Youcannot use the term protect the public when 1/3 of children are likely to develop fluorosis which they do not want, nor would otherwise get, for the greater public good from forced mass medication (fluoridation), in a marginal at best attempt to achieve less caries in a small minority that don't practice good hygene.
Firstly, In this post you refer to only dental fluorosis when mentioning possible side effects of WF, I note that you did not mention things like cancer or osteoperosis or IBS or any of the other (unproven) medical effects that anti-fluoridists claim. I'm glad.
You seem to have forgotten that Australia already has a fairly long history of fluoridation, QLD is not the first place. Many Australian towns and cities have been fluoridated for decades and there is no evidence (that I’m aware of) of anything close to the 1/3rd incidence of fluorosis in those towns/cities that you think will happen in QLD.
Retrospective studies in the future will show whether or not 1/3rd of children get fluorosis from QLD fluoridation like you claim, although I highly suspect this wont be the case. This is your opinion only and (I think – correct me if I’m wrong) you formed this opinion by taking figures from just one USA website link and applying it to the QLD situation – this is very unscientific, perhaps you need to accept that all you are doing is taking a bit of a wild guess here. In order to make your (shaky) argument more acceptable to other readers, you also failed to mention that 97% of the children who had fluorosis in that USA study had only mild or very mild fluorosis.
Look at the cost-benefit analysis. I don’t mind a few extra people with mild fluorosis if it saves a lot more of those disadvanataged people (eg aboriginal communities) coming into my surgery to have abscessed teeth taken out due to gross rampant caries.
People die from dental abscesses Whisker, including in Queensland. Dental caries is a mch bigger issue than mild fluorosis. Perhaps this should put the cost of ‘mild fluorosis’ (cosmetic problem only) into perspective a little more for you.
If you have a hammer, everything will look like a nail. You are just looking for anything to back up the anti-fluoridist belief/ideas, unfortunately none of the sources you use are peer-reviewed research and so I cannot accept it and neither would the scientific community. In other words, if you were trying to make a case, the experts wouldn’t even bother to give it a look. What you are then left with is just a small group of people. If this small anti-fluoridist group is right, we’ll find out in the future, but IMO I highly doubt it and I think pigs will fly first.
By the way, most of the research I referred to doesn’t use those indices, actually. If you want me to talk about indices, refer me to the particular research article I posted that uses them, and then I will gladly. THe photo you posted is obviously not mild, but what is more important is what is the cause of it - more than likely it is not due to (controlled) water fluoridation but more likely from toothpaste ingestion or fluoride tablets.