The campaign to ban DDT got its start with the publication of Rachel Carsons book Silent Spring in 1962. Carsons popular book was a fraud. She played on peoples emotions, and to do so, she selected and falsified data from scientific studies, as entomologist Dr. J. Gordon Edwards has documented in his analysis of the original scientific studies that Carson cited.
As a result of the propaganda and lies, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency convened scientific hearings and appointed a Hearing Examiner, Edmund Sweeney, to run them. Every major scientific organization in the world supported DDT use, submitted testimony, as did the environmentalist opposition. The hearings went on for seven months, and generated 9,000 pages of testimony. Hearing Examiner Sweeney then ruled that DDT should not be banned, based on the scientific evidence: DDT is not carcinogenic, mutagenic, or teratogenic to man [and] these uses of DDT do not have a deleterious effect on fish, birds, wildlife, or estuarine organisms, Sweeney concluded.
Two months later, without even reading the testimony or attending the hearings, EPA administrator William Ruckelshaus overruled the EPA hearing officer and banned DDT. He later admitted that he made the decision for political reasons. Science, along with economics, has a role to play . .. .. [but] the ultimate decision remains political, Ruckelshaus said.
Thanks YUGELY (or is it BIGLY) for the assist. Sometimes I forget that some FReepers are a LOT older than some other FReepers and may not have lived some of this crap. Again, thanks for covering my 6. Well you and Marchondc......