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How Long Shall We Grovel
Richard Grossman (April 2001) |
HOW
LONG SHALL WE GROVEL?
A
Memo for the Record
by:
Richard Grossman[1]
4 April 2001
provoked by: the Bill Moyers PBS Special “Trade Secrets”[2]
“We have trusted the chemical industry and our government to
test the
chemicals’ effects on health and safety, and to take dangerous ones
off the market.” - Alternet.org
2 April 2001
***
Why?
Based
on what evidence?
***
The point of the Moyers’ program was that chemical corporation officials made investment, technology, sales, and promotion decisions to drench their workers and the world with what they knew were poisons, and they didn’t come clean. Commenting on the program, The New York Times Corporation said that nothing good comes without a price.
The remedies suggested in Moyers’ program: passing laws that give people the “right to know” what’s in all products, and requiring the testing of chemicals before they are mass produced.
So I asked myself: Did Bill Moyers instruct his staff to discover what was known in the 1950s and 1960s and 1970s and 1980s -- or earlier -- about chemical corporations and poisoning? To find out what people back then were saying and doing? I took a look at my bookshelves and files.
Here are excerpts from reports, articles and books
going back 40, 50 & 60+
years.
They reveal that
knowledge
about the mass production, use
& dumping of toxic chemicals,
& about persistent manipulations, murders,
deceptions & usurpations
by chemical corporation and government officials, was
no
secret.
These excerpts show that
diverse people and civic groups --
along with eloquent scientists
& even some elected officials --
had a different vision of
how to build a prosperous, productive,
healthy & just society.
They show people
committed to
democracy, human rights
& living in harmony
with the earth’s natural systems.
They show people organizing to stop corporate & government assaults on
democracy, human rights, justice
and the earth’s
natural systems.
They show poisoned people demanding not vengeance
but acknowledgment as
human beings...
& then, health care,
reparations, justice & sanity.
They show poisoned people
educating themselves, neighbors,
public officials
and the nation about science,
medicine, business, oppression &
self-governance.
In 2001,
ANYONE
who chooses to look
will find massive evidence of chemical corporation murder, pillage & lies extending over a century.
ANYONE
who chooses to look
will see persistent corporate denial of people’s
constitutional and human rights,
& government complicity.
This country exalts the platitude
“all political authority is inherent in the people.”
But our great corporations have long been protected
by the rule of law...
empowered by
our own constitution and bill of rights.
Our society has bestowed upon Chemical corporation leaders,
as upon top officials of all giant
corporations, the highest rewards & honors,
& great wealth.
Great corporations have been
exalted
by legislators & judges,
presidents & governors, police &
national guards, by
local, state & federal governments.
How long shall we authorize chemical corporate officials to kill?
How long shall we beg them
to tell the truth?
To make the earth’s air, water and soil,
our foods and our jobs,
a little less deadly?
To please “give us” the right to know?
How long shall we grovel before our elected public servants?
Other species
are counting on us to do more
than regulate the destruction of the planet.
What do YOU think we the people
should do now?
***
·
“The United States Department of Agriculture has drafted a bill
to revise the Pure Food and Drug Act, with the purpose of protecting the people
of America, especially the poor and unsophisticated, against substances proven
to be either useless, fantastically expensive, grossly misrepresented, noxious,
habit-forming, or deadly. ...This
fair and strictly serviceable proposal to prevent mass injury, fraud and murder
has been met by a veritable avalanche of abuse, obfuscation and indignation.
Three great industries are roaring defiance, threatening to deprive congressmen
of their seats, newspapers and magazines of their advertising, the
administration of support for its recovery program. The drug and cosmetic trades
have no more interest in rendering a service to the community than a blind man
has in the cinema. The proposed bill threatens sources of income. Vendible
values might be lowered. Nothing else matters.” -Stuart Chase,[3] 1934
·
“The ‘control of
nature’ is a phrase conceived in arrogance born of the Neanderthal age of
biology and philosophy, when it was supposed that nature exists for the
convenience of man. The concepts and practices of applied entomology for the
most part date from that Stone Age of science. It is our alarming misfortune
that so primitive a science has armed itself with the most modern and terrible
weapons, and that in turning them against the insects it has also turned them
against the earth.” - Rachel Carson, the final paragraph of Silent Spring,[4] 1962
·
“As a biologist, I have reached this conclusion: we have
come to a turning point in the human habitation of the earth. The environment is
a complex, subtly balanced system, and it is this integrated whole which
receives the impact of all the separate insults inflicted by pollutants. Never
before in the history of this planet has its thin life-supporting surface been
subjected to such diverse, novel, and potent agents. I believe that the
cumulative effects of these pollutants, their interactions and amplification,
can be fatal to the complex fabric of the biosphere. And because man is, after
all, a dependent part of this system, I believe that continued pollution of the
earth, if unchecked, will eventually destroy the fitness of this planet as a
place for human life. ...If we are to survive, we need to become aware of the
damaging effects of technological innovations, determine their economic and
social costs, balance these against the expected benefits, make the facts
broadly available to the public, and take the action needed to achieve an
acceptable balance of benefits and hazards. Obviously, all this should be done before
we become massively committed to a new technology. ...The costs of correcting
past mistakes and preventing the threatened ones are already staggering, for the
technologies which have produced them are now deeply embedded in our economic,
social and political structure. ...It is already clear that even our present
difficulties demand far-reaching social and political actions.
Solution of our pollution problems will drastically affect the economic
structure of the automobile industry, the power industry, and agriculture and
will require basic changes in urban organization. ...Science can reveal the
depths of this crisis, but only social action can resolve it...” - Dr. Barry
Commoner, [5]
·
“In March of 1945, even before the war was over, the AFL
and the CIO worked out an agreement with the US Chamber of Commerce calling for
a ‘new Charter for Labor and Management’ for the postwar period. One of the
seven points read: ‘The inherent right and responsibility of management to
direct the operations of an enterprise shall be recognized and preserved. So
that enterprise may develop and expand and earn a reasonable profit, management
must be free as well from unnecessary governmental interference and burdensome
restrictions.’” [6]
·
“A History of Fraud
and Deception: Nothing has more characterized the history of occupational health
since the industrial revolution than the imbalance between employers and
employees in access to hazard information. Many examples could be cited...The
Union Carbide Corporation and its subcontractors concealed evidence of an
epidemic of acute and often fatal silicosis among tunnel workers in West
Virginia [in the early 1930s]. The Rohm and Haas Company ignored lung
cancer among workers exposed to bischloromethylether (BCME), prevented
independent analyses of exposure and medical records, and sought to forestall
governmental efforts to evaluate and regulate the substance. The Allied-Signal
chemical company was sufficiently concerned about the neurotoxic effects of the
pesticide kepone to create a legally separate corporate entity to produce the
substance; high exposures among uninformed and unprotected workers caused
serious tremors, brain damage, liver enlargement, personality changes and
sterility. Employers in mining industries refused to disclose to workers the
results of periodic chest X rays but instead used this information to fire
workers when their lung disease had progressed to a stage where they might
consider filing a compensation claim. Two aspects of workplace deception stand
out. Where the toxic substances are new and produced by only a few firms,
industry has often denied the hazard existed and sought to prevent independent
researchers from gaining access to data necessary to identify risks. Where the
toxic substances are well known and widely used, industry has often concealed
the extent of workplace exposures and medical evidence on adverse effects in
individual workers. These tactics of obfuscation and deceit have been practiced
most widely and effectively by the asbestos industry...It is against this
backdrop of management deception that the worker right-to-know movement was born
in the 1970s.”[7]
·
“The questions which have been raised recently concerning the
hazards of 2,4,5-T and related chemicals...may ultimately be regarded as
portending the most horrible tragedy ever known to mankind...In view of the
potential disaster that could befall us—or conceivably has insidiously
befallen us—absolutely no delay is tolerable in the search for answers.”
- Senator Philip Hart, April, [8] 1970
·
“This book is about a political tactic and its
effectiveness...Our specific focus is environmental job blackmail...Employers
know that for environmental job blackmail to succeed, they must control the
terms of public debate. This is because these threats require two kinds of
misrepresentation: first, denial of the full extent and costs of environmental
destruction; and second, denial that citizens can invent or implement
alternative ways to produce and prosper. “Employers have a well-developed
repertoire of tactics designed to control the definition of issues, ranging from
elaborate economic analyses to polished public relations campaigns that isolate
advocates of change. Those who resort to job blackmail routinely overestimate
the costs of production and investment strategies less harmful to workers,
citizens and the earth. They consistently under-estimate the costs of continued
pollution and the benefits of protecting public health, preserving natural
diversity and sustaining the nation’s productive capacity.
Moreover, they hammer home the message that theirs is the only viable
alternative. The public is told: ‘Without nuclear power, you will be left
freezing in the dark; if millions of acres of forest are closed to logging,
local industries and communities will collapse; if your community refuses a
toxic waste dump, industrial production will grind to a halt.’“These
assertions invariably fail to withstand careful scrutiny. ...Coalitions of
worker and community groups have countered with documentation of present and
future environmental damage. And they have advanced sound alternatives that
preserve jobs while protecting health and environment. Unfortunately, job
blackmail threats derive authority not from facts and logic, but from power.
Employers and their allies use their resources and authority to stifle debate,
to maintain control, and to deflect demands for economic democracy. They control
the jobs and never let us forget that fact....”[9]
1991
·
“First, an industry will claim that it can’t comply with a
proposed standard, because the technology to do so does not exist. Next, the
industry will claim that the cost will drive it out of business. Finally,
companies announce that they can, but it will cost everybody plenty.”[10]
1976
·
“As far as we’re concerned in the Steelworkers, we don’t
know of any single facility that had to shut down because of environmental
cleanup. Indeed, it’s just the converse. ...We experienced it at the
Johnstown, PA, plant; we experienced it at the Lackawanna plant of the Bethlehem
Steel Corporation; we experienced it at the United States Steel Corporation in
Duluth, Minnesota: When they began to say that they were refusing to abate and
comply with the laws, that was an early warning sign that they intended to
discontinue production activity at those facilities.”[11]
1979
·
“Corporate energy interests, along with most industrialists and
some government agencies, are vigorously urging the rapid expansion of energy
production. The energy systems they want are large in scale, technologically
complex, and will be costly, wasteful, environmentally destructive and dangerous
to energy industry employees and to the public. An increasing number of
Americans believe that these systems...are too destructive to the nation’s
public health—as well as to workplace and natural environments—to be
acceptable. These citizens propose instead a large decrease in the nation’s
waste of energy, plus immediate utilization of proven solar energy technologies
and developments of solar technologies almost ready to be utilized. ...Such a
solution to the nation’s energy problem actually leads to a more stable
economy and to more jobs than would the large-scale systems. It does so with
less pollution, less disease, less social, disruption, and less interference
with community, labor union and individual rights.”[12]
1979
·
“I recently traveled through 80 communities in 8 southern
states, on a commission from the Interreligious Economic Crisis Organizing
Network. I met people who physicians and worker-health experts say are
experiencing the symptoms of common industrial practices and the products of
science and industry: liver, kidney and blood diseases; gastrointestinal
diseases; central nervous system damage; anemia; headaches; miscarriages;
cancers; infertility; diarrhea; numbness of feet and hands; decreased mental
clarity; irritability; depression; depressed bone marrow functioning; leukemias;
birth defects; growth retardation; immune system destruction; premature aging;
premature deaths; genetic disorders. The list could go on...the people I talked
to had endless stores of terrible tales to tell...The South is saturated with
poisons, and dominated by poisoners. Industrial producers, government producers,
industrial users, government and industrial dumpers, along with government and
industrial apologists, intimidaters, rationalizers, and liars, comprise the
productive’ sector of society. They pour money into advertising and public
relations, as they seek to shape public debate with images that obscure, words
that deceive. They buy scientists, health officials, newspaper owners, police
departments, environmental protection departments, politicians, and even
physicians. ...Those who want to see only have to go to these places and look.
There is also no shortage of documen-tation. A handful of local newspapers have
been diligent. Reports done by [various government agencies] and numerous
citizens groups, confirm the tales of woe. The documents show that millions of
acres in the South have been stripmined, clearcut, and otherwise ravaged by
great machines. Heavy metals—lead, arsenic, zinc, cadmium, mercury—are
strewn about. So are synthetic organic chemicals, made from petroleum. And
radioactive fission products. As Rachel Carson once wrote, ‘no responsible
chemist would think of combining in his lab’ the multitude of chemicals that
are jumbled together when dumped. In 1985, companies in the USA generated 500
billion pounds of synthetic organics (compared with one billion pounds in 1940).
Industry now uses 65,000 different chemicals, adding 1,000 new ones each year.
Only a handful have been tested, despite the evidence of chemical inks to the
diseases and disorders listed earlier. Over 400,000 firms generate products
capable of producing these ill-effects. Some
25,000 companies transport them, by truck, ship and plane. Another 25,000
companies store, dump, or ‘do’ things to them, which they are arrogant
enough to call ‘treatment.’...[13]
1988
·
In April, 1979, KRON TV in San Francisco ran a documentary
film “Politics of Poison.” It focused on herbicide spraying in California,
dioxin, miscarriages and birth deformities. It quoted Dow Chemical Corporation
spokesman Cleve Goring labeling the public campaign against spraying of this
poison as “chemical McCarthyism.” The film provoked 40,000 letters from
viewers, “demanding action,” as Regenstein described. SF Examiner columnist
Bill Mandel wrote: “The only sensible conclusions one can draw are these: that
commercial interests are spraying populated areas with herbicides considered too
deadly for use as chemical weapons; that government agencies charted with the
protection of the public and the environment are powerless or too cowardly to do
anything about this rain of death from the skies; that health officials look
everywhere for explanations except at the culprits; and that massive
expenditures by the timber and chemical companies paralyze the fact-aimed
opposition of scientists and residents of the affected areas.”[14]
·
In 1972, William Longwood wrote in The Darkening Land:
“Each spraying makes more spraying necessary...The farmer desperately turns to
new and more powerful poisons. More imbalances result. More poison residues are
in the crops for people to eat...Even after all the spraying, losses due to
pests are about the same as they were 50 years ago—about 10%....We have
destroyed the old, and the new does not work. We set out to poison bugs so we
could feed ourselves. We wind up feeding the bugs and poisoning ourselves.”[15]
·
“Regulation of pesticide use by the Federal Government is
critically dependent on the safety testing data submitted by the firms that
manufacture and market pesticides.”[16]
-- Senate Subcommittee on Administrative Practice and Procedure, December, 1976
·
“We do not know where the millions of tons [of toxic waste] is
going. We feel that the things that have turned up like the Love Canal are
simply the tip of the iceberg. We do not have the capacity at this time really
to find out what is actually happening. In my view, it is simply a wide open
situation, like the Wild West was in the 1870s, for toxic disposal. The public
is basically unprotected. There just are not any lawmen out there, State or
Federal, policing this subject.” [17]
·
“Our groundwaters are threatened by ruinous contamination...this
will become the environmental horror story of the 1980’s...the most
grievous error in judgment we as a nation ever have made.”[18]
·
“Our communities are threatened by environmental problems caused
by racism inherent in land use decisions that result in the location of dirty
industries, toxic dumps, incinerators, and military bases close to low-income
communities of color. In the Southwest, as in many other regions, social and
economic impacts include loss of resources such as clean water, land, and air.
The human costs are staggering. New Mexico, best described as a colony of
the United States, is a case in point...Indigenous land loss, the privatization
of rangelands, and the coming of the railroad in the 1880s dramatically changed
the SW and left people of color in New Mexico economically disenfranchised.
State and local governments have largely functioned at the behest of the federal
government and for the benefit of outside industries. Barriers have prevented
poor communities from exercising electoral power or economic influence even in
this limited political arena....Tremendous amounts of groundwater and surface
water have been reserved for military and military-related use, for industry and
agribusiness. While poor communities have continually had their rights to
groundwater and surface water stolen over the years, that which is still
accessible is now being poisoned....Birth defects are increasingly common among
children of women working for high-tech manufacturers. ...Pesticides are a
constant danger to Chicano and Mexican farm workers in southern NM. With the
blessings of the state agriculture department, agribusinesses routinely use
organophosphates and other insecticides, which poison farm workers and their
families and groundwater supplies of local communities, causing cancer and other
diseases among many people. ..These cases are not confined to NM but also can be
seen and heard throughout the Southwest and in communities where there are large
numbers of Latinos...The McFarland, California, ‘childhood cancer cluster’
is an area where farm workers and their families live in a federally funded
housing tract, built right on top of a highly contaminated site previously used
as a pesticide dump...[19]
1994
·
In April 1980, the President’s Council on Environmental
Quality issued a report by economics professor A. Myrick Freeman. It concluded
that “national benefits which have been realized from reductions in air
pollution before 1970 lie in the range from roughly $5 billion to $51 billion
per year,” with the best estimate for 1978 being $21.4 billion. The savings
included lowered damage to human health, crops, forests, vegetation, buildings
and other property.[20]
·
“...In 1928...the Consumers’ League of Massachusetts
surveyed the extent of female exposure to occupational poisons and tabulated its
findings.” Here are excerpts from the League’s chart listing “some types
of industrial poisoning.” Women
working in the shoe, leather and rubber industries were subjected to “amyl
acetate, butyl acetate, pryoxylen or nitrocellulose, benzol, wood alcohol,
naptha rubber cement, carbon disulphide, carbon tetrochloride, sulphur...” A
companion chart from 1943 on “women’s potential exposures to harmful
materials during” WWII lists: “skin irritants -- Benzol, Tetryl, Mercury
fulminate, Mica dust, Pyranol, Glass silk, materials used in manufactures of
plastics, dyes of various kinds, cutting oils and compounds; systemic poisoning
-- lead oxides, Benzol, Radium, Mercury, carbon monoxide; Respiratory diseases:
Silica dust; steel dust, mica dust; Acid burns--Nitric acid; x-ray burns, heat
prostration...”[21]
·
“At the 1936 United Auto Workers Convention, Dr. I Ruskin
reported that there had been 13,000 cases of lead poisoning in auto factories
since 1929 -- 4,000 in 1934-35 alone. John W. Anderson, who worked at the Dodge
plant in 1932, described the conditions: ‘[There] was no attempt to ventilate
the work areas or to take the pollutants out of the air...It was an accepted
fact that thousands of metal finishers in the auto industry suffered from lead
poisoning.”[22]
·
Among the social costs of production discussed are the individual
and social losses caused by industrial accidents, occupational diseases, woman
and child labor; social costs are also reflected in the manifold destructive
effects of air and water pollution resulting from inadequate methods of
combustion and from the disposal of untreated waste products into streams,
rivers and lakes by private firms; moreover, important social costs of
production tend to be bound up with the competitive exploitation of both
self-renewable and exhaustible natural wealth such as wildlife, petroleum and
coal reserves, soil fertility, and forest resources.
Social losses also arise in connection with technical changes and the
manner and rate of introduction of innovations by private enterprise. ...What
these losses have in common and what makes them truly social costs is the
fact that they do not enter into the cost calculations of private firms.
They are shifted to and are paid for in one form or another by
individuals other than the entrepreneur or by the community as a whole or by
both...”[23] 1950
·
A group of Long Island citizens led by the world-famous
ornithologist Robert Cushman Murphy had sought a court injunction to prevent the
1957 spraying [of DDT-in-fuel-oil by the US Dept of Agriculture and the
NY Dept of Agriculture and Markets upon truck gardens and dairy farms, fish
ponds and salt
marshes...quarter-acre lots of suburbia...]. Denied a preliminary injunction,
the protesting citizens had to suffer the prescribed drenching with DDT, but
thereafter persisted in efforts to obtain a permanent injunction. But because
the act had already been performed the courts held that the petition for an
injunction was ‘moot.’ The case was carried all the way to the US Supreme
Court, which declined to hear it. Justice William O. Douglas, strongly
dissenting from the decision not to review the case, held that ‘the alarms
that many experts and responsible officials have raised about the perils of DDT
underline the public importance of this case.’ ”[24]
·
“The 1972 President’s report on Occupational Safety
& Health stated that ‘at least 390,000 new cases of disabling
occupational disease’ develop each year. This figure, apparently derived from
a projection of California workers’ compensation data, is probably far below
the true incidence rate, given the barriers erected against compensating
occupational disease...[this report] estimated that ‘there may be as many as
100,000 deaths per year from occupation-caused diseases.’...It is certainly
plausible that 100,000 deaths are caused annually by job-related diseases if
heart disease, lung disease, and cancers of the lung, kidney and bladder are
even partially linked to occupational exposure. A federal study, cited by HEW
Secretary Joseph Califano, estimated that from 20 - 40% of cancer deaths were
caused by on-the-job exposure.”[25]
·
“...EPA chose to discount all of this evidence, including its
own study conducted in 1973, which seriously undermined Velsicol
[corporation’s] claims that leptophos was safe.
Instead, EPA chose to credit and rely upon reports developed for and
submitted by Velsicol—all of which concluded that leptophos was safe.
And on May 31, 1974, EPA granted tolerances for leptophos in and
on tomatoes and lettuce.”[26]
·
“...no testing has been conducted under [Toxic Substances
Control Act]. Monitoring or regulating existing chemicals that might be
hazardous has been unsuccessful, and the agency has no access to chemical
manufacturers’ health and safety studies or records. Outside of the barebones
parameters set down by Congress, TSCA remains a law virtually undeveloped
despite five years of attempted implementation.”[27] 1982
·
“...some of the pesticides...are so long-lasting and so
pervasive in the environment that virtually the entire human population of the
Nation, and indeed the world, carries some body burden of one or several of
them.”[28]
1980
· from “Major Industrial Air Polluters for Ten Selected Toxic Chemicals in Los Angeles County.” [29]
|
chemical |
company | 1989 emissions, in pounds |
|---|---|---|
|
benzene |
Monsanto |
167,000 |
|
|
Chevron |
14,895 |
|
perchloroethylene |
Polycarbon, Inc. |
241,367 |
|
|
Northrop Aircraft |
196,000 |
|
Methylene chloride |
Crain Industries |
920,000 |
|
|
Douglas Aircraft |
630,000 |
|
|
General Motors |
450,250 |
|
Methyl Chloroform |
General Motors |
1,612,260 |
|
(TCA) |
Chase Packaging |
619,000 |
·
“Since 1987, [the Mothers of East LA] have fought state
plans to build a hazardous waste incinerator in Vernon, and one in East LA.
Aurora Castillo of MELA explained: ‘Because we are a poor and Hispanic
community they think we will accept destructive projects if they promise us
jobs.’...Juana Gutierrez of MELA added, ‘The state wants to place all of
society’s problems in our community – a prison, a pipeline, and an
incinerator. But if we keep up the pressure, they will have to solve all these
problems, not just dump them from one place to another.’ ”[30]
·
“Hooker [Chemical Corporation] admits to burying about 21,800
tons of various chemicals in [Love] Canal, but, this is all they will admit to.
The Army denies burying wastes, yet there are residents who testified to seeing
Army personal and trucks on the site. ...Every time I went to another house, I
learned something new. In one home,
I met a graying, heavyset man with a pitted face. He couldn’t walk very well.
He had worked for Hooker at one time, and now he had chloracne, a condition that
results from exposure to certain
chemicals. I didn’t know it then but chloracne is also a symptom of dioxin
poisoning. Dioxin is toxic in parts per trillion. Later we learned that it was
in Love Canal. The man was as nice and pleasant as he could be, but his face
looked awful. It was all I could do to look at him.
He wanted to go ahead with a class-action suit; but he was afraid to
jeopardize his pension from Hooker. I thought to myself: How could you be so
concerned with your pension? The law will protect you. Who cares about Hooker?
Look what they’ve done to you in the plant, let alone what they’ve done to
your family living here on one of their dump sites. It was hard to
understand why people were so afraid of Hooker, of what the company might do to
them. Why weren’t they angrier? ... Commissioner Robert Whalen, Dr. Vianna,
Dr. Alexrod (who would become the next health commissioner), Dr. Kim and a few
others were sitting on the stage.
Commissioner Whalen...read an order stating that the residents of Love Canal
were not to eat food from their gardens and that the 99th Street School would be
closed during remedial construction. The bombshell came when he recommended the
evacuation of pregnant women and children under the age of two because, he said,
the state was concerned about a danger to their health. ...I called the
child-abuse hotline in Albany and demanded that Commissioner Whalen be arrested
for child abuse. I was quite serious. I called the hot line and said I would
like to report a case of child abuse. Hundreds of children were being abused.
A child in the area had died. I
wanted to press charges against Commissioner Whalen, New York State’s Health
Commissioner ... Then I tried to call Secretary of Health, Education and
Welfare, Joseph Califano, but I couldn’t get through to him. He was never
around, or he was always in a meeting. I
talked to someone else though...The man said I would have to talk to the
Environmental Protection Agency. By now I knew what the initials ‘EPA’
meant. I told him the EPA wasn’t doing anything. It had put up a small amount
of money to repair the canal but had nothing to do with health studies. We
needed someone to protect the health and welfare of our children. But he just
gave me the runaround; there was nothing he could do, he said. I was beginning
to learn how fragmented the federal government is, how far removed the top
people are, protected by secretaries, regulations and paper from contact with
ordinary people. ...David Axelrod surprised me. He is a respected scientist. I
always thought that when he became commissioner, we would have a chance. But the
position made it difficult for him to separate science from politics. He couldn’t
hold his head up straight or look us in the eye when he talked with us. If I’ve
learned anything from this experience, it’s that science is not separate from
politics, no matter how much the scientists pretend it is. ...More and more
people arrived. I was afraid the situation was getting out of control. No one
was thinking with a clear head, and I was afraid I wouldn’t be able to reason
with them. I’m not sure even I had a clear head. I was as angry as they were!
I was not going to take my children back to our house on 101st Street. It
wasn’t safe. I had almost lost Missy a few months ago because of a blood
disorder, and I didn’t want to go through that again. ...I looked at both and
told them they were hostages of the ‘Love Canal People.’ I told them no harm
would come to them, but if that they left the office, I could not be responsible
for what the crowd, now numbering nearly 500 people, would do. We had no guns,
no other weapons; but for their own protection, I advised them to stay in our
office. ...I put in a call to Jack Watson. He was President Carter’s chief of
staff and had been involved in Love Canal on and off since 1978...His secretary
answered. ...In a few moments, she said she would deliver my message to Watson.
She went on to say that we were wrong, that we should let the EPA officials go,
adding: ‘You people have blown Love Canal all out of proportion. I have
friends who have cancer and they don’t live at Love Canal...’
I told her to go to hell!...Love Canal is not over. The families will
suffer from Love Canal the rest of their lives. If the Revitalization Committee
has its way, they will resell most of the homes to new, innocent victims. Five
or ten years from now, you will probably hear the cries from people at Love
Canal once again. The residents of Love Canal learned a lesson; I’m not sure
that government and industry have. It will be up to us, as citizens, to tell
them forcefully they can’t cover over Love Canal. All our lives are at stake.”[31]
1982
·
“PCB’s have been found in all organisms analyzed from the
North and South Atlantic Oceans, even in animals living under 11,000 feet of
water. Based on all available data, it seems safe to conclude that PCB’s are
present in varying concentrations in every species of wildlife on earth.”[32]
1975
·
“...humans are exposed to heptachlor epoxide from the moment of
conception on throughout life.”[33]
1974
·
“...heptachlor is carcinogenic at the lowest levels tested (1/2
part per million) in laboratory experiments...significant levels are found in
95% of samples of adipose (fat) tissue taken from this country’s populace...”[34] 1974
·
“In February, 1981, in a move admittedly aimed at
curtailing the powers of EPA and the Occupational Safety and Health
administration, President Reagan signed an executive order restricting the
ability of government departments and agencies to issue regulations. Shortly
thereafter, Vice President George Bush, as head of the administration’s Task
Force on Regulatory Relief, announced that EPA would propose easing Clean Air
Act pollution control regulations in California dealing with oil refineries and
automobile plants....Also being prepared, as the Washington Post reported, was:
‘a target list of major health, safety, environmental and social regulations
that the President’s aides are determined, in the words of budget director
David Stockman, to ‘defer, revise, or rescind.’ They range from testing of
food and drugs to safety and pollution control equipment on autos to industry’s
handling and disposal of hazardous chemical wastes.’ “[35]
·
“In August [1981], Bush announced additional proposed
changes in 30 regulations, including allowing more lead in gasoline, which would
represent a serious potential threat to children in urban areas, who absorb the
toxic metal from the air and dust. Other targeted regulations included those
under the Toxic Substances Control Act dealing with notification and testing
requirements for the introduction of new chemicals.”[36]
·
“Last year, Americans used well over a billion pounds of
chemical pesticides and herbicides. We are all served up a stew of chemical
leftovers as residues of these pesticides and the compounds to which they
degrade find their way into our food and water...The effect of these substances
on our health, not to mention the health of the environment, is not completely
known...Since WWII the production of toxic pesticides has doubled every nine
years to reach a staggering total of 1.6 billion pounds in 1980. Many of the
most hazardous of these poisons have been banned, but are still produced in the
US for export. ...The pesticide manufacturers claim they test the safety of
their product, but it is rare that they go to the expense of performing
exhaustive tests. Federal agencies lack either the will or the clout to demand
adequate safety tests...”[37]
1981
·
“There simply are not enough of either natural colors or natural
flavors available to produce the quantity and variety of foods which American
consumers demand. Artificial colors and flavors help fill this demand.”
[38]
1981
·
“A new artificial chocolate favor—Chocolim II is offered for
use in ice cream, yogurt, beverages, candies and all other foods in which
natural chocolate is generally used...one ounce of this synthetic oil can
replace about seven lbs. of cocoa at a consider savings in cost.”[39]
·
“In England [in 1951]...the Ministry of Agriculture
considered it necessary to give warning of the hazard of going into the
arsenic-sprayed fields, but the warning was not understood by the cattle (nor,
we assume, by the wild animals and birds) and reports of cattle poisoned by the
arsenic sprays came with monotonous regularity. When death also came to a farmer’s
wife through arsenic-contaminated water, one of the major English chemical
companies (in 1959) stopped production of arsenical sprays and called in
supplies already in the hands of dealers, and shortly thereafter the Ministry of
Agriculture announced that because of high risks to people and cattle
restrictions on the use of arsenites would be imposed. In 1961, the
Australian government announced a similar ban. No such restrictions impede the
use of these poisons in the United States, however.”[40]
·
“The Business-As-Usual system referred to above -- the food
system that is profligate with energy, cropland and water, that produces
pesticide-contaminated food, bankrupt farmers, unacceptable levels of topsoil
loss, tomatoes more crash resistant than car bumpers...and 12,000 new products a
year --the system is, as the Carrying Capacity analysis shows, clearly leading
us rapidly to disaster.”[41]
1991
·
“In summary, we believe that toxic chemicals are adding to the
disease burden of the US in a significant, although as yet not precisely
defined, way. In addition, we believe that this problem will become more
important in the years ahead...We believe that the magnitude of the public
health risk associated with toxic chemicals currently is increasing and will
continue to do so until we are successful in identifying chemicals which are
highly toxic and controlling the introduction of these chemicals into our
environment.”[42]
·
“The advantages [of biological control of serious pests] over
chemicals are obvious: it is relatively inexpensive, it is permanent, it leaves
no poisonous residues. yet biological control has suffered from lack of
support...There is, then, a whole battery of armaments available to the forester
who is willing to look for permanent solutions that preserve and strengthen the
natural relations in the forest. Chemical pest control in the forest is at best
a stopgap measure bringing no real solution, at worst killing the fishes in the
forest streams, bringing on plagues of insects, and destroying the natural
controls and those we may be trying to introduce...Through all these new,
imaginative and creative approaches to the problem of sharing our earth with
other creatures there runs a constant theme, the awareness that we are dealing
with life -- with living populations and all their pressures and
counterpressures, their surges and recessions... The current vogue for poisons
has failed utterly to take into account these most fundamental considerations.
As crude a weapon as the cave man’s club, the chemical barrage has been hurled
against the fabric of life -- a fabric on the one hand delicate and
destructible, on the other miraculously tough and resilient, and capable of
striking back in unexpected ways. These extraordinary capacities of life have
been ignored by the practitioners of chemical control who have brought to their
task no ‘high-minded orientation,’ no humility before the vast forces with
which they tamper.”[43] 1962
·
“It should be evident, from nearly everything that has been said
in this book, that no economic system can be regarded as stable if its operation
strongly violates the principles of ecology. ...both socialist and capitalist
theory have apparently developed without taking into account the limited
capacity of the biological capital represented by the ecosystem. As a result,
neither system has as yet developed a means of accommodating its economic
operation to environmental imperatives. Neither
system is well prepared to confront the environmental crisis; ...nature is not
‘the enemy,’ but our essential ally. The real question is to discover what
kind of economic and social order is best adapted to serve as a partner in the
alliance with nature.”[44]
1971
·
“In our progress-minded society, anyone who presumes to explain
a serious problem is expected to offer to solve it as well. But none of us --
singly or sitting in committee --can possibly blueprint a specific ‘plan’
for resolving the environmental crisis. To pretend otherwise is only to evade
the real meaning of the environmental crisis: that the world is being carried to
the brink of ecological disaster not by a singular fault, which some clever
scheme can correct, but by the phalanx of powerful economic, political, and
social forces that constitute the march of history.
Anyone who proposes to cure the environmental crisis undertakes thereby
to change the course of history. But this is a competence reserved to history
itself, for sweeping social change can be designed only in the workshop of
rational, informed, collective social action. That we must act is now clear. The
question which we face is how.”[45]
1971
· “National Pest Control Month is an excellent time to focus attention on the persistence of pests and to discuss how we can all work to contain and control them. The National Pest Control Association and the industry it represents are to be commended for their participation in this educational observance.”[46] 1985
***
“Have we perhaps grown up in a perverse sort of way and now accept that spectacular progress like that of the last half-century cannot be achieved without tradeoffs? Nothing good, be it democracy or more durable house paint, comes without a price.” - The New York Times Corporation’s, Neil Genzlinger instructing viewers how to think about Moyers’, PBS program, 3.26.01
Lewis Regenstein, America The Poisoned, Washington DC:
Acropolis Books, 1982
Karl Grossman, The Poison Conspiracy, Sag Harbor: The Permanent press, 1983
Michael Brown, Laying Waste, NY: Pantheon, 1979
Rachel Carson, Silent Spring, Greenwich, CT: Crest, 1962
Barry Commoner, The Closing Circle, NY: Bantam, 1972
Samuel Epstein, The Politics of Cancer, SF: Sierra Club Books, 1978
Jeanne Mager Stellman, Women’s Work, Women’s Heath: Myths and Realities, NY: Pantheon, 1977
Daniel Berman, Death On the Job: Occupational Health and Safety Struggles in the United States, NY: Monthly Review Press, 1978
Ralph Nader, Ronald Brownstein, John Richard, Who’s Poisoning America, SF: Sierra Club Books, 1981
Robert van den Bosch, The Pesticide Conspiracy, NY: Anchor Books, 1980
David Wier and Mark Shapiro, Circle of Poison, SF :Institute for Food and Development Policy, 1981
Richard Kazis and Richard L. Grossman, Fear At Work: Job Blackmail, Labor & the Environment, Gabriola Island, BC: 1982, second edition - 1991
Eric Mann with the Watchdog Organizing Committee, L.A.’s Lethal Air, Labor/Community Strategy Center, 1991
K. William Kapp, The Social Costs of Private Enterprise, NY: Schocken Books, 1950
Joan Dye Gussow, Chicken Little, Tomato Sauce and Agriculture, NY: The Bootstrap Press, 1994
Robert Bullard, ed., Unequal Protection: Environmental Justice & Communities of Color, SF: Sierra Club Books, 1994
James C. Robinson, Toil and Toxics: Workplace Struggles and Political Struggles for Occupational Health, Berkeley: Univ. of Cal. Press, 1991, pp. 109-111
Dr. Marion Moses, Designer Poisons, SF: Pesticide Education Center, 1995
H. V. Hodson, The Diseconomies of Growth, London: Earth Island Ltd., 1972
E. J. Mishan, The Costs of Economic Growth, NY: Penguin Books 1971; first ed: 1967
Some studies cited by Rachel Carson in her 1962 book Silent
Spring. Check out the dates.
Heuper, W. C., Occupational Tumors and Allied Diseases. Springfield, Ill: Thomas, 1942
Todd, Frank E., and S. E. McGregor, ”Insecticides and Bees,” Yearbook of Agriculture, US Dept of Ag, 1952
Biskind, Morton S., “Public Health Aspects of the New
Insecticides,” American Journal of Digestive Diseases, Vol. 20, 1953
Ortega, Paul, et al., “Pathologic Changes in the Liver of
Rats after Feeding Low Levels of Various Insecticides,” AMA Archives of
Pathology, Vol. 64, December 1957
“Chemicals in Food Products,” Hearings, HR 74, House
Select Committee to Investigate Use of Chemicals in Food Products, 1951
Clinical Memoranda on Economic Poisons, US Public
Health Service Publ. # 476 1956
Davidow, B., and J. L. Radomski, “Isolation of an Epoxide
Metabolite from Fat Tissues of Dogs Fed Heptachor,” J. Pharmacol. and
Exper. Therapeut., Vol. 107, March 1953
Kitselman, C. H., et al, “Toxicological Studies of Aldrin
(Compound 118) on Large Animals,” Am. Journal Vet. Research, Vol. 11 1950
Brooks, F. A., “The Drifting of Poisonous Dusts Applied by
Airplanes and Land Rigs,” Agric. Engin., Vol 28 1947
Anon., “No More Arsenic,” Economist (UK), 10 October 1959
Weinbach, Eugene, “Biochemical Basis for the Toxicity of
Pentachloraphenol,” Proc. Natl Acad Sci, Vol 43 1957
“Chemicals in Foods and Cosmetics,” Hearings, 81st
Congress, HR 74 and 447, House Select Committee to Investigate Use of Chemicals
and Cosmetics, Pt. 3, 1952
Willard, C. J, “Indirect Effects of Herbicides,” Proc.,
7th Annual Meeting North Central Weed Control Conf., 1950
Quinby, Griffith E., and A. B. Lemmon, “Parathion Residues
as a Cause of Poisoning in Crop Workers,” Jour. Am. Med. Assn, vol 166 1958
Keenleyside, M. H. A., “Insecticides and Wildlife,” Canadian
Audubon, Vol. 21 1959
Graham, R. J., “Effects of Forest Insect Spraying on Trout
and Aquatic Insects in Some Montana Streams,”
Biological Problems in Water Pollution. Transactions, 1959 seminar,
US Public Health Service Technical Report W 60-3 1960
Lawrence, J. M., “Toxicity of Some New Insecticides to Several Species of Pondfish,:” Progressive Fish Culturist, Vol. 12 1950
Some studies cited by K. William Kapp in his 1950 book
The Social Costs of Private Enterprise:
National Resources Committee, Report on Water Pollution by
the Special Advisory Committee on Water Pollution, July 1935
Petroleum Investigation, 1934, Hearings before a Subcommittee of the Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, House of Representatives, 73rd Congress
H. B. Meller, “A Modern Plan for a Community Campaign
Against Air Pollution,” American Journal of the Medical Sciences # 2, August
1933
H. Cristiani and J. Stoklasa, The Loss to Agriculture
Caused by Factory Fumes, Intl Institute of Agriculture, Rome, 1927
Ad infinitum. Alas.
Let’s
close with this simple chart from 1950:
Comparison of Estimated Value of Products Manufactured with Estimated Cost of Industrial-Waste Treatment for Major Industries Contributing to the Pollution of Surface Water in the United States[47]
| product |
total value (1935) |
est. costs of waste treatment[48] | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
food & beverages |
$8,830,896,000 |
|
$205,400,000 |
|
|
textiles |
2,516,157,000 |
54,000,000 |
||
|
chemicals |
1,366,311,000 |
28,300,000 |
||
|
petroleum refining |
1,823,793,000 |
30,000,000 |
||
|
ferrous metals |
1,902,909,000 |
20,000,000 |
||
|
nonferrous metals |
382,526,000 |
21,000,000 |
||
|
rubber |
469,400,000 |
1,000,000 |
||
|
paper |
822,719,000 |
129,000,000 |
||
|
gas |
203,751,000 |
5,000,000 |
||
|
|
$18,318,461,000 |
$494,300,000 |
||
The chemical corporation role in nuclear bomb and nuclear power activities over the past 60 years is incalculable. Nothing about this aspect of US history has been included in this memorandum for the record. – RLG
[1] Co-Director, Program on Corporations, Law & Democracy, P O BOX 390, Milton Mills, NH 03852. ph: 603.473.8637; fax: 603.473.8657; email: people@poclad.org; formerly, Director of Environmentalists For Full Employment, 1976-1985; co-founder, Stop the Poisoning (STP) Schools at Highlander Center, Tennessee.
[2] As Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney recently pointed out, officials of corporations which have contracted with the Pentagon in Colombia to spray chemicals from the skies, train terrorists, supply weapons of great destruction and heaven knows what else have refused to provide her with information about what precisely their corporations are doing in Colombia. The excuse: corporate trade secrets.
[3] Stuart Chase, The Economy of Abundance, NY: Macmillan Co., 1934, pp. 25-6
[4] Rachel Carson, Silent Spring, p. 297
[5] Barry Commoner, Science & Survival, NY: Viking, 1963
[6] Fear At Work, p. 185
[7] James C. Robinson, Toil and Toxics: Workplace Struggles and Political Struggles for Occupational Health, Berkeley Univ. of Cal. Press, 1991, pp. 109-111
[8] Regenstein, p. 21
[9] Richard Kazis & Richard L. Grossman, Fear At Work: Job Blackmail, Labor & The Environment, second edition, Gabriola Island, BC: New Society Publishers, 1991, p. xi-xii. [first edition: 1982]
[10] Leonard Woodcock, President, United Auto Workers, 1976, in Fear At Work, p. 57
[11] John Sheehan, legislative director of the United Steelworkers of America, 1979, in Fear At Work, p. 21
[12] Richard L. Grossman & Gail Daneker, Energy, Jobs & the Economy, Boston: Alyson Publications, 1979
[13] Richard L. Grossman, “The Saturation of the South,” in The Egg, Summer 1988
[14] Regenstein, pp. 25-6
[15] Regenstein, p. 82
[16] “The EPA and the Regulation of Pesticides,” staff Report to this senate committee, Washington DC, December, 1976.
[17] James Moorman, Assistant Attorney General for Land and Natural Resources, US Dept of Justice, testifying before the House Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations, May 16, 1979, in Regenstein p. 136
[18]
Eckhardt Beck, EPA assistant
administrator, July 25, 1980, in Regenstein p, 168
[19] Richard Moore and Louis Head, in Unequal Protection: Environmental Justice & Communities of Color, edited by Robert D. Bullard, SF: Sierra Club Books, 1994, pp. 195-200
[20] Regenstein, p. 205; nb: a significant “benefits” literature has existed for decades
[21] Jeanne Mager Stellman, Women’s Work, Women’s Heath: Myths and Realities, NY: Pantheon, 1977, pp. 85-86
[22] Fear At Work, p. 174
[23] K. William Kapp, The Social Costs of Private Enterprise, NY: Schocken Books, 1950, pp. 229-30
[24] Carson, Silent Spring, p. 158-9
[25] Dan Berman, Death On The Job, pp. 44-46
[26] Senate Subcommittee on Administrative Practice and Procedure, chaired by Edward M. Kennedy, in Regenstein, p. 233
[27] Chemical Regulation Reporter, 15 January, 1982, in Regenstein p. 271
[28] Library of Congress study, August 1980: “Health Effects of Toxic Pollution: A Report from the Surgeon General,” and “A Brief Review of Selected Environmental Contamination Incidents with a Potential for Health Effects,” reports prepared by the Surgeon General, Dept of HHS, and the Library of Congress, for the Committee on Environment and Public Works, US Senate, in Regenstein p. 245
[29] Eric Mann & the WATCHDOG Organizing Committee, L. A.’s Lethal Air: New Strategies for Policy, Organizing and Action, LA: A Labor/Community Strategy Center Book, 1991, p. 17
[30] LA’s Lethal Air, p. 18, 1991
[31] Lois Marie Gibbs, Love Canal: My Story, as told to Murray Levine, Albany: State University of NY Press, 1982, pp. 3, 6, 22, 30, 75-6, 141, 148-9, 174.
[32] Dr. George Harvey, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, 1975, in Regenstein p. 296
[33] Russell Train, EPA Administrator, November, 1974, in Regenstein p. 363
[34] Environmental Defense Fund, October 1974, in Regenstein, p. 363
[35] Regenstein, p. 375
[36] Regenstein, p. 375
[37] “Status Report on Pesticides,” SF: Friends of the Earth, 1981, in Karl Grossman, p. 35
[38] Institute for Food Technologists, a chemical industry “educational” non-profit corporation, in a pamphlet titled “Quick Answers to Commonly Asked Questions About Food,” 1981, in Karl Grossman, p. 85
[39] advertisement from Ritter International Corporation, in Karl Grossman, p. 83
[40] Rachel Carson, Silent Spring, NY: Houghton Mifflin, 1962, pp. 35-6
[41] Joan Dye Gussow, Chicken Little, Tomato Sauce & Agriculture, NY: The Bootstrap Press, 1991, p. 34
[42] “Health Effects of Toxic Pollution: A Report from the Surgeon General,” August 1,1980, in Karl Grossman, p. 102
[43] Rachel Carson, Silent Spring, NY: Houghton Mifflin, 1962, pp. 294-96. And so we must also deal with the reality that the institutional vehicle for moving from science to technology and then to mass production is the modern giant corporation, which our courts and culture have armed with the Constitution and the Bill of Rights. See: poclad.org.
[44] Barry Commoner, The Closing Circle, NY: Knopf, 1971, pp. pp. 277-282
[45] Commoner, The Closing Circle, final paragraph p. 300.
[46] President Ronald Reagan, “National Pest Control Month,” June, 1982, in Karl Grossman, p. 241
[47] “Compiled for the volume of production indicated by the 1935 Census of Manufacturers and based upon the judgment of engineers who have had wide experience in the treatment of industrial waste. See National Resources Committee, Water Pollution in the United States, pp. 31, 53-54.” In Kapp, p. 90
[48] These figures do not include costs of treating diseases, of people’s lost income, or the “value” of coerced and premature deaths. They do not include costs of across-generation genetic damage, harms to non-human species, the removal of land from agricultural production and human habitation. They do not quantify the costs of air and soil detoxification. They do not quantify the costs of detoxifying the nation’s educational and self-governing processes, or the detoxification of the law. And no columns on this chart list people’s agonies or the long-lived distortions arising from the toxification of the nation’s values.
http://www.poclad.org/articles/grossman06.html