Thanks Arthur,

 

You’ll recall that the thing that started me on my
skeptical way was Rachel’s foreboding about birds being
killed by pesticides – “a world without a robin” – so I
counted them. Actually I didn’t, the Audubon Society did it
for me.

 

There were twelve times as many robins after DDT as before
it.

 

Margaret was wrong about eagles. They were so plentiful
that Alaska paid a 50 cent bounty per head up to 1952 and
probably stopped it because it had become politically
incorrect.

 

Park rangers who mostly find the dead eagles tell us that
physical injury is the major cause of death with – if my
memory serves me – 70% receiving their injuries from gun
shots.

 

I got my raptor count from the Hawk Mountain Survey. All
raptor numbers were up. If you recall, the final irony is
that the large chemical companies didn’t make DDT. It was
too cheap with little profit to it. So when DDT was banned
they replaced it with somewhat toxic chemicals that cost 12
times as much to apply.

 

I hope they thanked the environmental movement.

 

Harry

 

**********************************

Henry George School of Social Science

of Los Angeles.

Box 655  Tujunga  CA  91042

818 352-4141

**********************************

 

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of Cordell, Arthur: ECOM
Sent: Friday, May 25, 2007 10:32 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [Futurework] Silent Spring is a case study in the
tragedy of good intentions

 

Harry can annoy but he can also (in his own way ) inform.
It was in one of Harry's postings that I first became aware
of the DDT controversy and Rachel Carson's role.

Arthur 
---------------------------------- 
Comment 
Carson's toxic legacy; Her book Silent Spring is a case
study in the tragedy of good intentions 
MARGARET WENTE 
24 May 2007 
HYPERLINK "javascript:void(0)"The Globe and Mail 
I was 12 when I read Rachel Carson's newly published book,
Silent Spring, in 1962. Although I'd never heard the term
“environmentalist,” she turned me into one. I didn't
understand the complicated science in it. But I was
horrified by her evocation of a natural world whose
creatures were being wiped out by man-made poisons – the
silent spring, where no birds sang. In school, I wrote an
essay praising Silent Spring, and another one explaining
why a bomb shelter wouldn't help you survive a nuclear
attack. (That was an apocalyptic time, not unlike our own.)


Born 100 years ago this week, Ms. Carson is still revered
as the patron saint of the environmental movement. Schools,
conferences and special days are named after her. Among her
foremost admirers is Al Gore. “Silent Spring came as a cry
in the wilderness, a deeply felt, thoroughly researched and
brilliantly written argument that changed the course of
history,” he wrote. 

Indeed it did – and not necessarily for the better. In
fact, it led to one of the greatest tragedies of modern
times. Thanks to Ms. Carson's all-out attack on pesticides,
DDT was banned in the West. But DDT was also the most
effective anti-malarial agent ever invented; before it fell
into disrepute, it was credited with saving 100 million
lives. When the Western nations cut off their support for
DDT spraying programs in the Third World, the death toll
shot back up. 

Today, malaria cripples local economies and kills 2.7
million people every year – mostly children under 5. In a
devastating investigative piece, New York Times journalist
Tina Rosenberg wrote, “Silent Spring is now killing African
children because of its persistence in the public mind.” 

“Poor woman. She never actually said ‘Ban DDT,' ” says Amir
Attaran, an expert on public-health and development policy
at the University of Ottawa. 

“Her point was that we should use chemicals less.” But for
environmental fundamentalists, Silent Spring was the ideal
propaganda tool to drive home their message. And even
though the World Health Organization has now reversed
itself on DDT, countless environmental and cancer activists
continue to cite the DDT ban as one of environmentalism's
greatest “victories.” 

DDT's persistence in the environment did, indeed, affect
certain bird species, such as eagles. But after decades of
testing, there's not a shred of evidence that it causes
cancer in humans, as Ms. Carson claimed. Although she was
an eloquent, impassioned writer, science wasn't her strong
suit. “She focused on the one environmental subject
[chemicals] where you have to have the greatest scientific
knowledge,” says Prof. Attaran. 

Silent Spring is riddled with anecdotal evidence and
misleading assertions that flunk the most basic science
test. “Today more American school children die of cancer
than from any other cause,” she wrote, implying that
pesticides were to blame. But the real reason for this
alarming trend was the dramatic decline in other causes of
child mortality, especially infectious diseases. At the
time she wrote, the mortality rate from childhood cancer
hadn't changed for decades. Curiously, she also overlooked
the greatest man-made cancer agent of them all: cigarettes.


Today the legacy of Silent Spring is all around us. As
cities and towns rush to ban lawn sprays, you can thank Ms.
Carson for the dandelions in the park. The belief that
man-made agents are unnatural, and thus inherently bad –
even in the most minute amounts – is now widespread.
Millions of people are convinced that toxic chemicals in
our food, our water, and our air are responsible for the
cancer epidemic, even though no such epidemic exists. Her
apocalyptic prophecies about how mankind is destroying the
Earth are faithfully reproduced by extremists in the global
warming crowd. Most seriously, groups like the Sierra Club
continue to lobby against DDT because of the potential for
“widespread misuse” – yet another example of the
distressing tendency among environmentalists to sacrifice
the interests of the Third World because they think they
know better. 

Ms. Carson wasn't really the mother of environmentalism
either, as her admirers like to claim. By the time she came
along, the environmental movement had been going strong for
decades, and the public had already embraced the importance
of species conservation and the preservation of open
spaces. 

The movement was already poised for its next – and far more
problematic – wave, the assault on Big Chem. “She didn't
launch that movement,” says Prof. Attaran. “She was used by
it.” 

And she was not used well. She may have turned the sixties
generation on to environmentalism. But ultimately, Silent
Spring is a case study in the tragedy of good intentions. 

[EMAIL PROTECTED] 

 

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