was to control the population in any given area through mass medication of drinking water supplies. By this method they could control the population in whole areas, reduce population by water medication that would produce sterility in women, and so on. In this scheme of mass-control, sodium fluoride occupied a prominent place . . . .
"Repeated doses of infinitesimal amounts of fluoride will in time reduce an individual's power to resist domination, by slowly poisoning and narcotizing a certain area of the brain, thus making him submissive to the will of those who wish to govern him. [A convenient light lobotomy]
"The real reason behind water fluoridation is not to benefit children's teeth. If this were the real reason there are many ways in which it could be done that are much easier, cheaper, and far more effective. The real purpose behind water fluoridation is to reduce the resistance of the masses to domination and control and loss of liberty.
"When the Nazis under Hitler decided to go into Poland, both the German General Staff and the Russian General Staff exchanged scientific and military ideas, plans, and personnel, and the scheme of mass control through water medication was seized upon by the Russian Communists because it fitted ideally into their plan to communize the world . . . .
"I was told of this entire scheme by a German chemist who was an official of the great I.G. Farben chemical industries and was also prominent in the Nazi movement at the time. I say this with all the earnestness and sincerity of a scientist who has spent nearly 20 years' research into the chemistry, biochemistry, physiology and pathology of fluorine - any person who drinks artificially fluorinated water for a period of one year or more will never again be the same person mentally or physically." - CHARLES E. PERKINS, Chemist, 2 October 1954"
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Kidney Disease a Silent Killer
When your kidneys are healthy and functioning well, these bean-shaped organs tucked below the ribcage filter blood and remove waste products from the body via urine. If the kidneys don't work properly for three or more months in a row, you are considered to have chronic kidney disease (CKD). This condition is more common than you might guess -- as many as one in nine American adults suffer from this potentially progressive and life-threatening disease. Many affected individuals have no idea they have CKD, and that they are vulnerable to serious complications that may include anemia, hypertension and heart disease. People with severe (end-stage) CKD may end up needing dialysis or a kidney transplant.
To learn more about CKD, I consulted Annamaria T. Kausz, MD, a nephrologist and assistant professor of medicine at Tufts University School of Medicine in Boston. Because symptoms may be subtle, or even non-existent, Dr. Kausz told me that CKD can defy early diagnosis so people must be aware of the risk factors for CKD and early signs that indicate CKD.
EARLY WARNING SIGNS
There are many possible causes of CKD, but in the US it is commonly associated with high blood pressure and diabetes. In fact, some of the factors that put people at risk for heart disease are also risks for CKD. It can run in families, and is especially common in African-Americans, who are four times more likely to develop kidney failure than white Americans. Unfortunately, like high blood pressure, early CKD is typically a silent disease in that there are usually no symptoms until CKD is more advanced. Individuals may not even notice any abnormalities in the urine, except possibly pink or foamy urine (if they have blood or protein in the urine).
Once CKD is advanced, the accumulation of waste products and excess fluid may lead to symptoms. Typical symptoms of advanced CKD include...
* Fatigue.
* Weakness.
* Itchy skin.
* Swollen feet and ankles.
* Unexplained weight loss.
* Loss of appetite.
SCREENING FOR CKD
Because early CKD is a silent disease, periodic screening is extremely important. Researchers from Weill Cornell Medical College in New York and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill recently introduced a jointly developed screening questionnaire for CKD for use at primary care clinics and community-based screening programs. If a person scores high, he/she would be encouraged to see a health-care provider to undergo simple medical testing for CKD. (To determine your own risk level, score yourself on the accompanying questionnaire.)
Periodic testing is especially important for individuals known to be at risk, including people with high blood pressure, heart disease, diabetes, kidney stones, frequent urinary tract infections, certain other infections (hepatitis B and C or HIV) or a family history of kidney disease. Simple testing, as outlined by the National Kidney Foundation, can detect chronic kidney disease...
* Blood pressure monitoring. High blood pressure may damage small blood vessels in the kidneys. Raised blood pressure will signal a possible problem.
* A urine sample to measure a type of protein. High levels of protein in the urine are a sign that there may be kidney damage, and this needs to be looked into by your doctor.
* A blood creatinine test to determine the glomerular filtration rate (GFR). This is an excellent measurement of kidney function and stage of kidney disease.
* A blood urea nitrogen test (BUN test) to measure urea -- waste from protein, which can build up in the blood when kidneys aren't working properly.
HEADING OFF SERIOUS COMPLICATIONS
The earlier CKD is detected and treated, the greater likelihood it can be brought under control, slowed or even halted altogether. As I mentioned earlier, at the extreme, unchecked and untreated CKD may lead to end-stage kidney disease and kidney failure, requiring dialysis or kidney transplantation.
THE BEST PREVENTION AND TREATMENT
If you have a condition such as hypertension or diabetes, both known risk factors for CKD, effective management is imperative to helping avoid CKD, stresses Dr. Kausz. There are specific therapies depending upon the root cause of the kidney disease. For most types of CKD, some of the treatments mirror prevention -- i.e., control of blood pressure and blood glucose levels. The most frequently prescribed blood pressure drugs are angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors and angiotensin II receptor blockers.
WHAT YOU CAN DO
For more information about CKD, visit the Web site of the National Kidney Foundation at www.kidney.org. If you think you may have kidney disease or if you have risk factors for CKD, consult your physician for testing and, if necessary, treatment. Recognizing and controlling CKD is your best chance for surviving it and heading off serious complications. Keep in mind too that lifestyle modifications -- such as healthy diet, regular exercise, maintaining an appropriate weight, smoking cessation and effectively managing stress -- are always important keys to wellness, and can help you better manage all the challenging conditions associated with CKD.
Should You Get Tested For Chronic Kidney Disease?
Take this two-minute screening test
Get scored on your risk for chronic kidney disease! Find out if you might have silent chronic kidney disease. Check each statement that is true for you. If a statement is not true or you are not sure, put a zero. Then add up all the points for a total.
Age: I am between 50 and 59 years of age.
If yes, score 2: ______
I am between 60 and 69 years of age.
If yes, score 3: ______
I am 70 years old or older.
If yes, score 4: ______
I am a woman.
If yes, score 1: ______
I had/have anemia.
If yes, score 1: ______
I have high blood pressure.
If yes, score 1: ______
I am diabetic.
If yes, score 1: ______
I have a history of heart attack or stroke.
If yes, score 1: ______
I have a history of congestive heart failure or heart failure.
If yes, score 1: ______
I have circulation disease in my legs.
If yes, score 1: ______
I have protein in my urine.
If yes, score 1: ______
Total ______
If you scored four or more points, you have a one in five chance of having chronic kidney disease. At your next doctor's visit, a simple blood test should be done. Only a professional health-care provider can determine for sure if you have kidney disease. If you scored between zero and three points, you probably do not have kidney disease now, but at least once a year, you should take this survey.
Questionnaire printed with permission from The Division of Biostatistics and Epidemiology in the Department of Public Health at Weill Cornell Medical College, courtesy of Heejun Bang, PhD.
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