FDA cracks down on unapproved fluoride drugs for kids as science exposes decades of deception
For decades, American children have been prescribed unapproved fluoride supplements under the guise of cavity prevention — despite mounting evidence that ingesting fluoride damages developing brains, disrupts thyroid function, and alters gut health. Now, in a rare admission of regulatory failure, the FDA is finally taking action to remove these dangerous drugs from the market. The move follows a landmark federal court ruling confirming
fluoride’s neurotoxic risks and a growing public awakening to the corruption that has kept this chemical in our water and medicine cabinets for generations.
Key points:
- The FDA is removing unapproved fluoride prescription drugs for children, admitting they were never safety-tested.
- Fluoride’s benefits are topical — ingesting it provides no dental benefit but is linked to IQ loss, thyroid dysfunction, and gut damage.
- The American Dental Association (ADA) and public health agencies have long ignored science, pushing fluoride as a "public health achievement" while suppressing risks.
- A federal court recently ruled that fluoridated water poses an "unreasonable risk" to children’s cognitive development.
- States like Utah and Florida are banning water fluoridation as public trust in institutional health guidance collapses.
The FDA’s belated reckoning with fluoride’s dangers
For years, the FDA turned a blind eye as doctors prescribed concentrated fluoride tablets and lozenges to infants as young as six months old — despite the agency never approving these drugs. As attorney Michael Connett revealed, fluoride supplements were grandfathered into use in the 1940s, bypassing modern safety reviews. Before being rebranded as a dental miracle, fluoride was a common rat poison.
Now, FDA Commissioner Marty Makary admits what independent researchers have warned for decades: "The best way to prevent cavities in children is by avoiding excessive sugar intake and good dental hygiene, not by altering a child’s microbiome." His statement echoes a seismic shift in understanding —
fluoride doesn’t need to be swallowed to work. In fact, swallowing it may poison the very systems it was falsely claimed to protect.
The ADA’s crumbling fluoride narrative
The American Dental Association’s (ADA) unwavering promotion of
fluoride as a public health necessity is not just scientifically dubious — it’s a dangerous deception. While the organization continues to push fluoride supplements for children in non-fluoridated areas, the evidence against this practice is overwhelming. A 2011 Cochrane review, the gold standard in medical research, found no credible studies demonstrating that fluoride supplements prevent cavities in children. Yet, the ADA clings to this outdated recommendation, ignoring the mounting body of research exposing fluoride’s toxic legacy.
The ADA’s narrative crumbles under scrutiny when confronted with fluoride’s well-documented harms:
- Thyroid Suppression: Fluoride competes with iodine, a critical nutrient for thyroid function. Studies link fluoridated water to hypothyroidism, with research from the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health (2015) showing higher rates of under-active thyroid in fluoridated areas.
- Neurotoxicity: Over 60 peer-reviewed studies now associate fluoride with lower IQ in children, including a landmark 2017 NIH-funded study (Environmental Health Perspectives) confirming that prenatal fluoride exposure reduces cognitive function. Harvard researchers have classified fluoride as a developmental neurotoxin, alongside lead and mercury.
- Endocrine Disruption: The National Research Council (2006) warned that fluoride disrupts hormone systems, potentially contributing to early puberty, infertility, and diabetes.
Dr. Hardy Limeback, a former fluoride advocate turned whistleblower, applauds the FDA’s move but warns the fight isn’t over. "Toddlers swallow 60% of their fluoride toothpaste," he notes,
urging scrutiny of all ingested fluoride sources, even the ones that are topically beneficial. Even toothpaste tubes now carry poison warnings—proof that the industry knows the risks it once denied.
The end of water fluoridation
The FDA’s crackdown follows a federal court ruling that fluoridated water endangers children’s brains—a verdict the Fluoride Action Network (FAN) calls "the beginning of the end" for mass medication. States like Utah and Florida are already banning the practice, joining most of Europe, where fluoridation was rejected decades ago.
As Stuart Cooper of FAN declares, "The lie that fluoride is safe to ingest is collapsing." The question now is whether the FDA will extend its scrutiny to fluoridated water—or if the public will have to dismantle this outdated experiment themselves.
Watch The Fluoride Deception posted by FalseFlag.info at Brighteon.com
Sources include:
ChildrensHealthDefense.org
HHS.gov
Pubmed.gov
Brighteon.com