A day or two ago, I put on
a link to the Dr. Strangelove film which had the US general who launched the
missiles depicted as a person who had gone noisily mad. His prime obsession was that the Commies by
promoting the fluoridisation of water were destroying the American people.
This coincided with one or
two items elsewhere about chemicals and water.
Another was an article pointing out that the world could face a severe water
shortage for its populations very soon.
There is a lot less fresh water to be had, mostly contained in ice
fields and sea water has its limitation.
Along with this was a
comment on the Sub Rosa blog doing a re-run of the DHMO spoof, allegedly dihydrogen
monoxide, which suggests that anyone raising questions about the extent and
nature of chemical use are the sort of people who would call water dangerous.
Allowing for the fact that
drowning can occur and that too much water too quickly as in major floods or
tsunamis may have adverse effects there is the breezy assumption in much of the
developed and Western World that fresh water is safe.
Our British and Irish
ancestors did not think so and were often reluctant to drink it raw because it
was so often contaminated and a carrier of diseases and other substances. It was safer to drink beer or almost anything
else.
In recent decades there
have been moves to not just treat water to decontaminate it but to add
chemicals in order to deal with other problems, notably fluoride to avoid the
effect on the teeth of eating too many sugars.
Now that we have had a few
decades of this the case is being made that we might be a lot better off without
all the sugars and for that matter the fluoride. Necessarily, this involves major companies,
lobbying, politics and all the clatter that follows.
In the USA there is now a
row developing over the apparent tactic by the companies involved to
ban attempts to end fluoride treatment by law and the long run
consequences of this form of using the water supply to deal with other
problems. This link to the Dr. Mercola
site gives a longish discussion of the issue.
This one will run and run
or at least until the water supply runs out.
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