Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Pink Disease and Mercury Poisoning

Ronnie Dunn Cost of Livin
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nBWjzBSt8eE

Ronnie Dunn We All Bleed Red
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ElCIGdLx4UM&feature=related

How Far to Waco Ronnie Dunn
http://www.theboot.com/2011/05/17/ronnie-dunn-how-far-to-waco-video/

Waco New Revelation 2011
http://911liarsexposed.blogspot.com/2011/05/waco-new-revelation-2011.html

http://www.advancedhealthplan.com/mercury.html
Excerpt:







Mercury on the Mind


by Donald W. Miller, Jr., MD
Although they afflict widely different age groups, autism and Alzheimer’s disease share a common cause: mercury. Dr. Boyd Haley, professor and chair of the chemistry department at the University of Kentucky, and Dr. Bernard Rimland, founder of the Autism Research Institute, presented evidence at this year’s Doctors for Disaster Preparedness meeting that connects mercury with these diseases.
This heavy metal is highly poisonous. A Dartmouth professor studying the chemical characteristics of an organic form of mercury – dimethyl mercury – spilled two drops of it on her gloved hand. The first sign of mercury poisoning occurred four months later when her speech began to be slurred. This was followed by difficulty walking and loss of vision. She then fell into a coma and died. Another person, attempting to smelt the silver in dental amalgams he obtained (they are 35 percent silver, 50 percent mercury, and 15 percent tin, zinc, and other metals), heated them in a frying pan. The mercury vapor thus generated killed him quickly. The two other family members in the house at the time also died.

http://www.naturalnews.tv/v.asp?v=1B1EAA33F68516F71CC582A6074F6079
Video
Robert Scott Bell -Monsanto's mercury madness 10/31/10

http://www.colgate.com/app/CP/US/EN/OC/Information/Articles/Oral-and-Dental-Health-Basics/Checkups-and-Dental-Procedures/Fillings/article/Types-of-Fillings.cvsp
Excerpt:

Types of Fillings



Made of: A mixture of silver, tin, zinc, copper, and mercury. Mercury is nearly 50% of the mixture.
Types: Traditional (non-bonded), bonded
Used for: Fillings in back teeth
Lasts: At least seven years, usually longer
Costs: The least expensive type of restorative material

http://www.heavymetalstest.com/mouthwash.php
Excerpt:


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mercury_poisoning

http://www.simplyteeth.com/category/sections/Child/5RepairTeeth/IntroductionOverview.asp?category=child&section=5&page=1

http://www.pinkdisease.org/

http://www.pinkdisease.org/PDpamphlet290111.htm

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medical_simulation

http://bostonreview.net/BR30.6/starfield.php

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iatrogenesis

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dental_amalgam_controversy
Excerpt:
The dental amalgam controversy refers to the conflicting views over the use of amalgam as a filling material mainly because it contains the element mercury. The concern centers on the health effects of toxicity or allergy which may be associated with constant mercury exposure, particularly as a potential cause of chronic illnesses, autoimmune disorders, neurodegenerative diseases, birth defects, oral lesions, and mental disorders.[citation needed] Scientists agree[citation needed]that dental amalgam fillings leach mercury into the mouth, but studies vary widely in the amount and whether such amount presents significant health risks. Estimations run from 1-3 µg/day (FDA) up to 27 µg/day (Patterson).[1][2] The effects of that amount of exposure is also disputed,[3][4] and currently dental amalgam is approved for use in most countries, although Norway, Denmark and Sweden are notable exceptions.[5]
Dentists who advocate the use of amalgam point out that it is durable,[6] cheap, and easy to use. On average, resin composites last only half as long as dental amalgam,[7] although more recent studies find them comparable to amalgam in durability,[8] and dental porcelain is much more expensive. However, the gap between amalgam and composites may be closing.[9] Further, concerns have been raised about the endocrine disrupting (in particular, estrogen-mimicking) effects of plastic chemicals such as Bisphenol A used in composite resins.[10][11]

http://midwifery.megtaylor.co.uk/index.php/index/15-obstetric-and-midwifery-thinking
Excerpt:
In the 1950s Isabel Menzies, as she then was, worked with a number of other psychoanalytically trained people from the Tavistock Clinic in London applying psychoanalytic principles of understanding to large organisations.  She was approached by a London teaching hospital to investigate why they were unable to retain their nursing students.  She observed the way that nurses, trained and untrained, worked and made a number of observations and conclusions.
She described how the task of nursing involves high levels of anxiety: the nurse must deal intimately with bodily processes, illness is her raison d’etre, and death is always a possibility. This understandably evokes anxiety in the professionals involved in care of the sick, the patients themselves, and their relatives. In order to make the level of anxiety manageable nurses organise their care in a way which minimises the depth of involvement they have with their patients. Nursing fragments the care of the patient into discrete tasks; differentiates and distances nurse from patient by means of uniform and modes of address; encourages detachment and denial of feelings; eliminates the need for reflection and decision making by ritualising tasks; attempts to underplay the reality of the situation by “collusive social redistribution of responsibility and irresponsibility”.  This all reduces anxiety by minimising the extent to which the nurse, as a whole person, encounters the patient, as a whole person.  The nurse does not have to take on board empathetically the patient's frightening reality.
I should like to suggest that this distancing is still a major defensive response.  It has been entrenched by moves within nursing to raise its professional status by raising its educational status.
Amalgam

http://www.mercuryexposure.info/environment/solutions/amalgam-separators/item/448-michigan-dentists-get-$270000-to-install-amalgam-separators
Excerpt:

Amidst financial crisis, Michigan dentists get $270,000 to install amalgam separators.

Written by 
Rate this item
(0 votes)
ada
Dentists have been polluting the environment with dental mercury amalgam waste for over 100 years. All the while oblivious to the fact they were contaminating the environment with mercury or denying they were the most significant source or mercury pollution.
Now with the advent of the environmental movement in full swing and the EPA soon to issue a mandatory amalgam separator regulation for dentists, Michigan has allotted $270,000 to give to dentists to help them stop contaminating the environment. Michigan dentists must have a heck of a lobbying organization to pull off such generosity from a state such as Michigan with all of its financial woes.
interesting facts about ADA lobbying from SourceWatch.org
According to a January 2006 search of the online database Lobbyists.info, the ADA lobbies on "Environmental / Superfund" and health issues. It has a political action committee, the American Dental Political Action Committee, whose director is Francis X. McLaughlin. ADA's Washington DC office has at least 13 staff people, including three Congressional lobbyists: Michael A. GrahamWilliam Prentice and Judith C. Sherman. According to the Center for Responsive Politics, the American Dental Political Action Committee gave $1,481,504 to federal candidates in the 2004 election cycle, 40% to Democrats and 60% to Republicans. [2]
ADA also hires outside counsel and consultants, including Larson Dodd Stewart & Myrick and Wexler and Walker Public Policy Associates on health issues, and Pepper Hamilton LLP on environmental / Superfund issues, according to Lobbyist.info.
According to the Center for Public Integrity, the ADA spent $2,520,000 on lobbying from 1998 to 2004. Over that same period, the ADA was represented by WPP Group plc, Larson Dodd Stewart & Myrick and Baker & Hostetler[3]
and Public Relations
ADA has also hired the New York-based PR and marketing firm Van Vechten & Company[8] According to the firm's webiste, they won a Presidential Citation for their work for ADA. [9] The firm's website briefly describes their ADA work: [10]
What did we do for the ADA? We fought false information about the supposed risks from fluoride. We fought false reports about intensified risks from amalgams and the mercury contained within fillings.

No comments:

Post a Comment