Hello and welcome to a much awaited blog post, a blog
post pitting a water fluoridation enthusiast against a water fluoridation
opposition. We’ll call this blog post ‘Rumble in the Water System’ (I feel like
only boxing enthusiasts will get that one). Both have heavy weight arguments in this
controversial topic. In the anti-corner we have Barry Groves wearing the scholarly
work ‘Fluoride: Drinking Ourselves to Death?: The Scientific Argument Against
Water Fluoridation’ and in the black corner we have Bernard Turnock wearing the
scholarly work ‘Public Health: What It Is and How It Works’.
Groves, from the anti-corner, comes out strong with an immediate
heavy right hook arguing that the problem with fluoridated water does not come
from the consuming of drinking water containing fluoride but instead the extra
absorption from bathing and consumption of beverages and food created using
fluoridated water (Groves, 2001). He follows this up
with a speedy one-two combo referring to Dr Julian Andelman, a professor of
water chemistry, who found that more fluoride is absorbed through showering and
the washing of clothes than through drinking it (Groves, 2001). He backs this one-two combo up with a
body shot stating that the US EPA have found similar results but have not
commissioned a published study (Groves, 2001). The bell rings and
the first round is over, a solid first round performance from the anti-corner (Groves, 2001). Barry Groves is
obviously fighting for the anti-corner with a belief that the extra absorption
of fluoride through other means rather than just drinking the water is a problem greatly overlooked and damaging to health.
Turnock, from the pro-corner, comes out to begin the
second quarter with a strong bolo punch arguing that fluoridated water positively affects
those of lower socioeconomic statuses (Turnock, 2009). He follows this up
with a check hook stating that people with a low socioeconomic statuses benefit
from having to pay less dental care services with fluoridated water. He
counters the argument that some communities get enough fluoride through
consuming beverages and foods created in pro fluoride communities with a quick jab
arguing that people of the poorer classes
do not consume as much of those products as people from the middle class due to having less money. He was stunned by a counter argument but came back strong in
the second half of the round. He obviously views fluoridation of water as a pro due to the positive affects on those who are less well off economically.
This one is to tough to call we'll have to go to the judges on this one (the judges are you guys, there weren't actually people judging these arguments).
Groves, B. (2001). Fluoride: Drinking Ourselves to
Death?: The Scientific Argument Against Water Fluoridation . Dublin: Gill
& Macmillan Ltd.
Turnock, B. (2009). Public Health: What It Is and
How It Works. Burlington: Jones & Bartlett Publishers.
Thanks for coming to this heavy weight blog, hope you enjoyed yourself
Bye bye now :)
Bye bye now :)
NIce job finding the sources.
ReplyDeleteWoah! What a good way to describe the opposing opinions! Using the boxing analogy was really clever and very impressive!
ReplyDeleteLooking forward to the next.
Great work on the clever phrasing and analogies! Works really well for a topic as divided as this one is.
ReplyDelete