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Carson springs up again (DDT Ban Kills Humans)
UPI Wire ^ | 8/11/2002 | Gordon S. Jones

Posted on 08/11/2002 7:19:03 AM PDT by Skooz

Outside view: Carson springs up again

By Gordon S. Jones
A UPI Outside view commentary

From the

Washington Politics & Policy Desk

Published 8/11/2002 6:21 AM

DRAPER, Utah, Aug. 11 (UPI) -- The week I went to work at the Environmental Protection Agency in June of 1972, Administrator William Ruckelshaus issued an order banning the domestic production of DDT. My job, for two-and-a-half years, was to administer that ban.

It made no sense to me then and it makes no sense to me now.

I have occasion to recall this because of an invitation I received to an Interior Department briefing to be held in the Rachel Carson Room. I had not known that there was a Rachel Carson Room in the departmental headquarters and, while I'm not overly surprised, I do think it inappropriate to name a room for a woman responsible for more than 60 million deaths.

While that may seem to be an extreme statement, consider the facts.

It is not too much to suggest that Carson was the impetus behind the U.S. ban on DDT and the ensuing limited availability in the Third World. Her 1962 book "Silent Spring" excited a backlash against the single most effective pesticide ever developed.

DDT had been used against lice during the World War II but it wasn't until 1948 that it was shown to kill malarial mosquitoes. Virtually overnight, malaria stopped being the killer it was. In Sri Lanka 2.8 million people died from it in 1948. In 1964, that number was 17. That is not a decimal error. Deaths from malaria dropped from 2,800,000 to 17 in less than two decades. Worldwide, DDT is credited with saving over 100 million lives.

Against that record, Saint Rachel of the Environmental Movement had her work cut out for her, but she proved herself up to it. "Silent Spring" is an evocative work, full of images of sun-filled glades, and limpid pools. The springs are silent, you see, because the birds are dead.

DDT may kill the insects, Carson tells us, but then the birds eat them.

The DDT builds up in their systems, the birds lay eggs with thin shells and the little birds don't survive. Eventually, in Carson's paradigm, the species become extinct.

The science, contrary to the conventional wisdom, doesn't really support her arguments.

Yes, there was evidence of eggshell thinning but it was never tied conclusively to DDT. In fact, Ruckelshaus rejected the recommendations of his own scientists when he formulated the DDT ban.

My own reading of the evidence and the hearings I conducted while at EPA led me to conclude that heavy metals -- arsenic, mercury, and cadmium -- were more likely the agents behind the eggshell thinning.

EPA officials were not all the impressed by the data either. The ban covered future production, stocks "in the pipeline" and that DDT in the possession of private individuals. At the same time, the acting director of the Office of Pesticide Programs told me that he had a 75-pound bag of DDT and that he fully intended to use it on his own garden -- ban or no. One of the deputy directors used to eat a spoonful each year to show his college classes that it was, essentially and to human beings, harmless.

It has been 30 years since DDT was banned as a result of Rachel Carson's literary skills. Malaria and other diseases controlled by the "miracle pesticide" are on the rise again. In Sri Lanka, five years after DDT was banned under pressure from U.S. regulators and diplomats, malaria deaths were back up to 2.5 million per year.

The dead are not very visible to American politicians because, in most places at least, they don't vote. A move is afoot in the United States Senate -- promoted by Sen. Joe Lieberman, D-Conn. -- to have the United Nations oversee a worldwide ban on the use of DDT.

This would have little if any effect in the United States because it is no longer used here. In the Third World, it is a very different story.

Millions in the developing nations, mostly poor children, will die as a result. Lieberman, who wants to be president, is trying to solidify his credentials with American environmentalists -- who all worship Rachel Carson.

He is less concerned with the poor children in India who cannot vote in U.S. elections. This does not mean his is unfeeling or an evil man; just that he is putting his own political agenda ahead of what is best for many others around the world.

Too often, there are those in the environmental movement who, like Rachel Carson, may have altruistic intentions yet ignore the consequences of what they espouse. As a result, a bird is saved but millions of people die. We can all meditate on that little fact while we are waiting for the briefing to start in the room named for Carson in the Department of Interior building.

---

Gordon S. Jones is a writer and political scientist working in Utah. In a 30-year career in Washington, his portfolio of activity included work on science and environmental issues both as a congressional staffer and in public policy organizations.

Editor's note: "Outside View" commentaries are written for UPI by outside writers who specialize in a variety of important global issues.

Copyright © 2002 United Press International
 


TOPICS: Editorial; Extended News; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: ddt; enviralists; environmentalism; rachelcarson
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1 posted on 08/11/2002 7:19:03 AM PDT by Skooz
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To: Skooz
"Rachel Carson ...a woman responsible for more than 60 million deaths."
2 posted on 08/11/2002 7:27:26 AM PDT by moneyrunner
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To: moneyrunner
Yep. That puts her in the Mao/Stalin league. Congrats, Rachel, you're with the big boys.
3 posted on 08/11/2002 7:30:20 AM PDT by Skooz
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To: Skooz
I wonder where an original source might be found for the reported Sri Lankan malaria deaths, and for the linkage to DDT use and then the later ban. Of course, even if there are reliable data in support of this, it's doubtful that it would have much effect in countering the enviro-maniacal forces in the government and in media...
4 posted on 08/11/2002 7:36:09 AM PDT by The Electrician
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To: Skooz
I wonder if the CDC can be bothered to track encephalitis deaths in the United States?

I know several owners of exterminator businesses. They all keep DDT for their personal use.

5 posted on 08/11/2002 7:36:37 AM PDT by SteamshipTime
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To: Skooz; moneyrunner; The Electrician
100 things you should know about DDT

A very concise and well put together FAQ on DDT and the fraud Carson.

6 posted on 08/11/2002 7:42:17 AM PDT by TomB
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To: The Electrician
Well the world is overpopulated, isn't it? (Sarcasm/off) Any movement that would CAUSE 60 million poor defenseless people to be murdered will have no problem with the timber industry, working rural farms and ranches, and relocating people to "planned villages."
7 posted on 08/11/2002 7:49:30 AM PDT by Leisler
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To: Skooz
Bump
8 posted on 08/11/2002 7:54:45 AM PDT by Fiddlstix
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To: Skooz; All
I'm glad to see others are broaching this subject again... my 2 cents?

West Nile Virus- Bring Back DDT?

9 posted on 08/11/2002 7:55:30 AM PDT by backhoe
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To: Skooz
Is human life so worthless? I wonder what their real agenda is? I have never been for the banning of DDT.
10 posted on 08/11/2002 7:55:38 AM PDT by freekitty
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To: The Electrician
In Sri Lanka, five years after DDT was banned under pressure from U.S. regulators and diplomats, malaria deaths were back up to 2.5 million per year.

Other estimates that I have seen (from a too-quick web search) estimate that worldwide malaria deaths currently are in the range from one to 1.5 million per year. I haven't found a worldwide estimate for the time period of "five years after DDT was banned under pressure from U.S. regulators" (since I don't know what year that is). So I can't pass judgement on whether or not those figures are grossly inflated.

But if I were in the mood to do some political muckraking, I'd publish and distribute newsletters among "peoples of color" informing them that most deaths from malaria occur in "peoples of color", and Lieberman and his Democrat enviromentalist comrades have no interest in helping those people because of they are of the wrong race...

In fact, if Lieberman's efforts are successful, millions of people of color will die.(rhetorical argument follows - don't try this at home) And, if I were a Terry McAuliffe or James Carville type (namely, a race-baiting, shameless liar), which I am not, then I would consider spicing up the account by pointing out that Lieberman is a Jewish Democrat, and he is doing this because the Jewish Democrats have a history of oppressing people of color, and this is just more of the same. That would be a disgusting and pernicious lie, of course, but when has that ever stopped a Democrat/Commie? So, wouldn't turnabout be fair play (he wondered to himself)?

11 posted on 08/11/2002 7:57:34 AM PDT by The Electrician
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To: Skooz
Drudge is reporting that the Air Force is being requested to help control West Nile in Louisianna. Wonder what they'll spray them mosquitos with, WD-40?
12 posted on 08/11/2002 7:58:27 AM PDT by zebra 2
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To: The Electrician
STATISTICS ON MALARIA
Malaria is one of the planet's deadliest diseases and one of the leading causes of sickness and death in the developing world. According to the World Health Organization there are 300 to 500 million clinical cases of malaria each year resulting in 1.5 to 2.7 million deaths.

Children aged one to four are the most vulnerable to infection and death. Malaria is responsible for as many as half the deaths of African children under the age of five. The disease kills more than one million children - 2,800 per day - each year in Africa alone. In regions of intense transmission, 40% of toddlers may die of acute malaria.

About 40% of the world's population - about two billion people - are at risk in about 90 countries and territories. 80 to 90% of malaria deaths occur in sub-Saharan Africa where 90% of the infected people live.

Sub-Saharan Africa is the region with the highest malaria infection rate. Here alone, the disease kills at least one million people each year. According to some estimates, 275 million out of a total of 530 million people have malaria parasites in their blood, although they may not develop symptoms.

Of the four human malaria strains, Plasmodium falciparum is the most common and deadly form. It is responsible for about 95% of malaria deaths worldwide and has a mortality rate of 1-3%.

In the early 1960s, only 10% the world's population was at risk of contracting malaria. This rose to 40% as mosquitoes developed resistance to pesticides and malaria parasites developed resistance to treatment drugs. Malaria is now spreading to areas previously free of the disease.
Malaria kills 8,000 Brazilians yearly - more than AIDS and cholera combined.

There were 483 reported cases of malaria in Canada in 1993, according to Health Canada and approximately 431 in 1994. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in the United States received reports of 910 cases of malaria in 1992 and seven of those cases were acquired there. In 1970, reported malaria cases in the U.S. were 4,247 with more than 4,000 of the total being U.S. military personnel.

According to material from Third World Network Features, in Africa alone, direct and indirect costs of malaria amounted to US $800 million in 1987 and are expected to reach US $1.8 billion annually by 1995.

Sources : The Malaria Control Programme, World Health Organization, Third World Network Features, Health Canada, The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and Desowitz, Robert S. The Malaria Capers (More Tales of Parasites and People, Research and Reality). W.W. Norton & Company, New York, 199
13 posted on 08/11/2002 8:06:30 AM PDT by Gladwin
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To: Skooz
The pseudo-science preached by militant environmentalists and willingly spread by the lazy media to a science ignorant public has indeed caused millions of deaths, not to mention millions of jobs and billions of our dollars.

Imagine how (shudder) a President Gore would be responding to the West Nile virus crisis? Probably he'd be spreading lady bugs on the swamps in hope they might eat the mosquitoes.

14 posted on 08/11/2002 8:09:47 AM PDT by The Great RJ
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To: The Electrician
Go to 100 Thing Your Need to Know about DDT at the Junk Science.com site to see how the Econ-Nazis pulled off the ban on DDT. Their focus was not the environment, but population control. That over 100 million mostly dark-skined children have died since they foisted their lies upon us was not an accident. It was their objective.
15 posted on 08/11/2002 8:15:08 AM PDT by Ditto
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To: The Great RJ

Chlorinated Hydrocarbons

DDT was the first of a long line of insecticides based on hydrocarbons with chlorine atoms replacing some of the hydrogen atoms. Its chemical name is dichloro, diphenyl, trichloroethane (see figure). Some others:

DDT was introduced during World War II and, along with penicillin and the sulfa drugs, was responsible for the fact that this was the first war in history where trauma killed more people - combatants and noncombatants alike - than infectious disease. DDT is effective against

Prior to the introduction of DDT, the number of cases of malaria in Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) was more than a million a year. By 1963 the disease had been practically eliminated from the island. However, growing concern about the hazards of DDT led to its abandonment there in the mid-1960s, and soon thereafter malaria became common once again.

DDT was especially effective against malarial mosquitoes because of its persistence - its resistance to breakdown in the environment. One or two sprays a year on the walls of homes kept them free of mosquitoes. But DDT has several serious drawbacks.

Insecticide resistance

As early as 1946, Swedish workers discovered populations of houseflies resistant to DDT. This was quickly followed by many other reports of developing resistance. Other chlorinated hydrocarbons (like dieldrin and methoxychlor) were developed as substitutes, but in time insects developed resistance to these as well.

Persistence

DDT is

These properties cause it to accumulate in fat tissue. People who were heavily exposed to DDT (during its manufacture or application) often showed concentrations of DDT in their fat 1000 times higher than that in their blood.

Even these high levels were probably of little harm to the workers. In the early stages of exposure, the blood levels of DDT (and its metabolite DDE) rise rapidly at first and then reach a steady level. From that point on, the body excretes it as fast as it acquires it.

Biomagnification

Although no harmful effects from average exposures to DDT have been seen in humans, DDT and other chlorinated hydrocarbons have been shown to harm other species, such as fishes, earthworms, and robins. The hazard of DDT to nontarget animals is particularly acute for those species living at the top of food chains.

Link to discussion of how DDT becomes concentrated as it moves up a food chain.
Carnivores at the ends of long food chains (e.g., ospreys, pelicans, falcons, and eagles) once suffered serious declines in fecundity and hence in population size because of this. High levels of chlorinated hydrocarbons interfere with forming eggshells of normal thickness.
Correlation between DDE concentrations in the eggs of Alaskan falcons and hawks and reduction in the thickness of their eggshells (compared with shells collected prior to 1947). DDE is a metabolite of DDT. Data from T. J. Cade, et. al., Science 172:955, 1971.
Species Location Average Concentration
of DDE in Eggs (ppm)
Reduction in
Shell Thickness
Peregrine falcon Alaskan tundra (north slope) 889 -21.7%
Peregrine falcon Central Alaska 673 -16.8%
Peregrine falcon Aleutian Islands 167 -7.5%
Rough-legged hawk Alaskan tundra (north slope) 22.5 -3.3%
Gyrfalcon Seward Peninsular, Alaska 3.88 0

Another group of nontarget victims of DDT (and other pesticides) are insects that prey upon insect pests; that is, the natural enemies of the pests. Killing these has serious ecological - and economic! - effects.

Once apple growers began controlling pests with DDT, they quickly found their orchards being attacked by scale insects and mites. The reason: DDT had killed off their natural enemies.

http://users.rcn.com/jkimball.ma.ultranet/BiologyPages/I/Insecticides.html

16 posted on 08/11/2002 8:23:12 AM PDT by Gladwin
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To: Leisler
Well the world is overpopulated, isn't it?

They won't come out and say it--well, most of them won't, anyway--but this is PRECISELY the kind of thinking the enviro-whackos engage in.

17 posted on 08/11/2002 8:25:11 AM PDT by Illbay
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To: Skooz
It has been 30 years since DDT was banned as a result of Rachel Carson's literary skills.

Conservatives might be able to accomplish some of their goals, too. If they refused to play the "I'm more conservative than you are" game.

18 posted on 08/11/2002 8:52:06 AM PDT by dubyagee
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Comment #19 Removed by Moderator

To: Gladwin
By Kenneth Smith
The Washington Times
September 2, 1999

The National Academy of Sciences called it the greatest chemical ever discovered, a lifesaver for 500 million people whose deaths were otherwise inevitable. And environmentalists want to make sure the world can never use it again.

The chemical is DDT. Though it is banned here in the United States as a possible threat to man and animals, public health authorities around the world have been using it for years to control the mosquito that carries the dreaded malaria parasite. The disease already kills some 2.7 million people and afflicts half a billion annually - about 90 percent of them children and pregnant women - and it could get much worse. Next week United Nations diplomats are scheduled to gather in Geneva to vote on a treaty that would ban alleged pollutants, among them DDT, by 2007.

Pushing hard for the ban are the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) and other environmental activists who argue that even trace exposures to the chemical can cause cancer and disrupt human hormones. On the other side are the Malaria Foundation and some 370 medical researchers, including three Nobel Prize winners from 57 countries who consider the proposed ban an exercise in Third World population control rather than healthy public policy.

In an open letter to U.N. negotiators, they accuse the WWF of "surprisingly blatant" distortion of the debate by its selective use of scientific findings. For example, the WWF cites studies linking breast cancer to exposure to DDT and other chemicals. But when the medical researchers went back to look at the studies, they found that one actually concluded just the opposite, that is, the "data do not support the hypothesis that exposure . . . increases risk of breast cancer." Environmentalists are misleading the world about the real risk here. "It would be ironic indeed if in running from the bogeyman of these speculative health risks," the open letter says, "we banned DDT and ran directly into the familiar and deadly hands of malaria."

Just how familiar and how deadly the developed world has largely forgotten thanks to a combination of eradication efforts and general migration away from those mosquito incubators known as wetlands. But for peoples who can't afford a mosquito net much less a townhouse, malaria is a genocidal tyrant on a scale beyond anything, say, a Hitler or even Stalin could comprehend. Partly that's because of the size of its army. Four different parasites carried by 35 species of mosquitoes - flying syringes, some call them - can infect humans. Once injected inside, the parasites slip past the body's unwitting defenders and regroup in the liver, gathering their strength and multiplying until finally they launch back into the blood system, gorging themselves on red blood cells and debilitating, even killing their human host within a matter of hours. Wrote Ellen Ruppel Shell in the Atlantic magazine two years ago: "I have seen greatly enlarged photographs of malaria parasites pouring from the ghostly white hulks of dead blood cells, like soldiers fleeing a scorched-earth spree, and the sight is frightening."

There is no vaccine against malaria. It evolves and mutates, hiding like a sci-fi villain, making it hard for a vaccine to find, much less attack. It's true that the disease is treatable in most cases, but after a while the malaria parasite develops a resistance to drugs. The result is that in Sub-Saharan Africa alone, the malaria researchers say, the disease destroys 70 percent more years of life than do all cancers in all developed countries combined.

Faced with so formidable a foe, researchers continue their hunt for the vaccine. But in the meantime, public health officials decided that if they couldn't beat the parasite, they would take on the mosquito. Armed with DDT, they discovered that by spraying the interior walls of huts twice a year, they could kill or at least deter the female mosquito carrying the parasite before she could plant her deadly kiss. And for a while that approach worked. The number of malaria cases around the world fell sharply. Researchers wondered if the disease might go the way of smallpox.

Then came a woman named Rachel Carson. In an apocalyptic book titled "Silent Spring," she predicted that man would destroy the Earth, chiefly through the use of sinister, profit-making pesticides like DDT, which would essentially poison the food chain. At its heart, the book was a religious, rather than scientific, tract whose premise was a creationist myth: Man had eaten of the forbidden tree of technology, and for that he would lose his access card to Eden, a gated community; he gets the card back when he gets rid of DDT and other pesticides. The book helped bring about the U.S. ban on the chemical.

Well, the Africans live (in a manner of speaking) in this version of paradise, and they're dying to get out. It has been a very silent spring for the tens of millions of people who have died of malaria.

"Malaria keeps Africa down, and down is where the rest of the world wants us to be," a medical editor in Senegal told the Atlantic. "If this was a disease of the West, it would be gone." Several Western scientists even told the magazine that population control, not disease control, is the central mission of the U.S. Agency for International Development in Africa. Said one scientist, "I'd rather die of malaria than of starvation."

There's no need for such a choice. There was no evidence at the time DDT was banned in the early '70s, and there is no evidence now that when used as directed the chemical posed a serious human health threat. Nor is it clear that its use had anything to do with declines in certain bird species, many of which had been having problems long before the advent of DDT. Why then deny the Third World access to a cheap, effective pesticide for which there is no substitute?

DDT, editorialized the British Medical Journal in 1969, "has incontrovertibly been shown to prevent human illness on a scale hitherto achieved by no other public health measure entailing the use of a chemical." Who now wants to save malaria from it?
20 posted on 08/11/2002 11:03:25 AM PDT by ijcr
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