My friend Matthew from New Zealand (where i am (still, unfortunately)) has been on a holiday visit to Austria and "Czecho-Slovakia" this month. I had asked him if he noticed any difference between fluoridated NZ(ers) and unfluoridated mainland Europeans. He sent an email with some very interesting things about the countries he is seeing and the differences between there (Austria/"Czechoslovakia") and here (NZ) which are too good to not share. I post his description and also post some of my own comments about NZ in square brackets.
".... I heard that if one drills a hole straight through the earth from Slovakia it comes out a mere 500km from Wellington."
"I
have been trying to learn how people go with the water and it turns out
people here all throughout Europe go to the pharmacy all the time as a
lifestyle choice. Like within a few blocks of here there are 5 big
pharmacies. A quarter of all adds on tv are for medical stuff as its a
thing people here like to do. People in Europe seem to love doing all
the medication they can! I don't know if it's a good thing but it's what
the locals tell me they do. The pharmacies are huge to, like mini
supermarkets and they seem to be on every 10th corner."
[I would agree that the pharmac culture there (which was interesting to
find out from you) may be harming people similar to fluoridated water. I
am very suspicious of pharmacuetical medications etc and here often
things claimed to be good for "health" are lies. Sounds alot like the
people there are being controled and made docile/dumb by the
pharmacuetical meds similar to fluoridated water.]
"The water here
seems to be much the same as nz from a taste point of view and a lot of
people also buy bottled water with magnesium added. The thought is the
magnesium helps with relaxing the muscles in the body. I am not sure if
there is anything negative about magnesium in the water but it seems to
be in all the shops. Another thing is they have three types of water,
still, small bubbles and sparkling. In nz we only have still and
sparkling so that was the first time I have experienced that flavor of
minor bubbles. Visited a big cave network and I got dripped on from
water that had come through the rocks above, I tried to taste it to see
if it was fresher but it tasted like lime and calcium which I guess
makes sense as it's in the middle of a cave..."
[Fluoride is tasteless and odourless and colourless so you won't directly see any fluoride present or absent in the water.
Magnesium & calcium make the water hard not soft. Soft water picks up alot of heavy metals. Magnesium is good for .... But bottled water i assume is in Pet(e) which has endocrine disruptors.]
"Super
hard to tell much more as so many people here all looking like a
typical spectrum of population. Wish I had some way of observation that
could tell more as that could be a good conversation discussion point."
[It may be that i am more able to see than you (can't you even see difference here between unfluoridated Petone (shops area (etc)) and fluoridated Upper Hutt/Lower Hutt/Wellington/Porirua (shops area (etc))? (It can't just be because beach environment of Petone.) Or it may be that people are effected by other things like food, smart-meters, etc.]
"Another
thing that is different is all the supermarkets same have only a bit of
fresh fruit and vegetables - they don't seem to sell much in the way of
these oddly. The supermarkets have a weird approach to food to, instead
of a whole lot of range they have a few products and then within these
products they have hundreds of variations. For example wafer buscuits
they have at least 100 types but ordinary buscuits that we have in nz
are not present. Even finding something as simple as Cinnamon is a
challenge as lots of places don't stock it!"
[Others have also said that NZ has alot more fresh veges & fruit than other countries, but remember that things here are sprayed (and fluoridated), and that things here often look ok on the outside but are otherwise not so good. It is a sign that NZ is more in the globalist free trade of the harlot Babylon of Revelation (people lament destruction of Babylon/Rome whence they imported alot of exotic goods). Also, maybe people there have gardens or markets? Here there are often things that i am not able to get anymore (eg kelp and yeast). Everything is relative, you know some people like me do not have normal life like majority of people here.
(Biscuits here are full of sugar. Crackers full of salt. Wafers here have soy.)]
"They
do insulation super well here, the houses are really warm as every
house has either wall or under floor heating. Insulation for sound
between and within apartments is non-existent thou. I can hear every
movement everyone makes no matter which building I am in. I guess one
would get used to it after a while but it's super noisy. Oddly enough
they don't seem to mind the noise - I am in a room by a corridor and you
can hear everyone walking past like there is no wall there at all. In
nz our new houses are much better at noise insulation so we do well on
that count. Wooden floors are the preference here, no carpets as the
floor is constantly getting muddy from the snow on shoes. The colour
scheme of buildings would also seem super weird to nz, here they all go
for pastel reds, oranges, pinks and yellows."
[Sounds good about cold/heat insulation, like the UK. Here is bad how so little (though there was a drive a couple of years ago to insulate new homes, and they have been ringing people to offer old homes insulated, though this is different insulation to double glazing and central heating, and we can't get normal woolen long-johns here except merino)). Good point about sound insulation but it is not true about that here from my and my fathers experiences (or yours from what you once told me). I have attached neighbour who has bare polished/varnished wooden floors except for some mats, and it has driven me mad for 10 years hearing them stomping around all day every day. I'd say the medications make people able to tolerate this negative.]
Edited by Arthur-Robin - 27-Jan-2017 at 02:42