Chinese Fluoride of questionable purity being added to US water
As if the mountain of evidence that continues to pile up showing the negative effects of ingesting fluoride wasn’t enough, ABC Boston reports that imported Chinese fluoride contains insoluble impurities that have prompted one Massachusetts municipality to temporarily stop forcibly medicating its population.
You see, to achieve the proper sedative effect, fertility reduction, and intelligence reduction, the fluoride must be pure. Please, won’t someone think of the children!
ABC WCVB Boston
Thu, 11 Mar 2010 19:29 EST
Amesbury, Massachusetts. — Fluoride is added to the water most of us drink because the government believes it’s a safe and inexpensive way to prevent tooth decay.
However, Team 5 Investigates found the Amesbury Water Department pulled fluoride from its system amid concerns about its supply from China.
Department of Public Works Director Rob Desmarais said after he mixes the white powder with water, 40 percent of it will not dissolve.
“I don’t know what it is,” Desmarais said. “It’s not soluble, and it doesn’t appear to be sodium fluoride. So we are not quite sure what it is.”
Desmarais said the residue clogs his machines and makes it difficult to get a consistent level of fluoride in the town’s water.
Since April the fluoride pumps in Amesbury have been turned off and they will stay that way until Desmarais can find out what’s in the fluoride that’s imported from China.
Both state and federal health officials told Team 5 Investigates that Chinese fluoride is safe.
The Department of Public Health said it believes that more than 650,000 customers in 44 Massachusetts communities are getting the flouride in question and only Amesbury has temporarily stopped using it.
However, they were unable to say with certainty which of the other 43 communities are actually using the sodium fluoride from China in its water.
The fluoride from China is not used in communities getting water from the MWRA.
The New York company that supplies the fluoride said it is certified by the National Sanitation Foundation which assures the quality of the product. But the NSF said they are not on their certification list.
Approximately 1,000 water systems in the United States use the additive to adjust the fluoride in their water supply, according to The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Testing continues to determine the precise composition of the residue.
“They should test it to make sure…it is safe for us to drink,” said Paul Stewart who lives in Newburyport. He said he has a right to know exactly what’s in his water.
“On the same day that I read the story about fluoride coming from China, I also read about stories about melamine that was being contaminated in milk products coming from China,” Stewart said. “And then we had another story about more lead in kids toys from China.”
Since 2007, most of the sodium fluoride has been imported from China because it’s the least expensive on the market.
“I don’t think that when it comes to something that I ingest every day that the lowest bidder is good enough,” Stewart said.
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