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To see additional news, click here 2008:
Fluoride: Miracle drug or toxic-waste killer? WorldNetDaily. May 5, 2008:
"The early studies that purported to show ingested fluoride reduced tooth decay were seriously flawed," says Dr. Paul Connett, emeritus professor of environmental chemistry at St. Lawrence University in Canton, N.Y., and executive director of Fluoride
Action Network. "There is no significant difference in tooth decay between fluoridated and non-fluoridated industrialized countries. The vast majority of countries are not fluoridated."
Fluoridation discussion covers familiar ground - Daily News-Miner (Fairbanks, Alaska), March 7, 2008:
...But many organized communities steer clear of fluoridation, and the City Council could vote as early as Monday to halt the practice in Fairbanks. The watchdog group Fluoride
Action Network lists 70 U.S. cities that have voted against fluoridation within the past nine years...
Opposition to Torrington's fluoridation proposal - The Torrington Telegram (Wyoming), February 22, 2008:
... Court and Van Dorn also produced several studies and a short video produced by the Fluoride
Action Network, an organization that is against the use of fluoride in water supplies. Torrington resident Paul Puebla also spoke, agreeing with Court and Van Dorn.
The fluoride fight continues - WVLT-TV (Knoxville, Tennessee), January 23, 2008:
... Now, a group called the Fluoride
Action Network is calling attention to an online action petition calling on congress to stop water fluoridation until hearings are conducted. The group cites new scientific evidence that fluoridation is not only ineffective, but has serious health risks ...
Second Thoughts About Fluoride - Scientific American, January 2008, pages 74–81.
Opponents of fluoridation, meanwhile, have been emboldened by the NRC report. “What the committee did was very, very important, because it’s the first time a truly balanced panel has looked at this and raised important questions,” says Paul Connett, a chemistry professor at St. Lawrence University and the executive director of the Fluoride
Action Network, one of the most active antifluoridation groups world-wide. “I absolutely believe it’s a scientific turning point because now everything’s on the table. Fluoride is the most consumed drug in the U.S., and it’s time we talked about it.”
2007:
Fluoride fracas afoot in Erie - Daily Camera (Boulder, CO), November 27, 2007.
... The Canton, N.Y.-based Fluoride
Action Network claims that ingesting fluoride yields little dental benefit and may result in a litany of health problems, including bone fracture, bone cancer, joint pain, reduced thyroid activity and IQ deficits. Michael Connett, a spokesman for the organization, said most of Western Europe has rejected fluoridation but has no worse a rate of tooth decay than the United States...
Fort Worth stops adding fluoride to water due to shortage - Fort Worth Star-Telegram, November 20, 2007.
Partly as a result, the Fluoride
Action Network in August released a statement signed by more than 600 professionals — including more than 100 dentists — calling for an end to water fluoridation. The coalition, composed of health professionals and scientists, said that fluoride in toothpaste has proven effective in preventing tooth decay but argued that it “makes no sense to drink it and expose the rest of the body to the long-term risks of fluoride ingestion.”
The Pros and Cons of Fluoride - ABC South West Victoria (Australia), November 16, 2007.
Meanwhile, the Department of Human Services have taken out newspaper ads to spread their pro-fluoride message, and the Chief Health Officer with the DHS, Dr John Carnie, has also visited Warrnambool to talk to members of the media. At the same time he was here, Dr Paul Connett, the Executive Director of the Fluoride
Action Network, was in town speaking at a public event. The two didn’t meet, but Dr Connett did appear on the breakfast program to put forward some of his ideas.
Fluoride no longer in water from Falher plant - Smoky River Express (Alberta, Canada), October 31, 2007
When researching on the internet, Gervais found an information sheet dated Aug. 9, 2007 by the Fluoride
Action Network – Calling for an End to Water Fluoridation, signed by 600 professionals from 39 different countries including 50 professionals from Canada and 10 from Alberta. Extensive research by this network indicates that fluoride has more adverse affects including Alzheimer’s disease, osteosarcoma (a frequently fatal bone cancer), increased risk of bone fractures, decreased thyroid function, lowered IQ, arthritic-like conditions, and dental fluorisis.
It's a gamble, says US professor - Warrnambool Standard (Australia), October 24, 2007
Fluoridation is a gamble with an inadequate margin for safety, according to one of the world's leading fluoride opponents. Dr Paul Connett, the executive director of the Fluoride
Action Network and professor of chemistry at St Lawrence University in New York, addressed about 120 invited guests last night at the Warrnambool Fluoride Action Group meeting.
Fluoride leaves a bitter taste with prominent New Yorker - The Macleay Argus (Australia). October 24, 2007.
"... Prof Connett, who was in Kempsey last week as part of a speaking tour taking in Victoria, NSW and Queensland, retired last year from the chair of Professor of Chemistry at St Lawrence University, in the State of New York... The professor, a director of the Fluoride
Action Network, an international grouping of scientists and others opposed to the fluoridation of drinking water supplies, has a blunt message..."
As EPA talks fail, activists will urge Congress to tighten fluoride limits. InsideEPA. August 29, 2007.
Environmentalists and health experts are planning to step up an anti-fluoride campaign by urging Congress to draft legislation tightening EPA’s contaminant limits for fluoride in drinking water after their private talks with EPA late last year failed to yield an agreement on stricter standards... While it remains unclear whether the anti-fluoride plan, in the form of an e-mail campaign initiated by the Fluoride
Action Network, will gain any traction among lawmakers, sources involved in it say the effort is necessary after the negotiations with EPA broke down in December 2006..."
Village
ends use of fluoride - Daily Gazette
(NY)- August 11, 2007.
"After 54 years of drinking water with fluoride added, Cobleskill
village residents who believe in its dental benefits will now
have to rely on toothpaste and other products... On Friday, the
Albany-based Citizens Environmental Coalition issued a statement
supporting a plea by 600 health and science professionals urging
Congress to stop water fluoridation until congressional hearings
are conducted. The coalition said Fluoride
Action Network Director Paul Connett is planning
an online petition drive based on what the coalition called 'new
scientific evidence that fluoridation, long promoted to fight
tooth decay, is ineffective and has serious health risks."
Data from Connett, a St. Lawrence University chemist, is part
of what helped persuade Cobleskill officials to stop fluoridation.
KU
prof among hundreds demanding hearings on fluoride - Lawrence Journal-World, August 11, 2007.
"... The group issued a statement that cites a 2006 report
by the National Research Council on fluoride toxicology. 'The
NRC report dramatically changed scientific understanding of fluoride’s
health risks,' said Paul Connett, executive director of the Fluoride
Action Network..."
Supply
woes forced Ottawa to shut off fluoride to water - The Ottawa Citizen. August 11, 2007.
"... 'It's an excellent thing for them to be short of this
chemical,' said Paul Connett, executive director of the U.S.-based Fluoride Action Network.
'If having a shortage of it makes them question the practice,
that would be very, very good.' The Fluoride
Action Network released a statement this week
signed by more than 600 professionals -- including more than 100
dentists -- calling for an end to water fluoridation. 'It makes
as much sense as swallowing sunblock,' said Mr. Connett..."
Cities
feel bite from shortage of fluoride - The Gazette (Montreal). August 11, 2007.
" 'It's an excellent thing for them to be short of this
chemical,' said Paul Connett, executive director of the U.S.-based Fluoride Action Network.
'If having a shortage of it makes them question the practice,
that would be very, very good.' ... According to Health Canada,
many studies show fluoridated water greatly reduces the number
of cavities in children's teeth. However, the practice has long had its detractors. The Fluoride
Action Network released a statement this week
signed by more than 600 professionals - including over 100 dentists
- calling for an end to water fluoridation."
Congress
Will Hear Protests from Health Professionals Over Fluoride - The People's Media Company. August 9, 2007.
"... The protesting group is gaining national attention
because of the support it has received from prominent health care
and other professionals... Director of the Fluoride
Action Network (FAN),
Paul Connett, said, 'The NRC report dramatically changed scientific
understanding of fluoride's health risks." He added, "Government
officials who continue to promote fluoridation must testify under
oath as to why they are ignoring the powerful evidence of harm
in the NRC report.'"
Health
experts bare teeth on fluoride - The
Politico, August 9, 2007
"... In a strong statement Thursday, the health professionals
called upon lawmakers to stop fluoridation in communities across
the nation until their safety concerns are reviewed at congressional
hearings. The group, the http://www.fluoridealert.org/news/2979.html,
cited fresh scientific evidence that fluoridation, long promoted
to fight tooth decay, is ineffective and carries serious health
risks... The problem, according to the Fluoride
Action Network, is that the very water that is
treated for dental purposes is also used in the preparation of
many food products -- from baby formula and cereal to juices,
sodas, wines, beers and even fresh produce. These scientists hold
that since most toothpastes also contain added fluoride, many
people are ingesting far more fluoride than they should...."
Environmental
Activists Want Congressional Hearings on Fluoride - CNSNews.com. August 9, 2007
"A group called the Fluoride
Action Network is urging Congress to stop the
long-time practice of putting fluoride in the nation's drinking
water. It is urging lawmakers to hold hearings on the subject.
The Fluoride Action Network,
which claims to represent over 600 "professionals,"
cites "new scientific evidence that fluoridation, long promoted
to fight tooth decay, is ineffective and has serious health risks..."
Earth
Talk: A green Q&A column from the editors of E/The Environmental
Magazine (June 28, 2007)
"Dear EarthTalk: Why do some people complain about fluoride
in drinking water and toothpaste? ... The problem, says Fluoride
Action Network (FAN), which is opposed to fluoridation,
is that the very water supplies that are treated for dental purposes
are also used in the making of many common food products—from
baby formula and cereal to juices, sodas, wines, beers and even
fresh produce. And with most toothpastes also adding fluoride,
many people are ingesting far more fluoride than they should...."
A nomination
by FAN's Pesticide Project is selected for a 2007 "Dirty Dozen
Award" given to the worst polluters and bad actors in New York
state - Watertown Daily Times (New York), May 29, 2007
"Fluoride Action Network Pesticides
Project, Canton, nominated one of the "Dirty
Dozen" awards announced this week by Citizens' Environmental
Coalition, Albany, a non-profit organization that advocates for
pollution prevention and environmental justice..."
Anti-fluoridation
camp opens wide in Yarmouth - Cape Cod Times (Massachusetts,
USA), May 8, 2007
"... the board last night heard from an opponent; Paul Connett,
a professor emeritus of chemistry at St. Lawrence University in
New York and executive director of the Fluoride
Action Network... Fluoridation is unethical, dangerous
and unnecessary, Connett said. The one part-per-million concentration
recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
and supported by the American Dental Association may be too much,
he said... "I urge Yarmouth to wait until the EPA water division
has determined a new" maximum contaminant level goal.
Fluoride
debated in Cadillac - Cadillac News (Michigan, USA),
April 12, 2007
“The benefits of water fluoridation has been exaggerated
by its proponents, while its long-term health risks have yet to
be adequately addressed,” said Michael Connett, research
director for the Fluoride Action
Network.
Fluoride
Debate Heats Up In Oregon House - Oregon Public Broadcasting,
April 4, 2007
"Paul Connett is director of the Fluoride
Action Network. He says fluoride can prevent tooth
decay. But it's safer when it comes out of a toothpaste tube,
not out of your faucet."
Need
for fluoride questioned - Bar Harbor Times (Maine,
USA), February 25, 2007
"A presentation by Michael Connett, the project director
for Fluoride Action Network,
during the public meeting portion of Tuesday night’s selectmen’s
meeting stated that cases of fluorosis – an overexposure
to fluoride – have increased five-fold in the past fifty
years, now affecting about a third of the U.S. population. He
said the condition is even common in non-fluoridated communities,
given the prevalence of fluoride in other products."
Fluoride:
Friend or Foe? - WKRG News (Alabama, USA), February
15, 2007
"A video entitled DRINKING WATER, "LET THE TRUTH BE
TOLD", has the attention of water board members. In the video
you'll find information also put out by the Fluoride
Action Network, a group against fluoridated drinking
water."
Shortage
forces halt to fluoride in water - Palm Beach Post
(Florida, USA), January 30, 2007
"Palm Beach County health officials have maintained that
fluoride is safe. Opponents argue that it is still unclear how
fluoride affects the entire body. Doses of fluoride cannot be
regulated because people drink varying amounts of water, they
say. Naomi Flack, a member of the steering committee for the South
Florida Citizens for Safe Drinking Water and the advisory board
of the Fluoride Action Network,
said it's time for commissioners to reconsider their decision.
"I think it's very fortunate for those people in the county
who will again be getting unfluoridated water," Flack said.
"I think it's time for the county to bring the issue up again."
Use
of fluoride in water supply raises questions - Carroll
County Times (Maryland, USA), January 22, 2007
"After talking with the caller, who turned out to be a city
resident concerned about the safety of putting fluoride in drinking
water, Grossnickle began to question public water fluoridation
himself. He visited the Web site of the Fluoride
Action Network, an international coalition aimed
at broadening public awareness about negative health effects of
fluoride exposure, and grew more concerned."
Citizens
of Skagit County asked to say no to fluoridation by fiat
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer (USA), January 16, 2007
"The public is encouraged to review Skagit Clean Water Web
site and the Fluoride Action Network
at fluorideaction.net, noting scientific information from the
National Academy of Sciences, National Research Council, Environmental
Protection Agency and World Health Organization."
Alert: Could
everything you've ever been told about fluoride be wrong?
- Vegetarian Times (USA), January 2007
"'Many Americans get too much fluoride and these studies
show that,' says Michael Connett, project director for the Vermont-based
Fluoride Action Network
(FAN). What's more, concern over the mineral additive has been
growing since the EPA reported in its January 2006 human health
risk assessment that Americans are consuming significant amounts
of fluoride in the form of sulfuryl fluoride, which is used as
a pesticide in facilities storing grains, dried fruit, and nuts."
2006:
Health
dept. issues fluoridation warning - Bratteboro Reformer
(Vermont, USA), December 19, 2006
"But Michael Connett, an anti-fluoride activist who works
for the Fluoride Action Network,
said the health department warning is an important wake-up call
and should not be taken lightly. For years, Connett said, both
the ADA and the Vermont Health Department have been hesitant to
do anything but fully endorse the use of fluoride."
New
Fluoride Warning for Infants - Mothering Magazine (USA),
November 2006
"'Water is supposed to be safe for everyone. Why add a chemical
that makes it knowingly unfit for young children? The US should
follow Europe's lead and end fluoridation,' says Michael Connett,
Project Director of the Fluoride
Action Network."
Water
Fluoridation: A Debate with Teeth - Bangor Daily News
(Maine, USA), November 20, 2006
"With fluoride in the water supply, he said, 'People don’t
have to do anything' to get the benefit of fluoride. But that
passive consumption is just what bothers Michael Connett of the
international Fluoride Action Network.
The nonprofit group seeks to educate consumers about the dangers
of exposure to fluoride in water supplies, foods, pesticides and
other sources. Connett said in a recent phone interview from his
home in Vermont that most people don’t have any idea whether
their water contains added fluoride and don’t understand
the risk of overexposure. 'The fact that it’s been going
on so long doesn’t mean it’s OK,' he said."
At
the Harvard School of Dental Medicine, One Professor’s Flouride
Scandal Stinks - The Harvard Crimson (USA), September
28, 2006
"The plot thickened like old toothpaste when another element
surfaced. Douglass had served as editor-in-chief of the Colgate
Oral Care Report since 1997, which according to its website “is
supported by the Colgate-Palmolive Company for oral care professionals.”
Colgate toothpaste, of course, contains fluoride, and it didn’t
take long for the EWG and another group, the Fluoride
Action Network (FAN), to cry conflict of interest."
Fluoride
Risks Are Still A Challenge - Chemical & Engineering
News (USA), September 4, 2006
"The status of the long-running debate over fluoride use
and exposure was the subject of a citizens' conference held at
St. Lawrence University, Canton, N.Y., on July 28-30. The meeting
was organized by Paul Connett, emeritus professor of chemistry
at St. Lawrence and executive director of the Fluoride
Action Network. Three members of the National
Research Council (NRC) committee that wrote a fluoride report
released in March 2006 spoke at the meeting. In addition, J. William
Hirzy, an Environmental Protection Agency scientist, and Donald
R. Taves, a retired toxicologist who did extensive research on
fluoride at the University of Rochester, as well as several other
scientists, participated."
The
National Academy of Sciences reports on fluoride -
PCC Sound Consumer (Seattle, Washington), August 2006
"'We’re a stone’s throw away from ending fluoridation
... if honest science prevails at the EPA. And that’s a
huge if,' says Paul Connett, executive director of Fluoride
Action Network and professor emeritus of chemistry
at St. Lawrence University."
Fluoride
Fixation - NOW Magazine (Toronto, Canada), July 27-August
2, 2006
"But scientists and concerned citizens are saying that's
not good enough. 'It is far too high,' says Paul Connett, environmental
chemistry and toxicology prof at St. Lawrence University and exec
director of the U.S.-based Fluoride
Action Network. He says the health effects we're
seeing on the brain, thyroid gland, bones and teeth are occurring
very close to if not at 1 part per million and even lower. Connett
warns we're not giving ourselves much of a margin of safety. 'No
honest toxicologist would for one moment entertain exposure to
people where the beneficial dose and the toxic dose are so close
in a situation where you cannot control who it's going to. It's
going to the very young, the very old, the infirm, people with
poor kidney function [who can't clear fluoride from their system].
It's totally non-discriminatory.'"
Scientist
to speak in Canton about fluoride risks - Watertown
Daily Times (New York, USA), July 25, 2006
"Paul H. Connett, professor emeritus of chemistry at St.
Lawrence University, said the conference is a chance for scientists
and the public to meet and discuss the effects of fluoride in
terms anyone can understand. Mr. Connett is director of the Fluoride
Action Network, which is sponsoring the conference."
Take
Action on Fluoride Pesticides in Foods - Organic Consumers
Association (USA), July 21, 2006
"A coalition of health and environmental groups have filed
a petition with the EPA, indicating the agency has violated federal
laws for establishing allowable levels of fluoride pesticide residues
in foods. Specifically, the petitioners (including Fluoride
Action Network, Beyond Pesticides and Environmental
Working Group) are asking the EPA to prohibit the use of sulfuryl
fluoride in food production."
Fluoride...
Good for the teeth or bad to the bone? Times Daily
(Alabama, USA), July 20, 2006
"Communities like Pagosa Springs aren't alone in their choice
to reject fluoridation. Michael Connett, with the Fluoride
Action Network, said 70 communities nationwide
have taken the same route since 2000. He contends that fluoride,
which is also used as a pesticide and insecticide, has no benefits
when consumed as a part of a water supply. 'The benefits dentists
are taking about are when fluoride is applied directly to teeth,'
he said. 'The largest source of fluoride exposure for people is
in their water because we have so much fluoridation in this country.'"
Activists Target Fluoride
Pesticides To Tighten Drinking Water Limits - InsideEPA
(USA), July 18, 2006
"Environmentalists are poised to challenge EPA’s decision
to license a fluoride-based soil fumigant pesticide, which they
say could draw attention to the broader issue of whether fluoride
standards for drinking water adequately protect public health...
Environmental Working Group (EWG), Fluoride
Action Network (FAN) and Beyond Pesticides charge
that allowing any use of the pesticide will increase fluoride-related
human health risks. They argue EPA’s decision did not meet
statutory requirements in the 1996 Food Quality Protection Act
(FQPA) amendments to the Federal Food, Drug & Cosmetic Act
(FFDCA), and threaten legal action if EPA does not open a public
hearing on sulfuryl fluoride safety limits, known as tolerances."
Water
issue to city ballot - Colorado Daily News (Colorado,
USA), July 13, 2006
"On the other hand, a report called “Tooth Decay Trends
in Fluoridated vs. Unfluoridated Countries” posted on the
Fluoride Action Network site
at www.fluoridealert.org/WHO-dmft.htm
suggested that tooth decay has also declined significantly over
the past 30-40 years in many European nations that don't fluoridate
drinking water."
Methyl bromide allocation
declines as use of alternative rises - Greenwire (USA),
July 12, 2006
"Last month, the Fluoride
Action Network, Beyond Pesticides and the Environmental
Working Group submitted a petition to the agency requesting a
hearing on sulfuryl
fluoride and seeking an immediate stay on its food use tolerances.
The groups accused EPA of "proceeding superficially, inadequately,
and thus in violation of the Federal Food Drug and Cosmetic Act
and the Administrative Procedures Act" when the tolerances
were first issued in 2004."
Fighting
Fluoride - St Cloud Times (Minnesota, USA), July 11,
2006
"Thirty-six years after fluoride was mandated to be added
to all public water supplies in Minnesota, people continue to
debate its safety. The chemical is said to strengthen teeth and
prevent tooth decay. But a Sauk Rapids man has taken it upon himself,
as the state representative of an anti-fluoride organization,
to campaign to remove the chemical from municipal water. Jason
Krueger has given speeches to organizations, spoken with legislators
and had letters to the editor appear in publications around Minnesota,
including the St. Cloud Times. Krueger is the Minnesota representative
of the Fluoride Action Network
- “an international coalition seeking to broaden public
awareness about the toxicity of fluoride compounds and the health
impacts of current fluoride exposures,” according to its
Web site."
BF
residents get conflicting reports on fluoride - Brattleboro
Reformer (Vermont, USA), May 11, 2006
"Along with Carton, the environmental scientist, Len Weldon,
a dentist from Keene, N.H., and Michael Connett of the Fluoride
Action Network told the crowd about the health
risks of fluoride. They also said any supposed health benefits
are overstated or just plain wrong. "It is a reckless form
of treatment," Connett said. "Putting it in everyone's
water takes away the right to choose. There are too many unanswered
health questions."
Fluoride
101: What are the arguments against fluoride? - The
Standard-Times (Massachusetts, USA), May 5, 2006
"Dr. Paul Connett, a chemistry professor at St. Lawrence
University and executive director of the Fluoride
Action Network, says hydrofluorosilicic acid is
more dangerous to human health because it contains traces of arsenic,
a known carcinogen."
Fluoride
101: What do other countries do? - The Standard-Times
(Massachusetts, USA), May 3, 2006
"The Fluoride Action Network
is an international coalition committed to broadening public awareness
about the toxicity of fluoride compounds and the effects of fluoride
exposure on health. FAN has an extensive Web site that shows that
most Western European countries have rejected adding fluoride
to drinking water. Even some cities that had been fluoridating
water recently decided to stop (see www.fluoridealert.org/govt-statements.htm)."
In
the spotlight: Paul Connett - Water Technology Online
(USA), April 2006
"The American Dental Association (ADA) and other organizations
support the addition of fluoride to municipal water sources and
bottled water, backing their opinion with years of clinical research
saying it helps reduce tooth decay. But the addition of fluoride
has come under public scrutiny as controversial studies have linked
fluoride to brain lesions, Alzheimer's disease and even cancer.
Paul Connett, Ph.D., professor of chemistry at St. Lawrence University
in Canton, NY, is executive director of the Fluoride
Action Network (FAN), a group that strongly questions
the merits of drinking water fluoridation. He spoke with Water
Technology® in mid-March about FAN and its views."
Government Panel Raises
Concern About Fluoride - Wall Street Journal (USA),
March 23, 2006
"When one couples the risks with the lack of understanding
on what the safe doses are for neurotoxic and other effects, it
should cause a great deal of concern," says Michael Connett
of the Fluoride Action Network,
a nonprofit group that opposes fluoridation.
Activists
worry a new pesticide will put toxic levels of fluoride in your
food - San Antonio Current (Texas, USA), March 22,
2006:
"Last December, the Fluoride
Action Network, Beyond Pesticides, and the Environmental
Working Group issued a statement to the EPA opposing government
approval of ProFume. They contend that fluoride’s cumulative
effects can be harmful in places where children and adults drink
highly fluoridated water and use toothpaste."
Fluoride issue on Burlington ballot
- Burlington Free Press (Vermont, USA), January 25, 2006
"Michael Connett, who also is project director for the Burlington-based
Fluoride Action Network,
said Tuesday that the vote March 7 will give Burlington residents
a chance to express their opposition to an "ineffective and
outdated form of mandatory medication." He said a number
of health risks have been associated with the ingestion of fluoride."
Dispute over Methyl
Bromide alternative prompts debate on fluoride - Inside
EPA (USA), January 20, 2006
"environmentalists dispute the scientific basis of EPA’s
2004 approval of the pesticide sulfuryl fluoride, which is manufactured
by Dow AgroSciences, LLC, claiming the agency used a flawed risk
assessment that violates the Food Quality Protection Act (FQPA).
The groups Fluoride Action Network,
Beyond Pesticides and Environmental Working Group (EWG) are now
challenging the decision through administrative means, which an
EWG source says eventually could lead to litigation. The activists
allege that EPA ignored data on the risks of sulfuryl fluoride
because the agency did not want to undermine its threshold limits
on fluoridation of drinking water."
2005:
The
debate over community water fluoridation - Vermont
Edition, Vermont Public Radio (USA), December 21, 2005
Several towns have taken up the debate over community water fluoridation.
Dr. Steve Arthur of the Vermont Health Department explains why
health professionals support fluoridation, and Michael Connett
of the Fluoride Action Network
discusses why his group wants fluoride reduced and eliminated
from community water supplies.
Communities
debate fluoride in tap water - The Associated Press
(Vermont, USA), November 26, 2005
The debate has drawn both philosophical and scientific responses,
with arguments over the success of fluoride in solving the public
health problem of tooth decay to opposition as well from those
who see as the government unfairly medicating their water. "On
a very basic level it's a medical ethics issue," said Michael
Connett of Burlington, project director for the Fluoride
Action Network, which is driving much of the debate
in Burlington. "Fluoride is defined as a medicine. ... But
they're crossing the line when they say, 'I want you to have it,
I want you to have it, I want every person in this community to
have it,'" he said.
Say
no to fluoridation, say medics - The Wanganui Chronicle
(New Zealand), November 21, 2005
Water fluoridation is wrong, according to a group of Wanganui
medical professionals. They have been providing the Wanganui District
Council with up-to-date scientific information explaining their
position. Ear, nose and throat surgeon PJ Faumui, osteopath Nigel
Brooke and registered nurse Anne Carlile are fronting the group
and say their views are supported by the Fluoride
Action Network.
Fluoridation
Vote Still Uncertain in Bellingham, Wash - All Things
Considered, National Public Radio (USA), November 14, 2005
Around the country fluoridation is back as a political issue
and as NPR's Martin Kaste reports fluoride opponents believe the
tide is turning their way... Chemistry professor Paul Connett
runs the internet-based Fluoride
Action Network, a source of information for anti-fluoridation
campaigns... Opponents call this forced medication and at the
moment that argument seems to be winning over many Americans.
In local elections last week at least three communities rejected
fluoridation and in Bellingham, where the pro-fluoridation campaign
vastly outspent the opposition, the vote tally is still far too
close to call.
Not
in My Water Supply - TIME Magazine (USA), October 24,
2005
The CDC recently announced that 32% of American children now
have some form of dental fluorosis, a white or brown mottling
of the teeth. U.S. health officials see it as a cosmetic issue,
largely caused by ill-advised swallowing of toothpaste, while
fluoride critics say it shows that children are accumulating too
much fluoride overall. The World Health Organization sets a fluoride-safety
standard of 1.5 p.p.m.--well below the EPA's 4-p.p.m. rule--partly
to prevent enamel fluorosis. And in Western Europe, where the
drop in tooth decay in recent decades is as sharp as that in the
U.S., 17 of 21 countries have either refused or discontinued fluoridation,
contending that fluoride toothpastes offer adequate protection.
(Only Ireland adds fluoride to most of its water systems, while
Switzerland fluoridates its salt.) Those facts, recycled through
Web-savvy organizations like the Fluoride
Action Network, are stirring up activists.
Public
health bodies slam new fluoride tolerance levels -
Food Navigator (USA), October 3, 2005
Environmental organizations claim that new food tolerances for
the fluoride-based pesticide sulfuryl fluoride could be potentially
damaging to public health... [T]he Environmental Working Group,
Beyond Pesticides and the Fluoride
Action Network (FAN) said that the maximum legal
limits for the fluoride-based pesticide in foods have been set
at levels that dwarf the amount allowed in tap water.
Professor’s
Research Reignites Fluoride-Cancer Correlation Debate
- Harvard Crimson (Massachusetts, USA), September 28, 2005
Another group, the Fluoride Action
Network, has accused Douglass of having a conflict
of interest. Douglass edits the Colgate Oral Care Report, a newsletter
subsidized by Colgate Palmolive, which looks at issues affecting
oral health. Colgate uses fluoride in its popular toothpaste.
Claiming “ties to a company that profits from Fluoride,”
the network asked the National Institute of Health, which has
funded Douglass’ work, to remove Douglass from the study,
eliminate all other conflicts of interest, and publish his data
along with his conclusions.
Council passes resolution urging
reduction of fluoride - Burlington Free Press (Vermont,
USA), September 20, 2005
To fluoridation supporters -- dentists and the Vermont Department
of Health -- adding fluoride to the water is a proven and cost-effective
way to deliver a mineral that reduces tooth decay. To those who
oppose it -- groups such as the Fluoride
Action Network -- it is mandated medication that
carries with it significant health risks, particularly for children.
Support
inquiry into fluoride as carcinogen - Joplin Independent
(Missouri, USA), September 14, 2005
An online petition calling for a Congressional investigation
into the safety of fluoridation has been posted on the Fluoride
Action Network website.
Fluoride opponents’ argument
gains teeth - Lawrence Journal-World (Kansas, USA),
August 24, 2005
Burgstahler — editor of the scientific journal “Fluoride”
and a founding member of the anti-fluoridation Fluoride
Action Network — said the past 60 years
largely have been a farce. He said there are studies suggesting
fluoride doesn’t do much to prevent tooth decay. And studies
that suggest a benefit don’t adequately consider other factors
that would account for improved dental health, such as better
diets. And Burgstahler said there are major studies that raise
questions about the safety of fluoride — including some
that suggest links to increased cancer rates, thyroid problems
and skin conditions.
BF
trustees weigh fluoridation issue - Rutland Herald
(Vermont, USA), August 24, 2005
Michael Connett, program director for Burlington's Fluoride
Action Network... stressed that the benefits come
from topical application, and not through ingestion. "This
was sold to us on the notion that we have to ingest it,"
he said. "But now we know that it is not the best way to
provide it."
Report of toxic spill at
Phillips plant not needed - Poughkeepsie Journal (New
York, USA), August 12, 2005
Ammonium fluorosilicate damage to vehicle surfaces "would
be immediately noticeable," said Paul Connett, a professor
of chemistry at St. Lawrence University in Canton, St. Lawrence
County, and executive director of the Fluoride
Action Network. Health effects would be harder
to gauge, Connett said. "The issue is, how much did people
breath into their lungs?" he said. "How much hand-to-mouth
activity would they have had?"
Trustees discuss fluoride removal
- Eagle Times (Vermont, USA), August 11, 2005
"The fact that something naturally occurs in water is no
guarantee that it will be safe," Paul Connett, executive
director of the Fluoride Action
Network in New York, said Wednesday. "Lead
naturally occurs in some water. Arsenic naturally occurs in some
water."... Connett said health officials simply don't want
to upset a "beautiful theory" they invented in 1945,
in which a public ill like tooth decay could be cured by adding
a magic potion to the water.
Bellows
Falls considers fluoridating its water - The Brattleboro
Reformer (Vermont, USA), August 11, 2005
But according to Michael Connett, program director for the Fluoride
Action Network, the only safe level is zero. "The
evidence is clear," he said. "Even dentists say that
the benefits of fluoride are topical. Putting fluoride in a public
water supply is not a good way of delivering this."
Speaker flails value of fluoride
- Bellingham Herald (Washington, USA), August 5, 2005
The leader of a national anti-fluoridation group blasted a proposal
to fluoridate Bellingham's drinking water Thursday night. Paul
Connett, executive director of Fluoride
Action Network and a chemistry professor at St.
Lawrence University in New York, told about 60 people gathered
at Broadway Hall in Bellingham that the risks of putting small
amounts of fluoride in the city's drinking water were greater
than the potential benefits to oral health.
Mandatory
fluoridation battle not over - Lovely County Citizen
(Arkansas, USA), August 4, 2005
Besides attracting public health officials and dentists, the
gathering also attracted more than 20 anti-fluoridation protesters
from a dozen states. Dr. Mouden’s comments, in which he
mocked members of the Arkansas legislature, were recorded by one
of the protesters who attended the session, transcribed, and distributed
by the Fluoride Action Network
(FAN).
Danger
on Tap - Organic Style Magazine (USA), July/August
2005
At the local level, many towns are opting to just say no to fluoride
in the water. Since 1990, at least 130 communities in 30 states
have voted against it. "Often we'll hear a city councillor
say something like, 'Look, I'm not a doctor or a scientist, but
there are so many questions outstanding that I think we should
err on the side of caution,'" says Michael Connett, project
director for the Fluoride Action
Network, a Vermont-based organization of activists,
environmentalists, and scientists that aims to educate the public
about the risks of fluoridation.
Taking a Closer
Look at Fluoride - Alternet (USA), July 21, 2005
Though generations of dental students have been sold on the dental
benefits of fluoride, studies over the last decade in particular
have suggested a correlation with cancer. Studies conducted by
the National Toxicology Program and the New Jersey Department
of Health, have shown higher than normal incidents of cancer in
male rats exposed to fluoridated water, for example. Such studies
have helped spawn grassroots opposition to fluoridation, and,
since 1999, 70 U.S. communities have rejected fluoridation schemes,
according to Fluoride Action Network,
a watchdog group.
Board wants city to reduce fluoridation
- Burlington Free Press (Vermont, USA), June 30, 2005
Michael Connett, director of the anti-fluoridation Fluoride
Action Network, said he was encouraged that two
of the board members had become worried about fluoridation after
studying the issue, and he called the final board recommendation
"a step in the right direction."
Harvard
Fluoride Findings Misrepresented? - Environmental Working
Group (USA), June 28, 2005
EWG obtained the NIEHS grant report via the Fluoride
Action Network, which received it from the National
Research Council of the National Academy of Sciences.
NGO unearths research
linking fluoride to cancer - IRC International Water
and Sanitation Centre (Netherlands), June 28, 2005
Fluoride Action Network
has unearthed an unpublished Harvard thesis [1] linking fluoride
exposure to an increased rate of osteosarcoma (bone cancer) in
boys. The findings have prompted the Washington-based Environmental
Working Group (EWG) to ask the government’s National Toxicology
Program (NTP) to evaluate the cancer-causing potential of fluoride
in tap water. Osteosarcoma is a rare, but dangerous form of childhood
cancer with a mortality rate in the first five years of about
50 per cent.
Contradictory scientific studies
raise questions about fluoride safety - Burlington
Free Press (Vermont, USA), June 23, 2005
Michael Connett, project director of the anti-fluoride organization
Fluoride Action Network,
said that although Masters is correct about the lack of FDA testing
on silicofluorides, "the more important point, in my view,
is that the FDA has never approved any fluoride product, including
sodium fluoride, when used for ingestion. The FDA has only approved
topical fluorides, e.g. toothpaste."
Does fluoridated water still make
sense? - Burlington Free Press (Vermont, USA), June
15, 2005
The Fluoride Action Network,
a Burlington group, argues that fluoridation has a demonstrated
link to bone cancer in young boys. Michael Connett, the director
of the 500-member international organization, says the risks of
water fluoridation are real and amply documented.
Thyroid Discovery - First Magazine (USA), June
13, 2005
For more information on fluoride overload and hypothyroidism,
visit fluoridealert.org
Fluoride
water 'causes cancer' - The London Observer (UK), June
12, 2005
Environmental organisations were repeatedly denied access to
it, and even bodies such as the US National Academy of Sciences
could not get hold of a copy. Eventually two researchers from
the Fluoride Action Network
were allowed to read it in the rare books and special collections
room at Harvard medical library.
New
Science on Fluoride & Bone Cancer in Boys - Environmental
Working Group (USA), June 6, 2005
Environmental Working Group (EWG) has attached to this petition,
key portions of a doctoral dissertation from the Harvard School
of Dental Medicine that found a strong, statistically significant
relationship between fluoride in tap water at levels commonly
found in American water supplies, and the rare but often fatal
form of bone cancer, osteosarcoma, in boys.... Environmental Working
Group obtained a copy of the results section of the document from
the Fluoride Action Network,
who sent two researchers to the library, each of whom were allowed
to copy 10 percent of the document.
Fluoride again: Legislature had
better take another look - Albany Democrat Herald (Oregon,
USA), May 29, 2005
The anti-fluoride folks are gaining ground. According to one,
the Fluoride Action Network,
more than 100 U.S. and Canadian cities have either rejected or
discontinued adding fluoride to their drinking water since 1990
(as of 2003).
Trading
tooth decay for cancer - The Australian (Australia),
May 25, 2005
For those who believe there are no serious health concerns I
recommend that they read Christopher Bryson's The Fluoride Deception,
published last year, and visit www.fluorideaction.net/health,
where they will see an abundance of recent studies. To claim that
you can't trust anything on the internet is childish. An article
that has appeared in a peer-reviewed journal does not suddenly
become invalid because it is made available to a wider audience.
Burlington Bites into the Fluoride
Question - Seven Days (Vermont, USA), May 18, 2005
...the Burlington-based Fluoride
Action Network. FAN, an international coalition
of activists, scientists and concerned citizens, has waged a number
of effective campaigns to convince municipalities to stop fluoridating
their water.
EPA To Answer Alleged
Children's Risk From Methyl Bromide Substitute - Inside
EPA (USA), May 9, 2005
EPA will soon respond to objections by environmentalists over
pesticide tolerances for an agricultural fumigant that could serve
as an alternative to the ozone-depleting chemical methyl bromide.
EPA's response would be the agency's first public statement on
a potential substitute to the widely used substance which is being
phased out under an international agreement. The Fluoride
Action Network Pesticide Project reiterated its
public health concerns last month, by asking EPA for a public
hearing on the first-time use standards of sulfuryl fluoride,
which the group says could lead to bone damage and neurological
problems particularly in children.
From bag to bone
- Hood River News (Oregon, USA), April 26, 2005
The Fluoride Action Network
is a convincing page. It has graphs and photos and diagrams. Most
of the people quoted there have "Dr." just before their
names or "Ph.D." just after. And their perspective is
obvious: No fluoride in water.
Fluoride program opposed
- The Sarnia Observer (Ontario, Canada), April 4, 2005
A group called the Fluoride Action
Network says fluoride is a “cumulative poison”
that can interfere with hormonal and some neurochemical signals.
That’s the information politicians in Lambton Shores reviewed
before unanimously deciding to ask all members of the Lambton
Area Water Supply System (LAWSS) to remove fluoride at the plant.
The
Fluoride Factor - Whole Life Times (USA), April 2005
“It is now the consensus view of the dental research community
that fluoride’s primary benefit to teeth comes from topical
application to the exterior of teeth, not from ingestion through
the water supply,” says Michael Connett, project director
of the Fluoride Action Network,
a Burlington, Vermont-based watchdog group. “Since …
the risks are primarily from ingestion … adding fluoride
to the nation’s water — and thereby to the bulk of
the nation’s processed food — is not a good way of
minimizing ingestion of fluoride.”
Stop
fluoridation now: new research on fluoride's brain and thyroid toxicity
- Townsend Letter for Doctors and Patients (USA), April 2005
The Fluoride Action Network
(FAN) is an international coalition whose main goals are "to
educate the public on the toxicity of fluoride compounds and to
end the outdated/hazardous practice of water fluoridation."
In addition to providing links to scientific studies, the Web
site has a news-tracking page with citations and links for more
than 1,200 relevant articles published in the US and worldwide
in recent years.
2004:
Residents debate need for fluoride
- The Daily Times (Tennessee, USA), December 2, 2004
The Fluoride Action Network
points to numerous studies underlining the hazards of fluoride
use, as well as comments from a 2000 Nobel Laureate in Medicine
and a top U.S. Environmental Protection Agency official advising
against use of fluoride.
Health at heart of fluoride dispute
- Knoxville News Sentinel (Tennessee, USA), November 1, 2004
Michael Connett of Burlington, Vt., project director of Fluoride
Action Network, adds that fluoride is believed
to contribute to arthritis and damage brain tissue, affecting
cognitive capabilities and learning. It also may have adverse
effects on the kidneys and thyroid, he said.
Commissioners discuss purchase
of refinery - Cushing Daily Citizen (Oklahoma, USA),
October 21, 2004
According to Fluoride Action Network's
Web site the acid is clear and fumes when it comes in contact
with oxygen. It is poisonous by ingestion, inhalation, absorption
or contact. Although not immediately deadly, it can kill anywhere
from eight hours to three days later according to the network.
Mandatory fluoridation of drinking
water up for debate - The Associated Press (New Jersey,
USA), October 18, 2004
But some European countries with nonfluoridated public water
supplies have seen even steeper declines, according to the Fluoride
Action Network, an advocacy group citing data
from the World Health Organization.
N.J. to consider fluoride in water
- Philadelphia Inquirer (Pennsylvania, USA), October 17, 2004
Groups including the Fluoride Action
Network and its affiliate, the New Jersey Citizens
Opposing Forced Fluoridation (NJCOFF), must square off against
dental associations, medical societies, the CDC and the surgeon
general. They often win.
Too much fluoride: Parts of State
Don't Meet Safe Drinking Water Standards -
The Daily Press (Virginia, USA), October 10, 2004
Paul Connett, a professor of environmental chemistry and toxicology
at St. Lawrence University in Canton, N.Y., and founder of the
Vermont-based Fluoride Action Network,
calls [dental fluorosis] a red flag. "It's a warning sign
that the child is overexposed to fluoride," said Connett,
who studied the health effects for years. "There may be other
toxic effects that are not visible. It would be a miracle if the
child that has dental fluorosis does not have other effects."
Groups
line up on fluoride issue - Clarksdale Press Register
(Mississippi, USA), October 2, 2004
Connett, the project director for the Fluoride
Action Network, believes Clarksdale citizens should
consider all the facts before allowing city leaders to possibly
follow the Mississippi Health Department's advice to add the chemical
to help prevent tooth decay... "Go and learn about this for
yourself," Connett advises. "You are going to be ingesting
this for the rest of your life so you better know what they are
going to put in there," he said.
Mohawk official moves group with
fluoride gas horror tale - Watertown Daily Times (New
York, USA), August 3, 2004
For Michael P. Connett, project director of the Fluoride
Action Network, which organized the conference,
the Mohawk experience with fluoride represents a problem for all
citizens and not just for those living near fluoride-emitting
factories. It's a problem for anyone who regularly ingests fluoridated
water or uses fluoridated toothpaste, allowing the chemical to
build up in their system, he said."
Fluoride
Controversy - Better Nutrition (Canada), August 2004
Fluoride is added to most US drinking water — although
worldwide, very few countries fluoridate their water. Yet dental
health in nonfluoridated Europe is better than here. In parts
of Turkey and China where fluoride occurs naturally in high concentrations,
skeletal brittleness and crippling — osteofluorosis —
is common. And with fluoride now in toothpaste, water, food and
many beverages, Nobel scientists and groups such as the Fluoride
Action Network (www.fluoridealert.org) are raising
the alarm.
To Add Or Not To Add
- The Register Guard (Oregon, USA), July 27, 2004
When such elections do take place, however, they most often swing
against fluoridation, said Michael Connett, research director
for the Fluoride Action Network,
an anti-fluoridation nonprofit based in Burlington, Vt. He said
60 percent to 65 percent of such elections result in fluoride
being removed or never added to the water supply.
Health dangers of fluoride to
be conference topic - Watertown Daily Times (New York,
USA), June 28, 2004
The Mohawks are working with the Fluoride
Action Network, Canton, to bring in scientists,
journalists and environmental policymakers who can educate people
on why fluoride may be as bad for them as it is for cattle.
South Blount Utility Board Opts
Against Fluoridation - The Daily Times (Tennessee,
USA), June 27, 2004
Isom Lail, South Blount Utility District manager, said he and
project coordinator Henry Durant recommended to utility district
board members that fluoride not be used in the water... Lail cited
as basis for the decision the Fluoride
Action Network's list of reasons not to use fluoride.
Groups
Challenge EPA's Approval of Dow's Sulfuryl Fluoride
- Beyond Pesticides (USA), March 30, 2004
On March 22, 2004, the Fluoride
Action Network (FAN) formally challenged US EPA's
approval of Sulfuryl fluoride for use as a fumigant on a wide
variety of foods... The Washington, DC-based Beyond Pesticides
joined FAN in submitting Written Objections and a Request for
a Hearing, the process necessary to formally challenge EPA's decision.
2003:
Coronet testing will not
expand - Tampa Tribune (Florida, USA), December 2,
2003
Tribune research by Jody Habayeb and Frances Bekafigo; Sources:
Environmental Protection Agency, U.S. Agency for Toxic Substances
and Disease Registry, Fluoride Action
Network
Is
drinking water fluoridation nothing to smile about?
- Toxic Times, October 2003
For more information about fluoride issues visit http://www.fluoridealert.org
Fluoridation Nation
- Seven Days (Vermont, USA), September 10, 2003
The irony of conventional wisdom is how much of it eventually
gets debunked. Not long ago, schoolchildren were routinely sprayed
with DDT to repel mosquitoes, pregnant women were given thalidomide
to treat morning sickness, and people suffering from mental illness
were lobotomized to calm them down. Before such practices were
revealed as more injurious than the problems they purportedly
cured, those who challenged the medical establishment were often
branded as quacks, frauds or madmen. Only time revealed whether
their apostasy was preposterous or visionary. One can only wonder
what time will tell about the Fluoride
Action Network, a Burlington-based international
coalition of activists, scientists and environmental groups founded
in May 2000. FAN's goal is to raise public awareness about the
deleterious effects of water fluoridation and to convince municipalities
they should discontinue the practice.
Fluoride
Concerns Surface Once Again - Chemical & Engineering
News (USA), August 25, 2003
Connett [Executive Director of FAN]
said it is likely that many people who live in communities with
moderate fluoride content in their water supplies (about 1 ppm,
for example) experience preclinical skeletal fluorosis. Some individuals
who have lived all their lives in areas with 1 ppm fluoride in
the water supply have been found to have elevated levels of fluoride
in their bone ash, he explained. There is evidence from both human
and animal studies that cortical bone with excessive levels of
fluoride is more brittle and prone to fracture, Connett said.
With the exception of vertebrae, most bones in the body are primarily
cortical, including the femoral neck in the hip. Consequently,
people who accumulate excessive levels of fluoride in their bones
are probably more likely to experience a hip fracture, he said.
Water fights - National
Review (USA), June 30, 2003
The "anti-fluoridationists" are quite well organized,
with a variety of websites, activist groups, and leaders. The
main anti- fluoridation engine, it would seem, is F.A.N. (or the
Fluoride Action Network).
Its overarching goal is to "end fluoridation of public water
supplies worldwide."
2002:
Fluoride debate -
Billings Gazette (Montana, USA), October 27, 2002
Although fluoridation is endorsed by an overwhelming majority
of public health authorities, opponents have experts and advanced-degree
holders in their corner as well. Among them is Paul Connett, Ph.D.,
a chemistry professor at St. Lawrence University in Canton, N.Y.,
who helped found the Fluoride Action
Network, one of the best-known groups working
to defeat fluoridation.
Fluoride link to children's bone
disease - The Sunday Herald (Scotland), October 6,
2002
Paul Connett, professor of chemistry at St Lawrence University
in New York and a founding member of the Fluoride
Action Network, said: "Far from dental fluorosis
being an inconvenient cosmetic problem, it may be an indicator
of bone damage. What we need to know is how much fluoride is being
deposited in our bones. Sadly, there is a glaring absence of such
data.
Nuclear plant to supply fluoride
for water - The Sunday Tribune (South Africa), June
30, 2002
For more information on the fluoride issue... The international
Fluoride Action Network
has compiled a document entitled "50 reasons to oppose fluoride",
available on the web at http://www.fluoridealert.org/50-reasons.htm
Fluoride's mark -
Philadelphia Inquirer (Pennsylvania, USA), April 15, 2002
"It's a red flag," said Paul Connett, of Fluoride
Action Network, an anti-fluoride coalition. "Fluorosis
is saying 'this kid has been overexposed to fluoride.'"
"It tells us something else might be going on," said
Connett, a chemistry professor at St. Lawrence University in New
York.
2001:
Coahoma County's water fluoride-deficient,
health officials say - Clarksdale Press Register (Mississippi,
USA), November 10, 2001
One Internet web site maintained by the Fluoride
Action Network lists "50 Reasons to Oppose
Fluoridation." The group contends that research showing fluoridation
prevents cavities is flawed and that it is easy to receive an
overdose of the chemical, resulting in a condition known as dental
fluoridosis, which actually damages the teeth of growing children.
Chemist blasts fluoride
- Bennington Banner (Vermont, USA), March 26, 2001
A graduate of Cambridge University, Connett holds a Ph.D. from
Dartmouth College. He joined the faculty at St. Lawrence in 1983,
and has received several awards for his work. Connett is a founder
of the Fluoride Action Network,
and contributes regularly to the organization's web site at www.fluoridealert.org.
Fluoride
fight bubbles up - The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (Wisconsin,
USA), January 29, 2001
For information about the potential pros and cons of fluoride,
visit these Web sites: www.ada.org for the American Dental Association
and www.fluoridealert.org for the Fluoride
Action Network, which opposes fluoride in public
water supplies.
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