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Subject: Bagdikian / A Dirty Dupont Secret---Again? / Dec 21

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Today's commentary:
http://www.zmag.org/sustainers/content/2005-12/17bagdikian.cfm

==================================

ZNet Commentary
A Dirty Dupont Secret---Again? December 21, 2005
By Ben Bagdikian

A widely used form of DuPont's Teflon, suspected of being a carcinogen and
creating organ damage in animals, is being studied by the Food and Drug
Administration, according to abcnews.com, but the potential danger to human
beings was known to a DuPont engineer who helped create the product but was
let go by the company when he raised internal questions about possible public
health dangers.

This is not the first time DuPont did its best to suppress public information
about company problems. Nearly 30 years ago, DuPont used its advertising power
over Big Media to smother a book in its cradle because it disclosed unpleasant
data about company behavior.

This time, the problem is a chemical called PFOA (acronym for perflurooactane
acid). If it is, indeed, hazardous to health, it is widely used in common
products throughout the human food chain.

What is significant while this is getting a more careful medical study is,
first, that it is so widely used in so many ordinary products, and second,
because a DuPont engineer, Glen Evers, working on its development saw a public
health problem about which DuPont had failed to tell the Food and Drug
Administration. Internal studies alarmed him when tests showed the chemical
produced by PFOA, Zonyl, being released in three times the concentration the
company expected. When he raised the issue his was let go by DuPont, though he
had been is employee for 22 years..

The chemical rubs off on its most common uses in fast-food packages, microwave
bags, and candy wrappers. While the FDA approved its use in 1967, the agency
is now monitoring data on its possible long-term dangers,. thanks to Evers and
the Environmental Working Group that is pursuing the issue. It also reached
the media when Evers filed a civil suit against DuPont

Evers said he decided to go public with his knowledge when his priest told him
, "You can't dance with the devil."

This is not the first time that a single individual discovered unpleasant
information about Dupont and had his work suppressed.

In 1974, Gerard Colby Zilg, a former congressional aide with access to large
quantities of corporate information, wrote a book about the DuPonts and the
imperial way they ran their corporation. The book was called DuPont: Behind
the Nylon Curtain. Published by Prentice-Hall, it rapidly sold out its first
10,000 printing. It created public interest. The New York Times Book Review
said it was "something of a miracle" that the 25-year-old author had written a
book with such authority that was masterful. Publishers Weekly said the book
would be "useful for future historians."

In ways not clear, DuPont got a copy of the manuscript before it was
published. (This writer  had a similar experience. When my first book, the
first edition of The Media Monopoly, was still in manuscript, Simon and
Schuster got a copy of the manuscript and the publisher's General Counsel
wrote to my publisher, Beacon Press, threatening to take action if Simon and
Schuster did not see the manuscript before publication and remove anything
that might be seen as defaming the publisher. 
The New York Times got word of this pre-publication threat and wrote a news
story. It did wonders for book sales. But how S&S saw the manuscript
beforehand remains a mystery.)

In the 1974 DuPont case, the book was saleable enough that it was slated to
become the selection of the Fortune Book Club, a subsidiary of Time,Inc. .
DuPont lawyers got on the case, threatened the Fortune Book Club and
Prentice-Hall, and more powerfully threatened to cancel all DuPont ads from
Time. Inc. publications. Time, Inc. and Fortune-Books cancelled its plans and
Prentice-Hall stopped promoting the book.

Zilg, the author, sued Prentice-Hall and DuPont for conspiracy under the First
Amendment and anti-trust collusion in restraint of trade. He never won against
DuPont but he did win against Prentice-Hall ---- after four years of litigation.

That was in 1974. Now in 2005, when Glen Evers who had worked for DuPont for
22 years as an engineer, he discovered a DuPont product with possible public
health problems, he, too, like Zilg years before, discovered that major
corporations do not fail to use their power to silence its critics.

In 1974, Gerard Colby Zilg, a former congressional aide with access to large
quantities of corporate information, wrote a book about the DuPonts and the
imperial way they ran their corporation. The book was called DuPont: Behind
the Nylon Curtain. Published by Prentice-Hall, it rapidly sold out its first
10,000 printing. It created public interest. The New York Times Book Review
said it was "something of a miracle" that the 25-year-old author had written a
book with such authority that was masterful. Publishers Weekly said the book
would be "useful for future historians."

In ways not clear, DuPont got a copy of the manuscript before it was
published. (This writer had a similar experience. When my first book, the
first edition of The Media Monopoly, was still in manuscript, Simon and
Schuster got a copy of the manuscript and the publisher's General Counsel
wrote to my publisher, Beacon Press, threatening to take action if Simon and
Schuster did not see the manuscript before publication and remove anything
that might be seen as defaming the publisher.

The New York Times got word of this pre-publication threat and wrote a news
story. It did wonders for book sales. But how S&S saw the manuscript
beforehand remains a mystery.)

In the 1974 DuPont case, the book was saleable enough that it was slated to
become the selection of the Fortune Book Club, a subsidiary of Time,Inc.
DuPont lawyers got on the case, threatened the Fortune Book Club and
Prentice-Hall, and more powerfully threatened to cancel all DuPont ads from
Time. Inc. publications. Time, Inc. and Fortune-Books cancelled its plans and
Prentice-Hall stopped promoting the book.

Zilg, the author, sued Prentice-Hall and DuPont for conspiracy under the First
Amendment and anti-trust collusion in restraint of trade. He never won against
DuPont but he did win against Prentice-Hall ---- after four years of litigation.

That was in 1974. Now to 2005.

Glen Evers has worked for DuPont for 22 years as an engineer. He found that
Teflon was used not just in cooking utensils, but in a wide range of candy
wrappers, microwave products, and fast-food packages since FDA's approval
almost 40 years ago.
------- End of Forwarded Message -------


---
TCB'n,
Noah

"The foundation of all mental illness is the unwillingness to experience
legitimate suffering."
        - Carl Jung

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