http://www.21stcenturysciencetech.com/articles/summ02/DDT.html

Bring Back DDT, and Science With It!


By Marjorie Mazel Hecht
 
 
What DDT Can Do 
Banned to Kill People

The Silent Spring Fraud

POPs Convention Is Genocide
  Full text of Editorial from Summer 2002 issue

The 1972 U.S. ban on DDT is responsible for a genocide 10 times 
larger than that for which we sent Nazis to the gallows at 
Nuremberg. It is also responsible for a menticide which has already 
condemned one entire generation to a dark age of anti-science 
ignorance, and is now infecting a new one.

The lies and hysteria spread to defend the DDT ban are typical of 
the irrationalist, anti-science wave which has virtually destroyed 
rational forms of discourse in our society. If you want to save 
science—and human lives—the fight to bring back DDT, now being 
championed by that very electable candidate for the Democratic 
Presidential nomination, Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr., had better be at 
the top of your agenda.

Sixty million people have died needlessly of malaria, since the 
imposition of the 1972 ban on DDT, and hundreds of millions more 
have suffered from this debilitating disease. The majority of those 
affected are children. Of the 300 to 500 million new cases of 
malaria each year, 200 to 300 million are children, and malaria now 
kills one child every 30 seconds. Ninety percent of the reported 
cases of malaria are in Africa, and 40 percent of the world's 
population, inhabitants of tropical countries, are threatened by the 
increasing incidence of malaria.

The DDT ban does not only affect tropical nations. In the wake of 
the DDT ban, the United States stopped its mosquito control 
programs, cutting the budgets for mosquito control and monitoring. 
Exactly as scientists had warned 25 years ago, we are now facing 
increases of mosquito-borne killer diseases—West Nile fever and 
dengue, to name the most prominent.
 
   
  Christopher Sloan 
  What DDT Can Do
Malaria is a preventable mosquito-borne disease. It can be 
controlled by spraying a tiny amount of DDT on the walls of houses 
twice a year. DDT is cheaper than other pesticides, more effective, 
and not harmful to human beings or animals.

Even where mosquito populations have developed resistance to DDT, it 
is more effective (and less problematic) than alternative chemicals. 
The reason is that mosquitoes are repelled by the DDT on house walls 
and do not stay around to bite and infect the inhabitants. This 
effect is known as "excito-repellency," and has been shown to be a 
dominant way that DDT controls malaria-bearing mosquitoes, in 
addition to killing them on contact.1 Studies have demonstrated this 
for all major species of malaria-bearing mosquitoes.

It costs only $1.44 per year to spray one house with DDT. The more 
toxic substitutes cost as much as 10 to 20 times more and require 
more frequent applications, making spraying programs prohibitively 
expensive. In addition, replacement pesticides have to be applied 
more frequently and are more toxic.

Banned to Kill People
DDT came into use during World War II, and in a very short time 
saved more lives and prevented more diseases than any other man-made 
chemical in history. Millions of troops and civilians, in particular 
war refugees, were saved from typhus because one DDT dusting killed 
the body lice that spread that dread disease.

Why was DDT banned, 30 years after its World War II introduction and 
spectacular success in saving lives? The reason was stated bluntly 
by Alexander King, founder of the Malthusian Club of Rome, who wrote 
in a biographical essay in 1990, "My chief quarrel with DDT in 
hindsight is that it has greatly added to the population problem." 
King was particularly concerned that DDT had dramatically cut the 
death rates in the developing sector, and thus increased population 
growth.

As King correctly observed, the incidence of malaria, and its death 
rates, were vastly reduced by DDT spraying. To take one example: Sri 
Lanka (Ceylon) had 2.8 million cases of malaria and more than 12,500 
deaths in 1946, before the use of DDT. In 1963, after a large-scale 
spraying campaign, the number of cases fell to 17, and the number of 
deaths fell to 1. But five years after the stop of spraying, in 
1969, the number of deaths had climbed to 113, and the number of 
cases to 500,000. Today, malaria rates have soared in countries that 
stopped spraying. In South Africa, the malaria incidence increased 
by 1,000 percent in the late 1990s.

The Silent Spring Fraud
The campaign to ban DDT got its start with the publication of Rachel 
Carson's book Silent Spring in 1962. Carson's popular book was a 
fraud. She played on people's emotions, and to do so, she selected 
and falsified data from scientific studies, as entomologist Dr. J. 
Gordon Edwards has documented in his analysis of the original 
scientific studies that Carson cited.2

As a result of the propaganda and lies, the U.S. Environmental 
Protection Agency convened scientific hearings and appointed a 
Hearing Examiner, Edmund Sweeney, to run them. Every major 
scientific organization in the world supported DDT use, submitted 
testimony, as did the environmentalist opposition. The hearings went 
on for seven months, and generated 9,000 pages of testimony. Hearing 
Examiner Sweeney then ruled that DDT should not be banned, based on 
the scientific evidence: "DDT is not carcinogenic, mutagenic, or 
teratogenic to man [and] these uses of DDT do not have a deleterious 
effect on fish, birds, wildlife, or estuarine organisms," Sweeney 
concluded.

Two months later, without even reading the testimony or attending 
the hearings, EPA administrator William Ruckelshaus overruled the 
EPA hearing officer and banned DDT. He later admitted that he made 
the decision for "political" reasons. "Science, along with 
economics, has a role to play . .. .. [but] the ultimate decision 
remains political," Ruckelshaus said.

The U.S. decision had a rapid effect in the developing sector, where 
the State Department made U.S. aid contingent on countries not using 
any pesticide that was banned in the United States. The U.S. Agency 
for International Development discontinued its support for DDT 
spraying programs, and instead increased funding for birth control 
programs.

Other Western nations—Sweden and Norway, for example—also pressured 
recipient nations to stop the use of DDT. Belize abandoned DDT in 
1999, because Mexico, under pressure from the United States and 
NAFTA, had stopped the manufacture of DDT, which was Belize's 
source. Purchases of replacement insecticides would take up nearly 
90 percent of Belize's malaria control budget. Mozambique stopped 
the use of DDT, "because 80 percent of the country's health budget 
came from donor funds, and donors refused to allow the use of DDT," 
reported the British Medical Journal (March 11, 2000).

The World Bank and the World Health Organization, meanwhile, 
responded to the rise in malaria incidence with a well-
publicized "Roll Back Malaria" program, begun in 1989, which 
involves no insect control measures, only bed nets, personnel 
training, and drug therapies—a prescription for failure.

POPs Convention Is Genocide
In 1995, despite the official documentation of increases in malaria 
cases and malaria deaths, the United Nations Environment Program 
began an effort to make the ban on DDT worldwide. UNEP proposed to 
institute "legally binding" international controls banning what are 
called "persistent organic pollutants" or POPs, including DDT. 
Ratification of the POPs Convention, finalized in 2001, is now 
pending in the U.S. Senate, where it has the support of the Senate 
Committee on Environment and Public Works, including committee 
chairman James Jeffords (Ind.-Vt.) and committee member Joe 
Lieberman (D.-Conn.). President Bush has already endorsed the U.S. 
signing on to the POPs Convention.

The evidence of DDT's effectiveness is dramatic. In South America, 
where malaria is endemic, malaria rates soared in countries that had 
stopped spraying houses with DDT after 1993: Guyana, Bolivia, 
Paraguay, Peru, Brazil, Colombia, and Venezuela. In Ecuador, 
however, which increased its use of DDT after 1993, the malaria rate 
was rapidly reduced by 60 percent.

But DDT spraying is not a magic bullet cure-all. Eliminating 
mosquito-borne diseases here and around the world requires in-depth 
public health infrastructure and trained personnel—as were in place 
in the 1950s and 1960s, when DDT began to rid the world of malaria. 
And mosquito-borne illness is not the only scourge now threatening 
us. A growing AIDS pandemic, and the return of tuberculosis and 
other killer diseases, now also menace growing parts of the world's 
population, particularly in those areas where human immune systems 
are challenged by malnutrition and poorly developed (or nonexistent) 
water and sanitation systems.

To solve this worsening problem as a whole—a disgrace in face of the 
scientific achievements the world has made—we must reverse the 
entire course of the past 30 years' policymaking and return to a 
society based on production, scientific progress, and rationality. 
The onrushing world depression crisis, demands a new FDR-style 
approach to economic reconstruction in the United States. The 
recognized spokesman for such a reform of our economic and monetary 
policies is the very electable candidate for the Democratic 
Presidential nomination, Lyndon H. LaRouche.

The United States should not ratify the POPs Convention with its 
phase-out of DDT and other valuable chemicals. On the contrary, this 
nation should bring back DDT now, under the provisions of existing 
U.S. law that allow the use of DDT in health emergencies. If the 
continuing mass murder of millions of people is not an emergency, 
what is?

Notes _____________________________________

1. A summary of this work can be found in an article by Donald R. 
Roberts, et al., Emerging Infectious Diseases, Vol. 3, No. 3 (1997), 
pp. 295-302.

2. J. Gordon Edwards, "The Lies of Rachel Carson," 21st Century, 
Summer 1992.

Edwards, a professor emeritus at San Jose State University in 
California, drank a spoonful of DDT in front of his entomology 
classes at the beginning of each school year, to make the point that 
DDT is not harmful to human beings. Now 83, and still fighting for 
the truth about DDT, Edwards is an avid mountain climber.
 







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