So, what was in 'swish' anyway?
So, what was in 'swish' anyway?
In early elementary school my class was given a small cup of flouride 'swish' to rinse our mouths out with every morning.
The USAF has admitted (In 1997, I believe) to spraying Chicago areas with chemicals through the 1970s that are correlated to causing deformities and cancer.
There's no reason why you should trust the government on anything. I don't know of a single case where a child or teacher brought the so-called swish to a scientist to have it formally investigated. Even then, if it contained some sort of chemical agent, the scientist would either not detect it, or certainly would never be able to publish his finds, if in fact whatever was in it was for nefarious purposes. The government is so tight with it's information, it boggles the mind to fathom how they're keeping tabs on everything so well... Just look at the released UFO documents from the 1940s-1960s on FBI.gov in their freedom of information act section... Someone would show up at the local newspaper saying they saw a flying saucer, and within an hour an X-Files team from the local office would be there giving that person the run down.
By saying anything about UFOs, or the X-Files in this, many would laugh or say my question is discredited because it smells of Internet paranoia, fueled by blogs and the easy accessibility of once sensitive information. I assure you, as long as you don't believe there are 'Raelians' and 'Lizard People', your opinion is quite valid. UFOs are a real phenomenon which remain unexplained. Those who repudiate them are merely helping those who probably want to keep them a secret.
Back to swish.
Why was it only done for a few years? If it was a healthy practice then why isn't it being done today? Why is there virtually no information about it on the Internet?
The USAF has admitted (In 1997, I believe) to spraying Chicago areas with chemicals through the 1970s that are correlated to causing deformities and cancer.
There's no reason why you should trust the government on anything. I don't know of a single case where a child or teacher brought the so-called swish to a scientist to have it formally investigated. Even then, if it contained some sort of chemical agent, the scientist would either not detect it, or certainly would never be able to publish his finds, if in fact whatever was in it was for nefarious purposes. The government is so tight with it's information, it boggles the mind to fathom how they're keeping tabs on everything so well... Just look at the released UFO documents from the 1940s-1960s on FBI.gov in their freedom of information act section... Someone would show up at the local newspaper saying they saw a flying saucer, and within an hour an X-Files team from the local office would be there giving that person the run down.
By saying anything about UFOs, or the X-Files in this, many would laugh or say my question is discredited because it smells of Internet paranoia, fueled by blogs and the easy accessibility of once sensitive information. I assure you, as long as you don't believe there are 'Raelians' and 'Lizard People', your opinion is quite valid. UFOs are a real phenomenon which remain unexplained. Those who repudiate them are merely helping those who probably want to keep them a secret.
Back to swish.
Why was it only done for a few years? If it was a healthy practice then why isn't it being done today? Why is there virtually no information about it on the Internet?
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eepberries
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eepberries
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I don't know what would be in those, but fluoride/peroxidase rinses are still used by dentists, as far as I know.
In addition to what I noted about people getting fluoride from water and toothpaste, I'd also guess that having children use fluoride rinses might not be a good idea if they can easily swallow it.
In addition to what I noted about people getting fluoride from water and toothpaste, I'd also guess that having children use fluoride rinses might not be a good idea if they can easily swallow it.
Last edited by werldhed on Wed Aug 10, 2005 8:20 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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eepberries
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The whole fluoride thing is a little foggy to me in general. I know that swallowing any noticable amount is harmful, but apparently a little is supposed to be good for your teeth, which is why they put trace amounts in the water.
But if ingesting a noticeable amount is bad for you, I can't imagine that it would be good to even swallow trace amounts every day for a lifetime. Can it?
But if ingesting a noticeable amount is bad for you, I can't imagine that it would be good to even swallow trace amounts every day for a lifetime. Can it?
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eepberries
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Nightshade
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eepberries
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This is just yet another guess, but I'd suppose that the body has a limit for excreting fluoride. So if you are constantly taking in more than whatever that limit is, you're retaining fluoride in the body. Water has a very low concentration of fluoride, and they even recommend having water de-fluorinated if its concentration is too high. Toothpaste and stuff has a much higher concentration, which is why you don't want to eat it.R00k wrote:The whole fluoride thing is a little foggy to me in general. I know that swallowing any noticable amount is harmful, but apparently a little is supposed to be good for your teeth, which is why they put trace amounts in the water.
But if ingesting a noticeable amount is bad for you, I can't imagine that it would be good to even swallow trace amounts every day for a lifetime. Can it?
I have also heard that excessive fluoride is really only a problem for children, but I don't know if that's true.
I know exactly what was in them; flouride and water.rep wrote:Flavored flouride rinses. They were called, "Swish," in my school. Who knows what was actually in them, though.werldhed wrote:Is "swish" actually a product? Or do you just mean fluoride rinses in general?
For some reason you're really on the idiot ball today rep.
There could be some floride mixed into this brown sediment filled ooze I loosely call water. I wonder if its still there after going thru an iron filter, water softner and finally reverse osmosis. Regardless we buy a floride rinse for the kids.werldhed wrote:Wells typically have good naturally-occurring fluoride levels.SplEEb wrote:the school my kids go to could never afford to do that. The government can't afford it either local or federal. And not everybody is privy to city water with floride and chlorine. My whole area is well water.
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[xeno]Julios
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fluoride is an essential mineral that humans cannot produce by themselves.
Somewhere along the evolutionary chain, a mutation broke down the metabolic pathway that would normally produce it (similar to vitamin C, but way more serious, since we absolutely need fluoride to survive).
This is why all children used to die before scientists started introducing it into our water supply and toothpaste.
There are a lot of conspiracy nuts that believe that fluoride is harmful (well DUH anything is harmful in large quantities). These radical anti-fluoride nuts, the sentiments of whom are most wonderfully embodied in a scene from Dr. Strangelove, are a harm to society, and indeed to the human species.
Somewhere along the evolutionary chain, a mutation broke down the metabolic pathway that would normally produce it (similar to vitamin C, but way more serious, since we absolutely need fluoride to survive).
This is why all children used to die before scientists started introducing it into our water supply and toothpaste.
There are a lot of conspiracy nuts that believe that fluoride is harmful (well DUH anything is harmful in large quantities). These radical anti-fluoride nuts, the sentiments of whom are most wonderfully embodied in a scene from Dr. Strangelove, are a harm to society, and indeed to the human species.
Ugh. I grew up on unfiltered well water which was superior in quality to even the city water. Yours sounds disgusting. Reverse osmosis will certainly remove the fluoride, so yeah, a fluoride rinse is probably a good idea (although I think a good toothpaste will probably do the job).SplEEb wrote:There could be some floride mixed into this brown sediment filled ooze I loosely call water. I wonder if its still there after going thru an iron filter, water softner and finally reverse osmosis. Regardless we buy a floride rinse for the kids.werldhed wrote:Wells typically have good naturally-occurring fluoride levels.SplEEb wrote:the school my kids go to could never afford to do that. The government can't afford it either local or federal. And not everybody is privy to city water with floride and chlorine. My whole area is well water.