NOTES BETWEEN PRINTED EDITIONS
Leftist Media Tries Fluoride Politics As A Last Digit Effort
By Alice Giordano
As we anxiously await to see if global socialists versus Americans will win the White House, stories by the leftist media about RFK Jr., in its attempt to discredit his support of Trump, just underscores the mental illness that has pervaded some people’s brains.
Esquire Magazine is among the outlets taking pot shots at Trump for supporting RFK Jr.’s quest to remove fluoride from “government-issued” drinking water.
And Now RFK Jr. Tries To Distract Us With Some Bullsh*t About Fluoride,” is the headline of the same libtard media that supported the experimental COVID jab used in its 11th hour, last resort attempt to convince voters that Trump is dangerous.
Then there’s The Guardian, another COVID/snake oil peddler, who was compelled to run a story titled “Trump indicates he is open to RFK Jr’s proposal to ban vaccines if elected.”
It would have been okay if the digital outlet didn’t follow it with a subtitle calling Kennedy an anti-vaccine conspiracy theorist.
It’s about stinkin’ time we have a U.S. President, that starts the examination of the poison we have so readily accepted for decades from greed-riddled lobbyists disguised as caring and compassionate experts.
Thank goodness for libraries and bookstores because it’s the only place where you can find books like “The Case against Fluoride: How Hazardous Waste Ended Up In Our Drinking Water and the Bad Science and Powerful Politics That Keep It.” Won’t come up in a cold search on the internet about fluoride.
It’s very telltaling as are the many books, not just about the COVID experiment, but many other vaccines pedaled by the very smiling, stuffed-shirt pundits, that created the ridiculous six-foot rule and mask mandates.
Even the Dems own allies found dirt on fluoride. A 2006 study by Harvard University scientists, incidentally published back then in Cancer Causes and Control, found a strong link between fluoride-contained drinking water and a rare and fatal cancer called osteocarcoma, strickening in boys.
Nonetheless.
It’s a free world. For those who want fluoride in your toothpaste, it’s there on the shelf. And if you want to continue on the course of the more than 60 vaccines children now receive before they graduate from high school, well, that’s part of your personal choices too.
Yet, type in vaccines and the only stories that come up are pro-vaccine stories. Type in fluoride and the only stories that come up are pro-fluoride stories….no matter how hard you try to research the other side.
And guess what.
Type in Trump and up bubbles right away anti-Trump stories. New York Times: “Trump’s Crowds Are Dwindling as His Campaign Winds Down.” The taxpayer funded PBS: Harris has 4-point lead over Trump in final PBS News/NPR. USA Today: Trump’s Political Future Is Unknown. Empty headlines that seem to promote rather than report, just like they do on the subjects of vaccines and fluoride.
In doing so they ignore and thus slight the millions of parents who have formed vaccine freedom advocacy organizations across America. Some of them were once ardent believers in vaccines — now caring for a child, who in many cases, suffered crippling injuries after a trip to the pediatrician where they got shot up with all sorts of “harmless, necessary” CDC-recommended vaccines.
If vaccines are so effective, then forcing them on others shouldn’t be an option.
But yet, at the eve of the election of the century, the pro-Harris media, so desperate to make sure the ignorant don’t falter and grow a brain in time to realize that a vote for the cackling hyena is a vote for, as George Orwell, so aptly coined – the thought police — is essentially propagandizing that very mandate.
It’s disgraceful. Evidence should never be dispelled as disinformation in the name of politics.
Trump supporters would do well to take heed of that.
Regardless of the outcome of this election, we free-thinking Americans need to start dismantling the status quo, stop parroting those proven to have self-serving agendas, and stop calling people like Kennedy conspiracy theorists.