| By Elizabeth M. Whelan A remarkable new documentary
tells the story of how political and ideological forces combined to
ban a widely and safely used chemical, DDT, leading to a surge of
malaria deaths in developing countries like Kenya, Indonesia, and
India.
3 Billion and Counting, which premieres this Friday in
Manhattan, was produced by Dr. Rutledge Taylor, a California
physician who specializes in preventive medicine. His film will both
shock and anger you.
DDT was first synthesized in 1877, but it was not until 1940 that
a Swiss chemist demonstrated that it could kill insects without any
harm to humans. It was introduced into widespread use during World
War II and became the single most important pesticide in
maintaining human health for the next two decades. The scientist
who discovered the insecticidal properties of DDT, Dr. Paul Müller,
was awarded the 1948 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his
work on DDT. (In the 1940s and 1950s the chemical was the “secret”
ingredient in a popular new cocktail, the Mickey Slim: gin, with a
pinch of DDT.)
In 1962, Rachel Carson’s lyrical but scientifically flawed book,
Silent Spring, argued eloquently, but erroneously, that
pesticides, especially DDT, were poisoning both wildlife and the
environment – and also endangering human health. The National
Academy of Sciences, the American Medical Association, and the U.S.
surgeon general were among those who dismissed these charges and
came out in support of continuing to use DDT to fight disease and
protect crops. A federal hearing was held on the safety of DDT, and
in April 1972 Judge Edmund Sweeney concluded that not only was DDT
safe, but it was an essential chemical. Two months later, the head
of the Environmental Protection Agency, William Ruckelshaus – who
had never attended a single day’s session of the EPA’s hearings and
admitted that he had not read the transcripts — overturned the
judge’s decision, declaring, without evidence, that DDT was “a
potential human carcinogen” and banned it for virtually all uses.
The ban on DDT was considered to be the first major victory for the
environmentalist movement in the United States, and countries around
the world followed America’s lead.
In Ceylon (now Sri Lanka), DDT spraying had reduced malaria cases
from 2.8 million in 1948 to 17 in 1963. After spraying stopped,
malaria cases rose sharply, reaching 2.5 million over the next
decade.
Scientists have never found an effective substitute for DDT — and so
the malaria death rate has kept on soaring.
In his dissection of the rise of the environmental movement and the
fall of science, Dr. Taylor not only educates us, but he also sparks
outrage about the unforeseen consequences of a scientifically
ignorant chemical witchhunt, one that has caused untold human
suffering and billions of deaths, primarily among children. While
any man-on-the-street interview will yield an overwhelming majority
of negative comments about DDT — a “highly toxic, killer chemical” –
the reality is that DDT has saved more lives than any other
man-made chemical.
– Dr. Elizabeth M. Whelan is president of the American Council
on Science and Health.
* * * * *
By the way, when the infestation
of "bedbugs" that is currently spreading everywhere across the U.S.
catches up to you, contemplate the fact that the itchy little blood
suckers once almost became extinct due to DDT. Until it was banned,
it was the only thing effective against them.
3 Billion deaths, huh? - I guess
the environmentalists would say that's good because that's 3 billion
more mouths to feed and 3 million more sets of lungs exhaling CO2
and harming the atmosphere and...
WTF? What kind of allegedly intelligent and sane people ban the ONLY
effective insecticide, which has been proven safe for humans, and
leave it on the banned list as 3 billion people die? Probably the
same kind of people who tolerate the existence of a cult
masquerading as a religion which has a published goal of violently
killing or enslaving every person in the WORLD who is not a member
of their cult.
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