Ch. 8. Robert Kehoe and the Kettering Laboratory: the fluoride deception
by Christopher Bryson from archive.org
Robert
Kehoe and the Kettering
Laboratory FROM
THE DARKNESS it can be difficult to determine the source of a shadow. Dr. Robert Arthur Kehoe of the
Kettering Laboratory cast such a
shadow over us all, one of the darkest of the modern era. For more than sixty years
Americans breathed hundreds of thousands
of tons of raw poison wafted into the atmosphere from leaded
gasoline. This toxic air
contributed to a medical toll of some 5,000 annual deaths from lead-related heart disease and an
almost incalculable toll of tragedy
in the neurological injuries and learning difficulties imposed on
children. One estimate, based on
government data, suggests that from 1927 to 1987, 68 million young children in the United States were exposed
to toxic amounts of lead from
gasoline, until the additive was finally phased out in the United States.' https://www.blogger.com/null For this in good measure we can thank
Dr. Kehoe. Dark-haired and
dark-eyed, Kehoe described himself as a "black Irishman" and
claimed to be descended from
Spaniards who had been shipwrecked on the Irish coast during Elizabethan times. The scientist possessed
boundless energy, and a keen mind,
and he could also tell "one hell of a dirty joke," colleagues