Chronicles of a family at home
Jan. 31, 2008
Latest mystery: Fluoride (part 1)

Posted in nebulous rants

I love a good mystery.  Especially ones with signs of conspiracies and cover-ups and government complicity.  Probably a symptom of WAAAY too much Robert Ludlum and Tom Clancy reading, back when I used to have free, uninterrupted time.

My latest case as an amateur sleuth began with a decree to add fluoride to the public water supply from our local mayor, a former lawyer and political party leader.  I thought these strange credentials in making healthcare decisions for the community, and since I strenuously believe that nothing he does is motivated by anything good, it bore looking into.

The two week odyssey of research took me from the 1930s through the present, to Sarnia, Ontario, and other disparate places like Hooper Bay, Alaska; Bauxite, Arkansas; and the Aluminum Company of America. Not to mention from science to junk science and on through the politics of expediency. 

First of all, let me just say that, like with the terms "homeschooler" and "alien," I am aware that there is an immediate and visceral reaction to the term "opponent of fluoride."  You know instantly that all homeschoolers are dressed in jumpers, are ultra-conservative Christians, and have a dozen children.  You immediately know that all "resident aliens" are actually illegal aliens.  And you equally assume all opponents of fluoride are either quacks or kooks.  (Or maybe you don't have the same visceral reaction because those of you reading this are also homeschoolers?)  But as a friend of mine said to me last week:  "Just because they are kooks doesn't mean they are wrong."  Reminded me of that old chestnut, "Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean someone isn't out to get you."

Either way, a fresh look at the evidence on safety and efficacy of fluoride may reveal to you the uneasy truth that while there may be evidence of its effectiveness in reducing dental caries, and while it is frequently repeated that it is economical, you may actually come up dry on hard evidence that it is safe.  I aspire to demonstrate this using facts not garnered from "kooks," but from the Belly of the Beast itself.

Look for Part 2, coming soon to this blog, near you.






 



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Dec. 13, 2007
Manna

Posted in nebulous rants

 "Exo 16:14 And when the dew that lay was gone up, behold, upon the face of the wilderness there lay a small round thing, as small as the hoar frost on the ground."

I have now idenitified the substance that was biblical manna:  Decaf, non-fat, sugar-free, caramel latte from the Starbucks' Drive-thru window. 

Just picture it.  On the Sabbath, you just walk outside and there it is; hot, steamy, environmentally friendly paper cups ("small round thing") with a safety sleeve complete with cheerful logo and full of creamy, sinless java that would melt your heart and make you praise the Lord for taking you out of Egypt! 

And if you insist that "bread" or "wafers" were involved, too, I can accept that:  ever had a cinnamon chip scone?

Ah.  Yet another mystery of history solved.


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Aug. 10, 2007
Is the financial sky falling?

Posted in nebulous rants

Often times, the news in other areas of the world is focused much differently than it is in America.  In fact, much of the time, if you were looking at a European TV world news show at the same time as an American world news show, you'd swear you were looking at the news of 2 different days.  We notice that phenomenon even on Cable international news channels (much too few and far between) viewed right here on the hill.  Three or four years ago, we spent a couple of weeks in Germany and bird flu was all over their TV news; strangely, it was at least another year or so before we really started hearing about it in the states.  Now that was creepy. 

Today, you will hear on all the US news outlets that the Dow is all over the place and that mortgage rates are climbing because of failed loans.  You will hear that the Federal Reserve Bank injected billions and billions of dollars into the market to insure its ongoing liquidity.  The money did its job in slowing down the decline, and thank goodness the markets are closed for the weekend.  But you don't hear a lot about the global markets and their parallel slide on our news.  The European Central Bank took the same approach of injecting cash into their markets.  Same with the Bank of Japan.  Not that this is the first time the federal/central banks have had to do this, but the times are few and far between.

What is much more worrisome to me is the news that a very major German bank closed down yesterday for some 2 hours.   A press release LATER said that the shut-down was to discuss the banking crisis.  Now I'm not much of a conspiracy theorist, but people don't usually go around shutting their banks down for mere discussions.  The fear is that the bank is near to collapse, and, according to one source (click on the "closed down" link), a "Westdeutsches Landesbank failure would have collapsed the entire global financial system."  It's amazing how linked the prosperity of banks around the globe really is.  Most sources maintain that the crisis has been caused by subprime lending practices of American banks and the instability spread worldwide from there.  Banks aren't as willing to lend to one another, at this point.  A Reuters story included a chilling quote from a fund manager in Singapore named Moe(!): "There's a variety of scenarios you can envision, all the way from it being a relatively contained phenomenon to something which has much broader implications that cause the world to collapse like a deck of cards," he said.

I imagine that we'll recover, and time (financially speaking) will march on.  But somewhere in this story, there should be a cautionary note or two -- perhaps a refrain:  the evils of subprime lending would be one message to be sure; but what about the line of dominoes that the global financial system has become?  This time, we were ourselves the catalysts for near-disaster -- quite by accident.  As a nation, we are, in varying degrees of comfort, also lying in bed financially with countries who may CHOOSE to tear down our markets as a new type of warfare.  If we can come within spitting distance of collapse by mistake, imagine what can be done by a malicious nation on purpose.

I hope that the "powers that be" are listening to that refrain.

If you are interested in studying up a little on the Gold Standard, US Reserve Notes, Federal debt, and the decline of manufacturing in the US, click here for an excellent (albeit old) article entitled "The US is in Deep Doodoo."


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