Originally posted by G4LM3
Thats… Thats what the Cleveland report said. How retarded are you?
The crooks' lapdogs wouldn't have made the threshold 10, if it was only 1.2. That's not the way it works. Plus, arsenic poisoning is cumulative, so even though the dose is small, the long-term effects of regular, daily poisonings are devastating. The Illuminati has already went on public record that it intends to reduce the worldwide population down to 500 million. This is one of the ways they are accomplishing their goal.
"Elevated vibration threshold has been associated with a cumulative arsenic index (drinking water arsenic exposure) and urinary arsenic levels [Hafeman et al. 2005]. Subclinical neuropathy, defined by the presence of abnormal nerve conduction, but no clinical complaints or symptoms, has been described in chronically exposed individuals [Tseng 2003; ATSDR 2007]. Recovery from neuropathy induced by chronic exposure to arsenic compounds is generally slow, sometimes taking years, and complete recovery may not occur."
"Because it targets widely dispersed enzyme reactions, arsenic affects nearly all organ systems. The most sensitive endpoint from arsenic exposure is dermal effects. While several studies may identify effects on other endpoints at the same exposure level that produces dermal effects, the database for dermal effects is stronger than for effects on other endpoints [ATSDR 2007]
Key physiologic effects from arsenic exposure that will be covered in detail later.
Patchy skin hyperpigmentation, small focal keratoses, and other skin lesions are common effects of heavy chronic exposure. It is difficult to establish strong associations between arsenic exposure and disease, as the prevalence and spectrum of diseases linked to chronic arsenic exposure differ not only between countries, but even within countries. Arsenic can cause lung and skin cancers and may cause other cancers. The association between chronic arsenic exposure and cancer is strongest for skin, lung, and bladder cancer. Liver (angiosarcoma), kidney, and other cancers have limited strength of association [IARC 2004; NRC 2000]."
"Drinking arsenic-contaminated water in Chile was associated with an increase of vasospastic changes (Raynaud’s disease) and thickening of the small and medium sized arteries in autopsied children [Garcia-Vargas and Cebrian 1996]."
"In studies that support an association, arsenic-exposed patients may develop destruction of axonal cylinders, leading to peripheral neuropathy. This has been reported at acute high doses (>2 milligram (mg) arsenic (As)/kilogram (kg)/day) as well as from repeated exposures to lower levels (.03 – 0.1 mg As/kg/day) [Chakraborti et al. 2003a, 2003b; ATSDR 2007].
Arsenic may cause encephalopathy at acute high doses (> 2mg As/Kg/day) [Uede and Furukawa 2003; Vantroyen et al. 2004; ATSDR 2007]. Arsenic poisoning can cause peripheral neuropathy. The lesion is a sensory-motor axonopathy. The classic finding is a peripheral neuropathy involving sensory greater than motor neurons in a symmetrical, stocking glove distribution [Murphy et al. 1981]. In high-level arsenic exposures, onset of neuropathy may occur after 7 to 14 days, with intense increased sweating in the distal lower extremities, muscle cramps, muscle tenderness, numbness, paresthesia, and spontaneous pain [Bleecker 2007]. Sensory effects, particularly painful dysesthesia, occur earlier and may predominate in moderate poisoning, whereas ascending weakness and paralysis may be evident in more severe poisoning. Those cases may at first seem indistinguishable from Guillain-Barré syndrome (acute inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy) [Donofrio et al. 1987]."
https://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/csem/csem.asp?csem=1&po=11