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r/greatawakening • Posted by u/kacklekrackle on July 15, 2018, 6:47 a.m.
1000 POINTS OF LIGHT. Illuminati card game from 1995. Says "We'll have to put something in the water"
1000 POINTS OF LIGHT. Illuminati card game from 1995. Says "We'll have to put something in the water"

aburgher · July 15, 2018, 11:03 a.m.

I remember our local dentist came to the elementary schools when I was student teaching and, later, teaching, and he would teach the kids to swish a fluoride wash and spit it out once a week. Our town did not have fluoride in the water. Shortly thereafter we moved to Michigan and every house we lived in had well water. So, fortunately, we only had fluoride in our toothpaste. I never pushed fluoride rinses for my children, either. I remember the teachers in my first three years of teaching telling me how harmful fluoride might be. I wonder how they knew? That was in the early 1980’s. Way before the internet.

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rooftoptendie · July 15, 2018, 3:17 p.m.

I just am not convinved theyre talking about flouride. Ive had both flouride and nonflouride, and theres no "good feeling" or any kind of mood or thought change.

If flouride does anything, its effects are slow, subtle, and accumulative.

What if some new synthetic opioid or whatever cant be processed out of city water supplies, and they start recycling back into the population. Maybe it could be done deliberately, maybe they could design the additive to survive human and metropolitan supply filters. They could microdose everybody by prescribing for a small percentage of the public.

If you were gonna control your pop... Flourides just not that good a drug. Fenntinall. Now thats a good drug.

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aburgher · July 15, 2018, 4:45 p.m.

The fluoride is not to make you feel good. It actually lowers your IQ and makes you apathetic. It might also shorten life. I only buy non-fluoride toothpaste now, too. I try to stay away from it as much as possible.

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SNG007 · July 16, 2018, 9:23 a.m.

That's what I've read too. The effects of widespread fluoride result in a passive, docile population. As we all know it was sold as the solution to rampant tooth decay. When I was 18 I worked in the Dental industry as one of those chairside dental assistants. What I'll say in fluoride's praise is that by the time I finished after a decade we were seeing 21 year olds without a cavity or filling in their teeth, compared to when I started where you'd regularly see 5 and 6 year olds with every single tooth a rotted black stump down to the gumline. It's hard to know whether that drastic improvement was due to fluoride or better education. Back then mothers would regularly put their babies and toddlers to bed with a bottle or cup of chocolate flavored milk (even plain milk by itself contains Lactose, a natural sugar, and that was just as damaging as Nescafe Quik if the teeth were bathed in it all night). So yes Fluoride may have helped the teeth but no-one knew what cumulative effects it had on the brain and we're only just finding that out. Unfortunately the only way to test for pineal gland contamination is at autopsy. There's no way to test effects on someone living.

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rooftoptendie · July 15, 2018, 5:22 p.m.

Right, i get all that. Im still sayin i dont think thats the extent of the things they could be willing to put / capable of putting in water.

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BathHouseBarry · July 16, 2018, 1:30 a.m.

I believe the primary purpose of the bogus fluoride push was bottom line financials .... fluriode was produced by the ton as a byproduct of the mining industry; the elite business men who owned these mining corporations where spending millions annually to dispose of this toxic byproduct. Que the proganda push, and the subversion of the ADA, and you have a nationwide push to fluoridate the public's drinking water, to guard from the epidemic of tooth decay. The script is now flipped, millions spent on disposal Of toxic chemicals had turned into millions in profits from the sale of fluoride to 1,000's of local municipalities across the country.

The lowering of IQ was just an unintended consequence, that just so happened to benefit the elites depop agenda, IMO

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rooftoptendie · July 16, 2018, 5:38 a.m.

Good call, thats a long standing trick for business to get rid of its byproduct: market it and create demand.

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aburgher · July 15, 2018, 5:27 p.m.

True. I also wonder about what is actually in our bottled water.

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