Clean teeth… no cavities… and NO fluoride!
It’s FLUORIDE or NOTHING. At least, that’s what the mainstream wants you to believe.
It’s pretty desperate for you to buy into this, too.
And it’s out with a new report that ludicrously claims that you can’t brush with ANYTHING else at all. According to the mainstream, using a fluoride-free toothpaste is just as bad as not brushing your teeth.
And if you make the switch yourself, your teeth will rot right out of your skull.
Hmmm… last time I checked, I still had all of my teeth.
So, I used them to bite into this new study, and I found… well… it’s pretty much toothless.
The researchers supposedly combed through SEVEN DECADES of science to find the studies to use in this analysis. In all that time… across all of those years… they only found three measly studies that tested fluoride for tooth decay.
Just three – and all of them were conducted in a single period (from 1977-1981), all involved only children, and all of them combined had just 743 kids.
They say that they couldn’t find many studies because it’s “widely accepted” that fluoride works.
But how in the heck can something be “widely accepted” if it hasn’t been subject to ANY rigorous studies in at least 70 years?
Answer: You can’t accept it. You have to question it -- especially fluoride, one of the most powerful neurotoxins on the planet.
That’s not my opinion. That’s “WIDELY ACCEPTED.”
Read the label on the toothpaste, and you’ll see a frightening warning: “If you accidentally swallow more than used for brushing, get medical help or contact a poison control center immediately.”
Yes. It’s that dangerous.
No one’s going around eating toothpaste – I hope – but even in NORMAL amounts, this stuff can hurt you in ways that are not immediately obvious, including learning and memory problems, cancer, kidney damage, and more.
Clearly, if there’s a better option, you want it.
And I’ve got it.
The “new” meta-analysis claims that non-fluoride toothpastes don’t work -- but given that the original studies were done in the 1970s, I’m guessing that the non-fluoride options used weren’t very good.
Today, we know more about what works and what doesn’t, including fluoride-free ways to fight the germs behind tooth decay.
The natural sweetener xylitol can help wipe out bacteria in the mouth, including the Streptococcus mutans that often causes cavities.
A 2013 study – also on kids – put a xylitol-only toothpaste up against one with both xylitol and fluoride. The mix did better, but not by much. In fact, the difference was NOT considered significant.
In other words, xylitol alone is about as effective as fluoride… but with none of the brain-rotting dangers.