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PROFANITY-LACED EMAILS, MISUSE OF CDC FUNDS ๐Ÿ’ฒ HOW BIG FLUORIDE TRIES TO PREVENT TOWNS FROM REMOVING

2 ืฆืคื™ื•ืชยท 04/21/25
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โฃWhen Washburn, North Dakotaโ€™s town commissioners decided in January to take up the issue of whether or not to continue fluoridating the water supply for the townโ€™s 1,300 residents, they anticipated researching the risks versus benefits and putting the matter to a vote.

What they didnโ€™t anticipate โ€” but soon encountered โ€” was evidence of a coordinated effort by state actors and a national fluoride lobby group, using federal money, to crush local efforts by small towns like Washburn to stop fluoridating their water supplies.

On Monday night, town commissioners voted 4-1 to stop adding fluoride to Washburnโ€™s water supply โ€” making Washburn the latest in a growing list of communities across the country to end the practice in light of mounting scientific evidence that the chemical harms childrenโ€™s health and provides little or no dental benefit.

At the meeting, Commissioner Keith Hapip shared what he said was evidence of astroturfing by Dr. Johnny Johnson, president of the American Fluoridation Society; Jim Kershaw, Bismarck, North Dakotaโ€™s water plant superintendent and others.

โ€œAstroturfing is when a group with money and power pretends to be regular folks supporting something, but itโ€™s really a planned push from the top,โ€ Hapip said. โ€œReal grassroots come from the community naturally. And here, the oral health program used CDC [Centers for Disease Control and Prevention] cash to manufacture support for fluoridation in Washburn.โ€

Johnson phoned into the meeting to advocate for water fluoridation. In response, the commission also hosted a presentation by Michael Connett โ€” the attorney who represented the plaintiffs who won a landmark ruling in a lawsuit against the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency for the agencyโ€™s failure to appropriately regulate fluoride use in water supplies.

Dr. Griffin Cole, conference chairman of the International Academy of Oral Medicine and Toxicology, who has expertise on fluorideโ€™s toxic effects, also made a presentation.

Interviews by The Defender with grassroots actors across the country revealed that for years, Johnson, one of the countryโ€™s foremost advocates of water fluoridation, has been intervening in grassroots efforts to end fluoridation in their communities.

He and colleagues โ€” in this case, Kershaw โ€” travel physically or virtually to meetings in towns across the country.

Johnson himself, along with the American Dental Association (ADA), openly celebrates this work lobbying local governments. The ADA frequently reports on Johnsonโ€™s appearances and his โ€œsuccessโ€ blocking community efforts to end fluoridation on its website.

As recently as last week, Johnson reportedly bussed in dentists to a meeting in Seminole County, Florida.

. .

At least one other town in North Dakota, McVille, voted to remove fluoride from its water in 2023. However, after Johnson, Kershaw, OPH employees Bopp and Kiefer, and dentists from the ADA pressured the town of 417 inhabitants โ€” Johnson flew in for their meeting โ€” the town reversed the decision.

Source: https://childrenshealthdefense.....org/defender/north-

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