Posted on 04/08/2004 3:44:37 AM PDT by JesseHousman
West Nile Virus- Bring Back DDT? | ||||||
Scams, Scalawags, and an all-too-gullible Public...famous frauds sold to America |
That may be; but the facts are the DDT is not banned; it can and is used for mosquito control; environmental organizations are therefore not to blame for millions of malaria deaths; and there are many other ways in which mosquitoes and malaria could be controlled if rich countries could invest a small amount of money in such efforts in Third World countries. (Note that I say "could" and not "would" -- true investments in fixing the problem are made difficult by the difficulties of getting money to go where it is needed and the dictatorial regimes in many such countries.) One such effort that is low-cost and which could pay big dividends is the distribution of insecticide-impregnated mosquito netting.
I have no liking for radical environmental groups, but blaming them for endemic malaria is too convenient. The roots of the problem lie in several places. One of the most notable is the amassing of wealth by "big men" dictators like Idi Amin and Mugabe and a host of others like them - they amass their own fortunes and neglect the people of the countries that they rule and the basic infrastructural improvements that would improve public health drastically. Until the benefits of democracy are exported more effectively, these problems will continue even if foreign-aid funding for malaria and waterborne disease control triples.
With the sole exception of the nuclear bomb, this is absolutely true. The earth may be warming slightly, but not much more than known periodic shifts, and definitely not enough to make a significant difference for anything. And I don't see how we would think it is because of us.
And volcanic eruptions.
You've discovered a way to control volcanic eruptions?
Greenpeace, WWF, EDT, AID and the rest are all still pushing for the all out ban, and failing that they seek to make it as difficult and expensive as possible for any country to use it. Some of the quotes by their spokespeople are quite chilling and show the true agendas they are pursuing- Genocide and population control.
The following is from December 2000, and last I checked their call for banning DDT as a POP has been attempted every year since.
DDT ban is genocidal By Steven Milloy
December 1, 2000, FoxNews.com
As first-world children eagerly anticipate the holiday season, millions of third-world children are about to be condemned to certain death from malaria by international environmental elitists.
The World Wildlife Fund, Greenpeace, Physicians for Social Responsibility and 250 other environmental groups will advocate the insecticide DDT be banned at next weeks United Nations Environment Programme meeting in Johannesburg. The meetings aim is a treaty banning or restricting so-called persistent organic chemicals (POPs).
Malaria control experts oppose a DDT ban, arguing that spraying DDT in houses is inexpensive and highly effective in controlling malaria especially in sub-Saharan Africa where 1 in 20 children die from malaria. Unfortunately, the eco-elites have out-maneuvered and outgunned public health advocates.
Saving lives doesnt interest DDT opponents who insist on recycling junk science to achieve their ill-considered goal of a pesticide-free world.
DDT is a persistent, bioaccumulative, hormone disrupting chemical, alleges the director of the WWFs anti-DDT effort. It is associated in the publics mind with weakened eggshells and declining bird populations..., he added.
But there never was, and still isnt a scientific basis for DDT fearmongering.
The publics mind was first polluted with misinformation about DDT by Rachel Carson in her 1962 book Silent Spring. Carson incorrectly alleged that DDT harmed bird reproduction and caused cancer.
Carson wrote Dr. [James] DeWitt's now classic experiments [show] that exposure to DDT, even when doing no observable harm to the birds, may seriously affect reproduction. Quail into whose diet DDT was introduced throughout the breeding season survived and even produced normal numbers of fertile eggs. But few of the eggs hatched.
DeWitt actually reported no significant difference in egg hatching between birds fed DDT and birds not fed DDT.
Carson predicted a cancer epidemic that could hit practically 100 percent of the human population. This prediction hasnt materialized, no doubt because it was based on a 1961 epidemic of liver cancer in middle-aged rainbow trout later attributed to aflatoxin. There is no credible evidence that DDT poses a cancer risk, whatsoever.
As wrong as Carson was, the Environmental Protection Agencys action against DDT the precedent for next weeks efforts to ban the chemical was worse.
Anti-DDT activism led to hearings before an EPA administrative law judge in 1971-72. After 7 months and 9,000 pages of testimony, the judge concluded DDT is not a carcinogenic hazard to man... DDT is not a mutagenic or teratogenic hazard to man... The use of DDT under the regulations involved here do not have a deleterious effect on freshwater fish, estuarine organisms, wild birds or other wildlife.
Despite the exculpatory ruling, then-EPA administrator William Ruckelshaus banned DDT.
Ruckelshaus didnt attend the hearings or read the transcript. He refused to release the memos used to make his decision, even rebuffing a Department of Agriculture request through the Freedom of Information Act.
As it turns out, Ruckelshaus belonged the Environmental Defense Fund. Ruckelshaus solicited donations for the anti-pesticide activist group on personal stationery stating, EDF's scientists blew the whistle on DDT by showing it to be a cancer hazard, and three years later, when the dust had cleared, EDF had won.
The WWF now alleges DDT disrupts hormonal processes to wreak havoc on immune, reproductive and nervous systems in laboratory animals, citing a 1999 report by the National Research Council.
The allegation conveniently overlooks the reports main conclusion that the scientific evidence is inadequate to suggest that low doses of chemicals typically found in the environment pose any risk. Its not surprising, after all, that animals administered high doses of chemicals develop all sorts of ill-effects; theyve essentially been poisoned.
The WWFs chicanery doesnt end with the science. Publicly, the WWF claims it backed off the demand of a DDT ban by 2007 in favor of regulatory controls. Dont be fooled.
The would-be controls are so onerous and costly for the third world that they would operate as a de facto ban. Of the 23 countries using DDT, only 9 countries so far asked for exemptions under the impending treaty. The others either have stockpiled DDT in advance or have been scared off by the burdensome regulatory scheme, according to Roger Bate of FightingMalaria.org.
Donor agencies such as the U.S. Agency for International Development have pressured Belize, Bolivia and Mozambique not to use DDT or risk losing their aid money, adds Bate.
The AIDs blackmail is eerily similar to its 1970s view that the failure of the Global Malaria Eradication Program (1956-1969) was a blessing in disguise. Better off dead than riotously reproducing, an AID official said.
A committee of the National Academy of Sciences wrote in 1970, To only a few chemicals does man owe as great a debt as to DDT... in a little more than two decades, DDT has prevented 500 million deaths due to malaria that otherwise would have been inevitable.
The WWF et al. often exploit the children as a stalking horse for their dubious agenda. Their effort to ban DDT is a chilling reminder of this cynicism.
Steven Milloy is a biostatistician, lawyer, adjunct scholar at the Cato Institute and publisher of JunkScience.com.
enviro- self-ping.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.