Saturday, October 8, 2016

Flint Lead Problems Just Got Worse

Flint, Michigan, is known for one thing these days - lead poisoning.

In 2014 Flint began drawing its drinking water from the local Flint River while they waited to connect to a regional water source. Residents began complaining about the water quality, and in 2015, it was discovered that some children in Flint had increased levels of lead in their blood. The Flint River water apparently had elevated lead levels and the children had ingested it.

It was all over from that point, for we all know that lead poisoning is very serious, as it affects brain function, etc.

Now, the residents of Flint have another health problem - and this time it's real. I'll explain the second half of that sentence in a bit.

It seems that the people of Flint have been sufficiently frightened to death by the lead scare to the point that they are afraid to bathe or shower in the "contaminated" water. They are instead using baby wipes to clean themselves. The wipes are evidently not getting the job done. Because of this lack of basic hygiene, 53 Flint residents, so far, have been infected with Shigellosis, which causes bloody diarrhea, fever, and nausea. There are a total of 84 victims of this highly infectious disease throughout the surrounding Genesee County.

So the government first deemed that Flint's water was unsafe, due to high levels of lead contamination. It then provided the baby wipes to residents, in place of bathing and general hygiene. Because the government provided the wipes, the residents naturally assumed that they would be an adequate substitute for a real shower. Obviously, the government was and is wrong, which brings me back to the original lead scare.

As it turns out, the Chicken Littles in government neglected their own EPA and CDC, which long ago deemed that bathing and showering in low lead contaminated water is safe, as skin does not absorb lead.

In other words, the people of Flint and Genesee County could have spared themselves the crippling and drug-resistant Shigellosis disease if not for the hysteria surrounding the original incident.

Regarding the original lead scare, it turns out to be just that. As happens more often than not these days, real science seems to be consistently pushed aside in favor of hysteria and junk science.

The hysteria over lead can be traced back to a single source. Much like the myths that salt kills, and others, the lead myth, too, comes out of the 1970s. It was a good decade for junk science.

The children of Flint were tested and some had blood lead levels (BLL) exceeding 5 micrograms per deciliter. Remember this number.

The man who originated the lead scare was Herbert Needleman, a University of Pittsburgh professor. He testified before Congress in 1979 that he had done a study and found that low levels of lead harmed children's intelligence and adversely affected their behavior.

The EPA back then wasn't completely co-opted by the left and rejected his claim stating that, "the Committee concludes that the study results, as reported in the Needleman paper, neither support nor refute the hypothesis that low or moderate levels of [lead] exposure lead to cognitive or other behavioral impairments in children."

A full investigation into Needleman's findings by his University found that, "… it is doubtful whether [Needleman’s study] represents a fair and accurate ascertainment of the relationship between IQ and [lead levels]."

Even the New England Journal of Medicine weighed in stating that Needleman's work showed a "pattern of errors, omissions, contradictions and incomplete information."

The University of Pittsburgh eventually ruled that Needleman engaged in "deliberate misrepresentation" and "substandard science."

Coincidentally, the CDC did a study of lead levels in children ages 1-5 years in three different eras. From 1976 to 1980, they found that 88.2% of children studied had BLL of 10µg/dL or more, with an average of 15 - three times the accepted level today. 1991-1994 the levels went down to 4.4%, and by 2002 it had dropped to 1.6% of children with levels exceeding 10µg/dL.
Almost 90% of the children of the 70s, by today's standards, should be brain damaged. But they are not. And why?

Because low levels of lead are not as dangerous as were being told by the junk science hysteria crowd. It's frankly getting to the point where we can't believe anything these so-called experts claim.

Meanwhile, the public remains at the mercy of these quack scientists and the government which funds them. To me, this is just another means of control wielded by the progressive left, and the people of Flint and others are paying the price.

2 comments:

marie said...

When I lived in Flint in 2011, I called the EPA in Michigan to complain about the fluoride in the water and what it was doing to the children of Flint. I had my own water filters/osmosis. The EPA of Michigan kept hanging up on me only after they told me that it is only a small percentage of fluoride and I said, " AND...ANY SMALL PERCENTAGE OF POISON EQUALS POISON!" That did it. The EPA in Michigan and D.C. could not care less about this lead problem or the fluoride problem or Fukushima. Snyder knew about it and he made a deal and probably a lot of money from separating from Detroit water along with alot of Democrats. There are two letters that are very fishy surrounding this issue. Corrupt to the core. The EPA needs to be disbanded. THE EPA IS THE PROBLEM!! I also called the EPA in D.C. Whew...it makes my blood pressure high to say the least. I will pass this on to my people in and around Flint. Thank you Freewill.

Anonymous said...

Frankly, I don't believe ANY study or information that comes from the CDC. This is the same organization that tells me that flu shots are safe and effective, both of which are outright lies.