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Re: Fluoride in tea

Posted: Jul 7th, '10, 11:11
by entropyembrace
Fluoride doesn´t do much to your brain it doesn´t cross the blood-brain barrier easily.

Re: Fluoride in tea

Posted: Jul 7th, '10, 19:51
by nonc_ron
entropyembrace wrote:Fluoride doesn´t do much to your brain it doesn´t cross the blood-brain barrier easily.
What, I have no brain barriers!
I'm quite gullible.Image

Re: Fluoride in tea

Posted: Jul 7th, '10, 19:53
by Geekgirl
Teachat is laffriot today. :lol:

Re: Fluoride in tea

Posted: Jul 16th, '10, 17:23
by TwoPynts

Re: Fluoride in tea

Posted: Jul 16th, '10, 19:28
by entropyembrace
TwoPynts wrote:A recent related article:

http://www.rttnews.com/Content/HealthNe ... 61568&SM=1
:shock: :shock: :shock:

:?

:cry:

nuuuuuuuuu not my tea! :cry: :cry: :cry:

Okay so I´d still drink tea even if I knew it was going to kill me.

Re: Fluoride in tea

Posted: Jul 17th, '10, 19:04
by TwoPynts
entropyembrace wrote:Okay so I´d still drink tea even if I knew it was going to kill me.
You can still drink up to 4 cups and not stress too much. They don't say anything about non-black teas. :wink: I wonder where Pu-erh falls into that?

Re: Fluoride in tea

Posted: Jul 18th, '10, 12:47
by entropyembrace
TwoPynts wrote:
entropyembrace wrote:Okay so I´d still drink tea even if I knew it was going to kill me.
You can still drink up to 4 cups and not stress too much. They don't say anything about non-black teas. :wink: I wonder where Pu-erh falls into that?
I don´t think it makes a difference between black or green tea since the fluoride is in the leaf when the plant is growing. What could make a difference is that they used very cheap tea that people typically use to make sun tea in Georgia which is lower grade, and thus older leaf. While most expensive tea only uses the two youngest leaves and the bud. The older the leaf is the more fluoride and aluminum gets concentrated in it. And the other thing is how well do these aluminum fluoride compounds get absorbed by the body? They could just go right through, I don´t know.

Re: Fluoride in tea

Posted: Jul 30th, '10, 18:23
by britt
Fluoride is not necessary to make the water safe to drink. It is added for medical purposes, so adding fluoride to a public water supply is forced medication. Maybe we can add Ritlin next?

If fluoride is a natural element of tea, I'm not worried about it. Tea is really one of nature's wonders and if there's anything in it that's not good by itself, there's probably something else in it to balance it out. This claim has been made by some about tea extract, saying it can be harmful because it omits some of the natural ingredients that balance each other out in real green tea.

Re: Fluoride in tea

Posted: Jul 30th, '10, 18:50
by silverneedles
"If X is a natural element of Y, I'm not worried about it."

dangerous thinking

Re: Fluoride in tea

Posted: Jul 30th, '10, 19:04
by entropyembrace
yeah...cyanide is a natural element of fruit pits...not everything natural is safe.

Re: Fluoride in tea

Posted: Aug 1st, '10, 05:12
by britt
silverneedles wrote:"If X is a natural element of Y, I'm not worried about it."

dangerous thinking
If tea is naturally healthy, do we really need to worry about the individual components? Nature seems to have done a much better job in balancing our food products than man has done. I trust nature, I don't trust man (or Monsanto, or the FDA).

Re: Fluoride in tea

Posted: Aug 1st, '10, 05:16
by britt
entropyembrace wrote:yeah...cyanide is a natural element of fruit pits...not everything natural is safe.
Ah, but we don't eat the pits. I agree that everything natural is not safe, but for a thousand years people have been drinking tea and many valid claims made about its health benefits. I also recently read that the fluoride put into water is not the same type as what is found to be naturally in the food chain.

Re: Fluoride in tea

Posted: Aug 1st, '10, 07:16
by skilfautdire
entropyembrace wrote:We could put prozac and antibiotics in the water too, cover a few more bases. :roll:
What about viagra and cialis ? That should take care of the decline in Occidental populations !

Re:

Posted: Aug 1st, '10, 07:22
by skilfautdire
brose wrote:There needs to be fluoridated water until regular dental care is available for all in said area. Without fluoride those with bad dental hygiene and unable to pay for dental care are the ones that are hurt the most, this is just worsened by those that use fluoride free toothpaste. Ask any dental professional that has experience in the areas with and without fluoridated water. Hopefully real public healthcare will be available in the US soon solving the problem.
Dental professionnals will not really emphasize to people to not eat junk foods and piles of sugar daily, starting from a young age at that. Can't blame poor people in America where a burger with pop costs the same price as a broccoli head. Try to feed a family with 4 broccoli heads.

Well, actually something can be done in those dire situations. The inexpensive tooth-rotting fast food is not the only solution for the poor people. Hopefully, with more and more immigrants coming in, people will start to learn about how to buy cheap rice, bulghur and lentils and cook them. Of course, being poor, there's not much more in rice than ric, some lentils and cheap soy sauce, but at least it's better than burgers and pops.

Re: Fluoride in tea

Posted: Aug 1st, '10, 07:25
by skilfautdire
rayFrev wrote:it's all been but a farce, it's the water :| :cry:
Isn't there an American beer that uses this slogan ? It's the water... :lol: