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Mercury: The Latest Green Scare Campaign
CNSNews.com ^ | January 16, 2004 | Alan Caruba

Posted on 01/16/2004 7:17:19 PM PST by Tailgunner Joe

The Greens have mastered the ability to conjure up a scare campaign about almost anything to such perfection, one almost forgets that they are a lying bunch whose past lies have harmed the timber industry, those engaged in ranching and agriculture, those who provide the chemical building blocks of everything we use every day, and those responsible for providing the energy this nation requires to function.

Let me show you how the Greens, assisted by journalists with an agenda, create such a campaign. In this case, the target is mercury, a common chemical widely used by various industries and which is discharged as the result of producing energy to heat or cool one's home, et cetera.

On Monday, December 6, 2002, an opinion editorial, "Don't let polluters deny danger of mercury" appeared in my local daily newspaper, the (Newark, NJ) Star-Ledger. The author was Jillian Waldman, identified as "a field associate for New Jersey Public Information Research Group."

PIRG is a Ralph Nader organization that passes itself off as a consumer group. The opinion editorial referred to "prominent public health advocates" without naming them and accusing "a powerful industry coalition" of lobbying to insure the air remains filled with mercury and other pollutants.

Now watch the chain of "news" articles that followed in the Star-Ledger. On December 9, Alexander Lane, the newspaper's designated reporter on environmental topics, had an article, "Air pollution blamed for premature deaths." The same day, the newspaper carried an article by Tom Johnson and Kevin Coughlin, "Experts: Energy firms ignore upgrades."

Two days later, Lane was back with "New rule targets mercury emissions: State seeks to cut pollutant by 75 percent." And the next day, December 12, the Star-Ledger ran an Associated Press article by Lauran Neergaard, "Panel wants greater details in warning on mercury in fish." This was followed on December 16 with another AP article, "EPA would allow 15 years for reduction of mercury: Power plant controls less stringent than those proposed in Clinton years."

Finally, on January 6, the Star-Ledger makes the "issue" into a lead editorial, "Negligence on mercury." The editorial demands the federal government to do more to "reduce the dangers." Do you see a pattern here?

What you don't see or read is the truth about mercury in the atmosphere or in the food chain.

For example, none of these articles note the enormous cost of upgrades being demanded to reduce mercury emissions, nor the fact that utilities have, over the years, invested billions of dollars to comply with the Clean Air Act. To make those investments, the cost of the energy provided to consumers has to be increased.

The issue these days is the cost-benefit ratio. At what point does the mandated investment yield a level of safety that is unnecessary? Okay, no one wants pollution in the air, but just when is the air "clean" enough? For Greens there never is "enough" even if there is, as is the case of mercury, no proof that anyone is actually endangered by the miniscule amount of mercury by US utilities and industry.

The Star-Ledger editorial says it all, "But it is not doing enough from dirty power and other industrial plants." The target is always the same, the demand is always the same, the complaint is always the same, and the facts on which it is based is almost always without scientific merit.

The amount in question is about one percent of the total human contribution to the atmosphere. The US is responsible, according to the EPA, for 3.6 percent of the world's total, despite the fact that the US represents about 25 percent of the world's total economic activity. That means 97.4 percent comes from someplace else. Even so, not one of the articles reports that there is NO evidence that mercury emissions have killed a single person on the face of the earth. As Patrick J. Michaels, a senior fellow in environmental studies at the Cato Institute, succinctly says, "Where are the bodies? Where are the sick millions?"

For the record, there was one instance of mercury poisoning. It was Japan's Minamata Bay where, since the 1930s, massive industrial dumping had occurred.

Back in March 2003, the Environmental Protection Agency came out with a report "America's Children and the Environment." One favorite way of scaring the hell out of everyone is to announce that our children are at risk. The EPA asserted that 8 percent of American women of childbearing age had a mercury concentration of 5.8 parts per billion in their blood. I repeat, per billion . To put it another way, 92 percent did not show any mercury concentration, even in the statistically low risk factor stated.

Steven Milloy, a Cato Institute adjunct scholar, recently tore into the current scaremongering by the Food and Drug Administration. Notice how the claims about mercury start with some self-appointed "consumer" or "environmental" group (often in tandem) migrate into the EPA, and then spread to other government agencies? In December, the FDA warned against mercury in seafood. Again it was about the claim that trace amounts in an expectant mother's blood was a hazard.

The FDA warned against eating swordfish, king mackerel or tilefish "because they contain high levels of mercury." Larger fish usually do, Milloy noted, but he also directed the reader to a study from the Harvard School of Public Health published in the Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine (February 2002) which was unable to find mercury-related health effects among a group of regular swordfish consumers.

Have you any idea how much swordfish, king mackerel or tilefish---indeed any fish, you'd have to eat to acquire enough mercury to pose a health threat? A lot! A whole lot! More than you'd normally eat in a year, maybe two or three years, or longer. The FDA is blowing smoke up your dress with their latest warning.

Even by their own published standards, you can safely eat up to twelve ounces (two to three meals) of fish and shellfish every week. And, as Milloy points out, "The FDA's 12 ounces-per-week is simply arbitrary." It's just government agency hocus-pocus!

Unable to dispute the Bush administration's decision not to burden utilities and others with hugely costly requirements to reduce pollution (that represents no real health threat!), the Greens have simply conjured up a campaign about the "dangers" of mercury. And too many irresponsible members of the press went along with them as they always do.

You are not in any danger from mercury, but you are in danger once again with be stuck with the bill if this latest scare campaign were to succeed.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: environment; greenparty; greens; mercury; paranoidfringe; pirg; pollution; ralphnader

1 posted on 01/16/2004 7:17:20 PM PST by Tailgunner Joe
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To: Tailgunner Joe
The non-profit corporation must be killed to get all these leaches off of our backs.

Nothing frosts my arse more than seeing some geek on tv identified as an "advocate" for some nebulous cause or another.

2 posted on 01/16/2004 7:32:50 PM PST by metesky (TGIF! Time for some alcohol- involved posting!)
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To: farmfriend
ping
3 posted on 01/16/2004 7:35:20 PM PST by Libertarianize the GOP (Ideas have consequences)
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To: Tailgunner Joe
Anybody over about age 40 probably has a mouth full of mercury /silver amalgam fillings. I've been carrying mine for 40+ years and I'm sure have ingested micro-analytical amounts of mercury--without apparent harm. So have millions of other people for more than 100 years.

Is mercury toxic--sure, but in part per billion levels--probably not or I would have been dead years ago.

4 posted on 01/16/2004 7:38:47 PM PST by The Great RJ
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To: Tailgunner Joe
Even by their own published standards, you can safely eat up to twelve ounces (two to three meals) of fish and shellfish every week. And, as Milloy points out, "The FDA's 12 ounces-per-week is simply arbitrary." It's just government agency hocus-pocus!

Who the hell eats 4 oz of fish for a meal????

I worked for NYPIRG when I was young n dumb. I can tell you first hand, the PIRGS are a load of Crap with a capital C.
5 posted on 01/16/2004 7:56:54 PM PST by adam_az (Be vewy vewy qwiet, I'm hunting weftists.)
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To: The Great RJ
without apparent harm

I'll focus on the word 'apparent'. My wife was diagnosed with MS. Once I had her mercury fillings removed, the symptoms disappeared.

6 posted on 01/16/2004 8:00:02 PM PST by aimhigh
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To: aimhigh
"I'll focus on the word 'apparent'."

Yup. I wouldn't take mercury poisioning to lightly.

7 posted on 01/16/2004 8:08:37 PM PST by blam
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To: Tailgunner Joe
I'm no envirowacko, but I won't go into all the reasons that I hate fluorescent lights.

Just one is enough - they are all filled with Mercury vapor and there is no recycling option in place to prevent the vapor from escaping to the atmosphere.

If you want me to cuss for four hours, just ask me about their RF noise on the shortwave bands!

8 posted on 01/16/2004 8:50:41 PM PST by mfulstone
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To: Tailgunner Joe; Ace2U; Alamo-Girl; Alas; alfons; alphadog; amom; AndreaZingg; Anonymous2; ...
Rights, farms, environment ping.

Let me know if you wish to be added or removed from this list.
I don't get offended if you want to be removed.


If this is taxes with reprsentation
Give me taxes without representation
I much prefer a tax on tea!
Instead of everything else.

9 posted on 01/16/2004 10:16:30 PM PST by farmfriend ( Isaiah 55:10,11)
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To: farmfriend
A "you leave my damn tea alone !! !!" BUMP.

 

;^)

10 posted on 01/16/2004 10:24:37 PM PST by brityank (The more I learn about the Constitution, the more I realise this Government is UNconstitutional.)
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To: brityank
LOL!
11 posted on 01/16/2004 10:26:13 PM PST by farmfriend ( Isaiah 55:10,11)
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To: Tailgunner Joe
Next to plutonium mercury is the most toxic metal around. My mother-in- law. Who died a particularly nasty death from an undiagnosed neurological disorder was an interesting case.

About midway through her decline after seeing numerous doctors my wife was walking through a store with her when a German doctor stopped her and asked her how her mother got metal poisoned.

She had a hair analysis done and she was off the charts. My wife’s brother who works in waste management sent some technicians down from MASS. to test the environment. tested the house, water everything NADA, nothing.

My wife who had been reading up on it had her mother breath out of her mouth into a jerome meter. The reading was so high my brother-in-law said he could put her in a barrel and ship her to Canada for disposal.

We had her fillings replaced but she continued her decline, it was not till near the end when she had a bridge fall out we found out that she had a layer of Mercury amalgam on top of the 3 base teeth a .10 of an inch thick.

Mercury amalgam is 50% mercury after 5 years it is 50% gone. It dissipates as a Vapor which is inhaled and ingested. This form of mercury vapor is highly toxic. Mercury is one of the few metals that readily crosses the blood brain barrier.

In socialist Europe with socialized medicine they had high incidences of lou gerhig’s, MS, Alzheimer’s higher than what you would see in the general POP. metal toxicity was strongly suspected. After much research the cause was determined to be more numerous and larger amalgam filings

An interesting note there were no documented cases of MS till about 1820 they first appeared in a 50 mile radius of London England which also is the same place and time when they stared using mercury amalgams.

There is a unusually high incidence of MS among dentist assistants who mix the amalgam for the dentists. In fact a relative of mine has MS. she is 35 years old a dental assistant by profession.

My wife’s brother services dentists offices. They treat mercury as a toxic substance before it goes into your mouth and when they take it out. So what is it when the battery effect kicks in and the vapor makes it way in to your lungs/blood and your oralfactory system and crosses the blood brain barrier? The Vapor mercury is not the same as the stuff in seafood

I do not worry about most environmental issues, but I like my food and water clean.

Eat seafood from Long Island sound or the CT river? no thanks I will not swim in it either. Maine OK

Alzheimer’s Anyone?
12 posted on 01/16/2004 11:09:57 PM PST by underbyte (Arrogance will drop your IQ 50 points)
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To: underbyte
An interesting note there were no documented cases of MS till about 1820 they first appeared in a 50 mile radius of London England which also is the same place and time when they stared using mercury amalgams.

Interesting, but that also prompts a question of its own: did they start documenting these cases because the use of mercury in dentistry caused them, or did they simply not have enough medical knowledge before then to properly diagnose one even if they had a clearly identifiable case by today's standards.

13 posted on 01/16/2004 11:20:44 PM PST by GOPcapitalist
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To: blam
Well, I don't know if it's mercury in the fish, but when we lived at the Jersey shore, there were an inordinate number of cancer deaths among people that we knew who had boats and ate a heavy diet of the local bluefish (which I hated, yuk), and I remember people worrying about the fish, back then (70s).
14 posted on 01/16/2004 11:27:15 PM PST by Eva
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To: The Great RJ
Japanese and Scandinavians eat a BUNCH of fish. Every day.
Keep that in mind when the studies point to red zone mercury danger levels in what we might think of as off-the-charts fish intake per year. Lots of people really do eat that much fish. Just watch "The Iron Chef" on the Food Channel...

When your fillings were installed, I think probably the only person in the room without a surgical mask was you.
During the drilling, don't you remember all of that dust with the weird smell? Did you just think that was your tooth that you were inhaling? That was the mercury.

I've read about the mercury filling removal trend and I'm all for it. I think some people are more sensitive to this poison than others.

15 posted on 01/16/2004 11:27:20 PM PST by My Dog Likes Me (tailgunner joe, aimhigh, blam, adam_az, mfulstone)
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To: mfulstone
Just coincidencedental ;)
16 posted on 01/16/2004 11:28:08 PM PST by underbyte (Arrogance will drop your IQ 50 points)
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To: metesky
The non-profit corporation must be killed to get all these leaches off of our backs.

They are but one of many leaches, but they are a good place to start.

17 posted on 01/16/2004 11:54:29 PM PST by Paul C. Jesup
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To: farmfriend
BTTT!!!!!!
18 posted on 01/17/2004 3:21:37 AM PST by E.G.C.
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To: Eva
I eat a lot of fish so, I had a heavy-metals test done on my body. On a mercury scale of 0-15, I had a two. That's not why I'm crazy, lol.
19 posted on 01/17/2004 7:13:45 AM PST by blam
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To: underbyte
"Eat seafood from Long Island sound or the CT river? no thanks I will not swim in it either."

Eating fish from the fresh water rivers and lakes in this region is not recommended due to mercury contamination. There is a big study underway now by the USA (University Of South Alabama and UC (University Of California) in the area waters.

The Mercury Forum

20 posted on 01/17/2004 7:22:10 AM PST by blam
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