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by frankvdwaal 436 days ago
The parent comment is not making a causal claim. They're pointing out a double standard: "Anyone arguing this is about childhood IQ and wouldn’t similarly ban (not stop mandating, ban) soft drinks, chips and fast food for kids, they’re signalling this is about something other than kids’ health."

In other words, if these people are anti-fluoride because it's supposedly bad for children's IQ, they should also oppose bad food for the same reason. If they don't, the supposed (unproven) health effects are not the reason. That's the point that is made, at least.

1 comments

Yup. We don't have causal studies on fluoride's effects on intelligence, to my knowledge. This is so obviously not about kids' health, but like MMRs, partisan/social identity signalling.