FLUORIDATION REVISITED
Yes, I confess: I'm a
veteran anti-fluoridationist, thereby – not for the first time –
risking placing myself in the camp of "right-wing kooks and
fanatics." It has always been a bit of mystery to me why
left-environmentalists, who shriek in horror at a bit of Alar on
apples, who cry "cancer" even more absurdly than the boy cried
"Wolf," who hate every chemical additive known to man, still cast
their benign approval upon fluoride, a highly toxic and probably
carcinogenic substance. And not only let fluoride emissions off the
hook, but endorse uncritically the massive and continuing dumping of
fluoride into the nation's water supply.
First: the generalized case for and against
fluoridation of water. The case for is almost incredibly thin,
boiling down to the alleged fact of substantial reductions in dental
cavities in kids aged 5 to 9. Period. There are no claimed
benefits for anyone older than nine! For this the entire adult
population of a fluoridated area must be subjected to mass
medication!
The case against, even apart from the specific evils
of fluoride, is powerful and overwhelming.
(1) Compulsory mass medication is medically evil, as
well as socialistic. It is starkly clear that one key to any
medication is control of the dose; different people, at
different stages of risk, need individual dosages tailored to their
needs. And yet with water compulsorily fluoridated, the dose applies
to everyone, and is necessarily proportionate to the amount of water
one drinks.
What is the medical justification for a guy who drinks
ten glasses of water a day receiving ten times the fluorine dose of
a guy who drinks only one glass? The whole process is monstrous as
well as idiotic.
(2) Adults, in fact children over nine, get no
benefits from their compulsory medication, yet they imbibe fluorides
proportionately to their water intake.
(3) Studies have shown that while kids 5 to 9 may have
their cavities reduced by fluoridation, said kids ages 9 to 12 have
more cavities, so that after 12 the cavity benefits
disappear. So that, at best, the question boils down to: are
we to subject ourselves to the possible dangers of fluoridation
solely to save dentists the irritation of dealing with
squirming kids aged 5 to 9?
(4) Any parents who want to give their kids the
dubious benefits of fluoridation can do so individually: by
giving their kids fluoride pills, with doses regulated instead of
haphazardly proportionate to the kids' thirst; and/or, as we all
know, they can brush their teeth with fluoride-added toothpaste. How
about freedom of individual choice?
(5) Let us not omit the long-suffering taxpayer, who
has to pay for the hundreds of thousands of tons of fluorides poured
into the nation's socialized water supply every year. The days of
private water companies, once flourishing in the U.S., are long
gone, although the market, in recent years, has popped up in the
form of increasingly popular private bottled water even though far
more expensive than socialized free water.
Nothing loony or kooky about any of these arguments,
is there? So much for the general case pro and con fluoridation.
When we get to the specific ills of fluoridation, the case against
becomes even more overpowering, as well as grisly.
During the 1940s and 50s, when the successful push for
fluoridation was underway, the pro-forces touted the controlled
experiment of Newburgh and Kingston, two neighboring small cities in
upstate New York, with much the same demographics. Newburgh had been
fluoridated and Kingston had not, and the powerful pro-fluoridation
Establishment trumpeted the fact that ten years later, dental
cavities in kids 5 to 9 in Newburgh were considerably lower than in
Kingston (originally, the rates of every disease had been about the
same in the two places). OK, but the antis raising the disquieting
fact that, after ten years, both the cancer and the heart disease
rates were now significantly higher in Newburgh. How did the
Establishment treat this criticism? By dismissing it as
irrelevant, as kooky scare tactics. Oh?
Why were these and later problems and charges ignored
and overridden, and why the rush to judgment to inflict fluoridation
on America? Who was behind this drive, and how did the opponents
acquire the "right-wing kook" image?
THE DRIVE FOR FLUORIDATION
The official drive began abruptly just before the end
of World War II, pushed by the U.S. Public Health Service, then in
the Treasury Department. In 1945, the federal government selected
two Michigan cities to conduct an official "15-year" study; one
city, Grand Rapids, was fluoridated, a control city was left
unfluoridated. (I am indebted to a recent revisionist article on
fluoridation by the medical writer Joel Griffiths, in the left-wing
muckraking journal Covert Action Information Bulletin:
"Fluoride: Commie Plot or Capitalist Ploy?" [Fall 1992], pp. 26-28,
63-66.) Yet, before five years were up, the government killed its
own "scientific study," by fluoridating the water in the second city
in Michigan. Why? Under the excuse that its action was caused by
"popular demand" for fluoridation; as we shall see, the "popular
demand" was generated by the government and the Establishment
itself. Indeed, as early as 1946, under the federal campaign, six
American cities fluoridated their water, and 87 more joined the
bandwagon by 1950.
A key figure in the successful drive for fluoridation
was Oscar R. Ewing, who was appointed by President Truman in 1947 as
head of the Federal Security Agency, which encompassed the Public
Health Service (PHS), and which later blossomed into our beloved
Cabinet office of Health, Education, and Welfare. One reason for the
left's backing of fluoridation – in addition to its being socialized
medicine and mass medication, for them a good in itself – was that
Ewing was a certified Truman Fair Dealer and leftist, and avowed
proponent of socialized medicine, a high official in the
then-powerful Americans for Democratic Action, the nation's central
organization of "anti-Communist liberals" (read: Social Democrats or
Mensheviks). Ewing mobilized not only the respectable left but also
the Establishment Center. The powerful drive for compulsory
fluoridation was spearheaded by the PHS, which soon mobilized the
nation's establishment organizations of dentists and physicians.
The mobilization, the national clamor for
fluoridation, and the stamping of opponents with the right-wing kook
image, was all generated by the public relations man hired by Oscar
Ewing to direct the drive. For Ewing hired none other than Edward L.
Bernays, the man with the dubious honor of being called the "father
of public relations." Bernays, the nephew of Sigmund Freud, was
called "The Original Spin Doctor" in an admiring article in the
Washington Post on the occasion of the old manipulator's
100th birthday in late 1991. The fact that right-wing groups such as
the John Birch Society correctly called fluoridation "creeping
socialism" and blamed Soviet Communism as the source of the
fluoridation campaign (no, not Bolsheviks, guys: but a
Menshevik-State Capitalist alliance, see below) was used by the
Bernaysians to discredit all the opposition.
As a retrospective scientific article pointed out
about the fluoridation movement, one of its widely distributed
dossiers listed opponents of fluoridation "in alphabetical order
reputable scientists, convicted felons, food faddists, scientific
organizations, and the Ku Klux Klan." (Bette Hileman, "Fluoridation
of Water," Chemical and Engineering News 66 [August 1, 1988],
p. 37; quoted in Griffiths, p. 63) In his 1928 book
Propaganda, Bernays laid bare the devices he would use:
Speaking of the "mechanism which controls the public mind," which
people like himself could manipulate, Bernays added that "Those who
manipulate the unseen mechanism of society constitute an invisible
government which is the true ruling power of our country...our minds
are molded, our tastes formed, our ideas suggested, largely by men
we have never heard of..." And the process of manipulating leaders
of groups, "either with or without their conscious cooperation,"
will "automatically influence" the members of such groups.
In describing his practices as PR man for Beech-Nut
Bacon, Bernays tells how he would suggest to physicians to say
publicly that "it is wholesome to eat bacon." For, Bernays added, he
"knows as a mathematical certainty that large numbers of persons
will follow the advice of their doctors because he (the PR man)
understands the psychological relationship of dependence of men on
their physicians." (Edward L. Bernays, Propaganda [New York:
Liveright, 1928], pp. 9, 18, 49, 53. Quoted in Griffiths, p.63) Add
"dentists" to the equation, and substitute "fluoride" for "bacon,"
and we have the essence of the Bernays propaganda campaign.
Before the Bernays campaign, fluoride was largely
known in the public mind as the chief ingredient of bug and rat
poison; after the campaign, it was widely hailed as a safe provider
of healthy teeth and gleaming smiles.
After the 1950s, it was all mopping up – the
fluoridation forces had triumphed, and two-thirds of the nation's
reservoirs were fluoridated. There are still benighted areas of the
country left however (California is less than 16 percent
fluoridated) and the goal of the federal government and its PHS
remains as "universal fluoridation."
DOUBTS CUMULATE
Despite the blitzkrieg victory, however, doubts have
surfaced and gathered in the scientific community. Fluoride is a
non-biodegradable substance, which, in people, accumulates in teeth
and bone – perhaps strengthening kiddies' teeth; but what about
human bones? Two crucial bone problems of fluorides – brittleness
and cancer – began to appear in studies, only to be systematically
blocked by governmental agencies. As early as 1956, a federal study
found nearly twice as many premalignant bone defects in young males
in Newbergh as in unfluoridated Kingston; but this finding was
quickly dismissed as "spurious."
Oddly enough, despite the 1956 study and carcinogenic
evidence popping up since the 1940s, the federal government never
conducted its own beloved animal carcinogenicity test on fluorides.
Finally, in 1975, biochemist John Yiamouyiannis and Dean Berk, a
retired official of the federal government's own National Cancer
Institute (NCI), presented a paper before the annual meeting of the
American Society of Biological Chemists. The paper reported a 5 to
10 percent increase in total cancer rates in those U.S. cities which
had fluoridated their water. The findings were disputed, but
triggered congressional hearings two years later, where the
government revealed to shocked Congressmen that it had never tested
fluoride for cancer. Congress ordered the NCI to conduct such
tests.
Talk about foot-dragging! Incredibly, it took the NCI
twelve years to finish its tests, finding "equivocal evidence" that
fluoride caused bone cancer in male rats. Under further direction of
Congress, the NCI studied cancer trends in the U.S., and found
nationwide evidence of "a rising rate of bone and joint cancer at
all ages," especially in youth, in counties that had fluoridated
their water, but no such rise was seen in "non-fluoridated"
counties.
In more detailed studies, for areas of Washington
state and Iowa, NCI found that from the 1970s to the 1980s bone
cancer for males under 20 had increased by 70 percent in the
fluoridated areas of these states, but had decreased by 4
percent in the non-fluoridated areas. Sounds pretty conclusive to
me, but the NCI set some fancy statisticians to work on the data, to
conclude that these findings, too, were "spurious." Dispute over
this report drove the federal government to one of its favorite
ploys in virtually every area: the allegedly expert, bipartisan,
"value-free" commission.
The government had already done the commission bit in
1983, when disturbing studies on fluoridation drove our old friend
the PHS to form a commission of "world-class experts" to review
safety data on fluorides in water. Interestingly, the panel found to
its grave concern that most of the alleged evidence of fluoride's
safety scarcely existed. The 1983 panel recommended caution on
fluoride exposure for children. Interestingly, the panel strongly
recommended that the fluoride content of drinking water be no
greater than two parts per million for children up to nine, because
of worries about the fluoride effect on children's skeletons, and
potential heart damage.
The chairman of the panel, Jay R. Shapiro of the
National Institute of Health, warned the members, however, that the
PHS might "modify" the findings, since "the report deals with
sensitive political issues." Sure enough, when Surgeon General
Everett Koop released the official report a month later, the federal
government had thrown out the panel's most important conclusions and
recommendations, without consulting the panel. Indeed, the panel
never received copies of the final, doctored, version. The
government's alterations were all in a pro-fluoride direction,
claiming that there was no "scientific documentation" of any
problems at fluoride levels below 8 parts per million.
In addition to the bone cancer studies for the late
1980s, evidence is piling up that fluorides lead to bone fractures.
In the past two years, no less than eight epidemiological studies
have indicated the fluoridation has increased the rate of bone
fractures in males and females of all ages. Indeed, since 1957, the
bone fracture rate among male youth has increased sharply in the
United States, and the U.S. hip fracture rate is now the highest in
the world. In fact, a study in the traditionally pro-fluoride
Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA),
August 12, 1992, found that even "low levels of fluoride may
increase the risk of hip fracture in the elderly." JAMA
concluded that "it is now appropriate to revisit the issue of water
fluoridation."
Clearly, it was high time for another federal
commission. During 1990-91, a new commission, chaired by veteran PHS
official and long-time pro-fluoridationist Frank E. Young,
predictably concluded that "no evidence" was found associating
fluoride and cancer. On bone fractures, the commission blandly
stated that "further studies are required." But no further studies
or soul-searching were needed for its conclusion: "The U.S. Public
Health Service should continue to support optimal fluoridation of
drinking water." Presumably, they did not conclude that "optimal"
meant zero.
Despite the Young whitewash, doubts are piling up even
within the federal government. James Huff, a director of the U.S.
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, concluded in
1992 that animals in the government's study developed cancer,
especially bone cancer from being given fluoride – and there was
nothing "equivocal" about his conclusion.
Various scientists for the Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) have turned to anti-fluoridation toxicologist William
Marcus's warning that fluoride causes not just cancer, but also bone
fractures, arthritis, and other disease. Marcus mentions, too, that
an unreleased study by the New Jersey Health Department (a state
where only 15 percent of the population is fluoridated) shows that
the bone cancer rate among young males is no less than six times
higher in fluoridated than in non-fluoridated areas.
Even coming into question is the long-sacred idea that
fluoridated water at least lowers cavities in children five to nine.
Various top pro-fluoridationists highly touted for their expertise
were suddenly and bitterly condemned when further study led them to
the conclusion that the dental benefits are really negligible. New
Zealand's most prominent pro-fluoridationist was the country's top
dental officer, Dr. John Colquhoun.
As chairman of the Fluoridation Promotion Committee,
Colquhoun decided to gather statistics to show doubters the great
merits of fluoridation. To his shock, he found that the percentage
of children free of dental decay was higher in the
non-fluoridated part than in the fluoridated part of New Zealand.
The national health department refused to allow Colquhoun to publish
these findings, and kicked him out as dental director. Similarly, a
top pro-fluoridationist in British Columbia, Canada, Richard G.
Foulkes, concluded that fluoridation is not only dangerous, but that
it is not even effective in reducing tooth decay. Foulkes was
denounced by former colleagues as a propagandist "promoting the
quackery of anti-fluoridationists."
WHY THE FLUORIDATION DRIVE?
Since the case for compulsory fluoridation is so
flimsy, and the case against so overwhelming, the final step is to
ask: why? Why did the Public Health Service get involved in the
first place? How did this thing get started? Here we must keep our
eye on the pivotal role of Oscar R. Ewing, for Ewing was far more
than just a social democrat Fair Dealer.
Fluoride has long been recognized as one of the most
toxic elements found in the earth's crust. Fluorides are by-products
of many industrial processes, being emitted in the air and water,
and probably the major source of this by-product is the aluminum
industry. By the 1920s and 1930s, fluorine was increasingly being
subject to lawsuits and regulations. In particular, by 1938 the
important, relatively new aluminum industry was being placed on a
wartime footing. What to do if its major by-product is a dangerous
poison?
The time had come for damage control; even better, to
reverse the public image of this menacing substance. The Public
Health Service, remember was under the jurisdiction of the Treasury
Department, and treasury secretary all during the 1920s and until
1931 was none other than billionaire Andrew J. Mellon, founder and
head of the powerful Mellon interests, "Mr. Pittsburgh," and founder
and virtual ruler of the Aluminum Corporation of America (ALCOA),
the dominant firm in the aluminum industry.
In 1931, the PHS sent a dentist named H. Trendley Dean
to the West to study the effects of concentrations of naturally
fluoridated water on people's teeth. Dean found that towns high in
natural fluoride seemed to have fewer cavities. This news galvanized
various Mellon scientists into action. In particular, the Mellon
Institute, ALCOA's research lab in Pittsburgh, sponsored a study in
which biochemist Gerald J. Cox fluoridated some lab rats, decided
that cavities in those rats had been reduced and immediately
concluded that "the case (that fluoride reduces cavities) should be
regarded as proved." Instant science!
The following year, 1939, Cox, the ALCOA scientist
working for a company beset by fluoride damage claims, made the
first public proposal for mandatory fluoridation of water. Cox
proceeded to stump the country urging fluoridation. Meanwhile, other
ALCOA-funded scientists trumpeted the alleged safety of fluorides,
in particular the Kettering Laboratory of the University of
Cincinnati.
During World War II, damage claims for fluoride
emissions piled up as expected, in proportion to the great expansion
of aluminum production during the war. But attention from these
claims was diverted, when, just before the end of the war, the PHS
began to push hard for compulsory fluoridation of water. Thus the
drive for compulsory fluoridation of water accomplished two goals in
one shot: it transformed the image of fluorine from a curse to a
blessing that will strengthen every kid's teeth, and it provided a
steady and substantial monetary demand for fluorides to dump
annually into the nation's water.
One interesting footnote to this story is that whereas
fluorine in naturally fluoridated water comes in the form of
calcium fluoride, the substance dumped into every locality is
instead sodium fluoride. The Establishment defense that
"fluoride is fluoride" becomes unconvincing when we consider two
points: (a) calcium is notoriously good for bones and teeth, so the
anti-cavity effect in naturally fluoridated water might well be due
to the calcium and not the fluorine; and (b) sodium fluoride happens
to be the major by-product of the manufacture of aluminum.
Which brings us to Oscar R. Ewing. Ewing arrived in
Washington in 1946, shortly after the initial PHS push began,
arriving there as long-time counsel, now chief counsel, for ALCOA,
making what was then an astronomical legal fee of $750,000 a year
(something like $7,000,000 a year in present dollars). A year later,
Ewing took charge of the Federal Security Agency, which included the
PHS, and waged the successful national drive for water fluoridation.
After a few years, having succeeded in his campaign, Ewing stepped
down from public service, and returned to private life, including
his chief counselship of the Aluminum Corporation of America.
There is an instructive lesson in this little saga, a
lesson how and why the Welfare State came to America. It came as an
alliance of three major forces: ideological social democrats,
ambitious technocratic bureaucrats, and Big Businessmen seeking
privileges from the State. In the fluoridation saga, we might call
the whole process "ALCOA-socialism." The Welfare State redounds to
the welfare not of most of society but of these particular venal and
exploitative groups.