Thanks for responding Mamu, and yes, I did indeed watch the same video -- I just took something different from it than you did. I don't have the time at the instant to give justice to your response, so I will have to get back to it. I will include one point, here, however, because it's the particular answer from Brandon that really set the warning flags flying:
This is not a convincing or scientifically acceptable argument. Just because something is widely used does not mean it's safe. Consider, as but one pertinent example, cigarettes. And how long in that case did it take us to figure out a widely used product was indeed not safe? Actually, I find the fact that Brandon would even advance such an argument concerning in its own right, which is why it set the warning flags flying over his other answers.
Fortunately most of his answers were better than that, and I'll get to the rest of them when I have a little more time. In the meantime, I really want to say thanks for sharing your personal experience, which I actually find more convincing than all of Brandon's arguments combined. And if, as I'm hoping, you can say the same thing about your personal experience in a year and two and five as you're saying now, I'll consider it a very significant data point(s) indeed.
-Kevin