to enforce that you'll need a pretty serious censorship machine, which is arguably even worse
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Replying to @whitequark
If censorship = prior restraint, no. Just prosecuting ppl who go around promoting quackery.
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Replying to @RichFelker @whitequark
There's always a money trail to the ones having significant impact.
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Replying to @RichFelker @whitequark
And if you think quackery has no impact on public health just look at the antivax movement.
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Replying to @RichFelker
as much as it saddens me to say it, in context of United States distrust of public health measures is rational
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Replying to @whitequark @RichFelker
this is the government that has quite literally and deliberately poisoned or infected its citizens
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Replying to @whitequark @RichFelker
"don't put fluoride in our water" is not an unreasonable demand in this context
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Replying to @cr1901 @RichFelker
medically, nothing, as long there isn't too much of it
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Replying to @whitequark @cr1901
Not quite. Excessive amounts affect development of (at least badly discolor) teeth in children.
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This is not from anti-fluoride ppl but diagnosis from every dentist I've ever seen.
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