Thursday, April 7, 2022

Flouride is only effective topically, not systemically. That's why we tell kids to spit the toothpaste, not swallow it

Too many folks online live to condemn fluoride  Fine.  Yes, if you ingest it like a soda, then it's bad for you.  But as a topical, it's too valuable for tooth health.  Try using a fluoride-free toothpaste for a couple of years and find out what happens to your teeth.  

280mg Intravenous Melatonin stops this type of Covid Brain damage

I will fill IVM rxs & compound as well at Mt Juliet Pharmacy in TN… and for lots of good reasons!

The shocking story of how Aspartame Became Legal

From I Am Awake

If you want to gauge the quality of a society or culture, no better place to look than the food supply.  "Spring 1971– Neuroscientist Dr. John Olney (whose pioneering work with monosodium glutamate was responsible for having it removed from baby foods) informs Searle that his studies show that aspartic acid (one of the ingredients of aspartame) caused holes in the brains of infant mice. One of Searle’s own researchers confirmed Dr. Olney’s findings in a similar study."

Aspartame is 200 times sweeter than table sugar.  

From MadeHow

Aspartame is an artificial sweetener used in reduced calorie foods. It is derived primarily from two naturally occurring amino acids chemically combined and designated by the chemical name N-L-aaspartyl-L-phenylalanine-l-methyl ester (APM). Discovered inadvertently in 1965, it was later patented and is currently the most utilized artificial sweetener in the United States.
Read more:  http://www.madehow.com/Volume-3/Aspartame.html#ixzz7PoGPzDqr

A list of products containing aspartame.

Pfizer rakes in $81 billion a year, making it the 28th most valuable company in the world. Johnson & Johnson ranks 15th, with $93.77 billion

Meaning that these guys can afford $20-$30 billion lawsuits every few years.  

By Rebecca Strong

After graduating from Columbia University with a chemical engineering degree, my grandfather went on to work for Pfizer for almost two decades, culminating his career as the company’s Global Director of New Products. I was rather proud of this fact growing up — it felt as if this father figure, who raised me for several years during my childhood, had somehow played a role in saving lives. But in recent years, my perspective on Pfizer — and other companies in its class — has shifted. Blame it on the insidious big pharma corruption laid bare by whistleblowers in recent years. Blame it on the endless string of big pharma lawsuits revealing fraud, deception, and cover-ups. Blame it on the fact that I witnessed some of their most profitable drugs ruin the lives of those I love most. All I know is, that pride I once felt has been overshadowed by a sticky skepticism I just can’t seem to shake.In 1973, my grandpa and his colleagues celebrated as Pfizer crossed a milestone: the one-billion-dollar sales mark. These days, Pfizer rakes in $81 billion a year, making it the 28th most valuable company in the world. Johnson & Johnson ranks 15th, with $93.77 billion. To put things into perspective, that makes said companies wealthier than most countries in the world. And thanks to those astronomical profit margins, the Pharmaceuticals and Health Products industry is able to spend more on lobbying than any other industry in America.