Look into chlorine dioxide as a water purifier. It is said to clean anything safely. If they remove fluride they could afford to replace it with CD? If leaves nothing harmful behind!
Check the Safrax website and Mike Adams on The Health Ranger
reverse osmosis won't remove the chloramine which is the source of the chloronitramide anion contaminant.
countertop distillation won't remove chloramine either, because it has such a broad evaporation range.
about the only thing that removes chloramine effectively is a solid carbon block filter. a carbon prefilter on a RO filtration system will take out a little of the chloramine.
in this central Missouri town they started contaminating ("treating") the water with chloramine about 7-8 years ago. that wasn't too long after the toxin started being used worldwide.
with only around a decade of subjecting the public to the chemical, combined with little to no regulatory testing of the water system except for very specific contaminants, it's not really surprising that new decay products of chloramine are only now being identified.
You can look at your city water on https://www.ewg.org/tapwater/. A good motivator to always filter your water.
Look into chlorine dioxide as a water purifier. It is said to clean anything safely. If they remove fluride they could afford to replace it with CD? If leaves nothing harmful behind!
Check the Safrax website and Mike Adams on The Health Ranger
Local government has been lining its pockets & poisoning us for decades.
The fun never ends. Effing nightmare really. Thank you incredibly much for this important information!!!
reverse osmosis won't remove the chloramine which is the source of the chloronitramide anion contaminant.
countertop distillation won't remove chloramine either, because it has such a broad evaporation range.
about the only thing that removes chloramine effectively is a solid carbon block filter. a carbon prefilter on a RO filtration system will take out a little of the chloramine.
in this central Missouri town they started contaminating ("treating") the water with chloramine about 7-8 years ago. that wasn't too long after the toxin started being used worldwide.
with only around a decade of subjecting the public to the chemical, combined with little to no regulatory testing of the water system except for very specific contaminants, it's not really surprising that new decay products of chloramine are only now being identified.
- Wait,WHAT?
-unidentified chemical
produces unidentified health risks...