Potsdam forum focuses on choice about fluoridation
PUBLISHED: SUNDAY, JULY 29, 2018 AT 5:15 AM
POTSDAM — More than 20 people gathered Thursday night in
Potsdam’s Town Hall community room to listen to a man who had helped
coordinate the removal of fluoride in Canton’s water supply.
However
Paul Connett, a former professor at St. Lawrence University, was
preceded by two women who had taken the evidence he had shared countless
times to heart.
Walden Village Mayor Susan Rumbold and
Trustee Lynn Thompson sat patiently in front of the crowd, but both held
nothing back when speaking.
“And as an elected
official, I guess what it came down to was I had to make a decision as
to whether I was going to represent the entirety of my population or
just one segment, and what it came down to at the end of the day was
that big ‘what if,’” said Mrs. Rumbold.
She had eventually chosen to side with what she believed to be evidence against fluoridation.
Walden now has no fluoride in the water, a fact that Mrs. Thompson relishes.
“This
is America. We’re all supposed to have a choice. We’re supposed to make
good, sound choices for the people in our community,” she said. “Our
mayor and our village manager made it very clear that you’re not going
to bully us, you’re not going to change our minds, we’ve done our
homework, we’ve spoken to our residents, fluoride’s going. And that was
the end of that.”
Mr. Connett has traveled around the world to speak out against this issue, which he says is very personal.
For some in the crowd who have followed him around to events and online, it was a rehashing of the oldies.
“Fluoride is very toxic, no doubt about that,” he started.
He rehashed the story of how his wife had brought the issue to his attention in 1996 — with a stack of papers and cup of tea.
“I should have been suspicious with the cup of tea,” he said, eliciting chuckles from around the room.
He
then ran through his greatest hits: fluoride decreases the total number
of smart people in half, low-income families being targeted the most
and the fetus is most impacted by fluoride in the water.
A
smattering of nods and murmurs of approval spurred Mr. Connett on. His
voice raised slightly, his tie and coat came off as the heat and
excitement poured out of him.
At one point, he asked if
everyone attending would vote to take fluoride out of the water. A field
of hands and arms hid the speaker from those in the back row.
“Doctor, in 2019, I want you to address the vaccination issue,” one man said. Applause erupted from the crowd.
Potsdam
Village Trustee Steve Warr stood by an empty door and told the crowd
that the decision on whether to fluoridate the water — a practice first
started over 30 years ago, according to Potsdam Mayor Reinhold J.
Tischler — would be decided soon.
“It will be decided in
August or September,” Mr. Warr said. “We’ve had plenty of time to make
up our minds individually, now it’s time to make up our minds
collectively.”
Mr. Tischler would not reveal which way he leaned.
“There were a lot of great points made tonight, but I am not ready to comment on my position yet,” he said.
Rosemarie
Rivezzi, who is on the town board, said she would vote for not
fluoridating the water if she had the chance; she won’t because the
decision will fall to the village, not the town.
“What convinced me the most was letting people choose whether they want to take fluoride or not,” she said.
A doctor on the St. Lawrence County Board of Health wrote a press release stating his opinion on the matter.
“Fluoridation
is a well-established, safe measure to improve the oral health and
general health of children and adults in the community,” Dr. Andrew F.
Williams wrote.
“The efficacy and safety of fluoridation
of water is not simply a matter of opinion. The extensive scientific
research on the matter has been reviewed, leading the American Academy
of Pediatrics, American Dental Association, Mayo Clinic, American
Medical Association and many other respected medical and health
organizations to recognize and endorse the health benefits of
fluoridation.”
Fluoride is a poison. Fluoride was poison yesterday. Fluoride is poison today. Fluoride will be poison tomorrow. Allopathic medicine or iatrogenesis is one of the leading causes of death. Being emphatic and being correct are two different things all together. Being correct usually involves some effort to learn what the root cause of a disease is. Because of the control big corporations have of our government people today are very much on their own when it comes to health. Take your time and learn about fluoride. Then take your time and learn about vaccines. Then take your time and learn about EMF's. It is a gauntlet out there. When in doubt get it out.
ReplyDeletePotsdam NY residents must contact their legislators and tell them to stop adding unnecessary, ineffective, health-robbing, money-wasting fluoride chemicals into their bodies via the water supply. If they don't hear from resdents, political pressure from outside groups expecially the American Fluoridation Society will embarrass Potsdam to continue fluoridation for their own political viability.
ReplyDeleteFollow the Science: 4800 professionals urge you to end fluoridation Here's why http://fluorideaction.net/researchers/professionals-statement