WaPo | There’s a scene
in Stanley Kubrick’s comic masterpiece “Dr. Strangelove” in which Jack
D. Ripper, an American general who’s gone rogue and ordered a nuclear
attack on the Soviet Union, unspools his paranoid worldview — and the
explanation for why he drinks “only distilled water, or rainwater, and
only pure grain alcohol” — to Lionel Mandrake, a dizzy-with-anxiety
group captain in the Royal Air Force.
Ripper: “Have you ever heard of a thing called fluoridation? Fluoridation of water?”
Mandrake: “Ah, yes, I have heard of that, Jack. Yes, yes.”
Ripper: “Well, do you know what it is?”
Mandrake: “No. No, I don’t know what it is, no.”
Ripper:
“Do you realize that fluoridation is the most monstrously conceived and
dangerous communist plot we have ever had to face?”
The
movie came out in 1964, by which time the health benefits of
fluoridation had been thoroughly established and anti-fluoridation
conspiracy theories could be the stuff of comedy. Yet half a century
later, fluoridation continues to incite fear and paranoia. In 2013,
citizens in Portland, Ore., one of only a few major American cities that
don’t fluoridate, blocked a plan
by local officials to do so. Opponents didn’t like the idea of the
government adding “chemicals” to their water. They claimed that fluoride
could be harmful to human health.
Actually fluoride is a natural
mineral that, in the weak concentrations used in public drinking-water
systems, hardens tooth enamel and prevents tooth decay — a cheap and
safe way to improve dental health for everyone, rich or poor,
conscientious brushers or not. That’s the scientific and medical
consensus.
To which some people in Portland, echoing anti-fluoridation activists around the world, reply: We don’t believe you.
We live in an age when all manner of scientific knowledge — from the safety of fluoride and vaccines
to the reality of climate change — faces organized and often furious
opposition. Empowered by their own sources of information and their own
interpretations of research, doubters have declared war on the consensus
of experts. There are so many of these controversies these days, you’d
think a diabolical agency had put something in the water to make people
argumentative.
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