Our
Own Silent Spring
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
Let there be
no doubt that the war on malaria has failed. It is estimated that
800,000 children in Africa die from the disease every year, and
as many as three million people altogether every year.
We know how
people contract it: from mosquitoes. We know how to control it:
kill the carrier mosquitoes. And we know what kills them: DDT.
So why has
the war on malaria failed? Because governments banned the cure.
Now they claim to wonder why people are sick and dying.
DDT was discovered
during World War II to be a great means of stopping infection from
typhus and malaria. Its inventor, Paul Hermann Mueller, won the
Nobel Prize in 1948.
It was used
throughout the 1950s and 60s and was on the verge of wiping out
mosquito-borne diseases from the planet. Then something very peculiar
came along. A book called Silent Spring by Rachel Carson
was published in 1962, and eventually it created a fantastic backlash
against progress. The spring was silent supposedly because of the
lack of birds, killed off by DDT.
The only problem
is that Carson's claims were never scientifically validated. Indeed,
it was a hoax. Studies pumped primates full of DDT with no effect.
Human volunteers ingested the stuff with no effect. Workers with
600 times the typical exposure to DDT showed no increased side effects.
(Some details here.)
What's more, she never once mentioned in her book that DDT had saved
hundreds of thousands of lives.
Even so, governments
acted. First in Norway and Sweden in 1970. The US banned it in 1972.
The UK acted in 1984. The Stockholm Convention of 2001 called for
the complete elimination of DDT. Of course, the US enforced its
opposition through its foreign aid programs.
Here it is
2006 and what happens? People are stunned that malaria is back with
a vengeance. Every 30 seconds, someone dies of malaria, and three-quarters
of the victims are under the age of 5. Survivors can be left with
horrific mental and physical ailments. So far as I know, neither
governments nor greens were ever held liable.
Today, the
big bucks are looking to fix the problem. Nearly $1 billion was
spent last year alone. Warren Buffett ($31 billion) and the Gates
Foundation have gotten in the act. Where is the money going? Only
a tiny portion will be spent on DDT spraying, the restrictions on
which are only now being slightly loosened, provided it is sprayed
in homes and not on crops.
Mostly the
money is going to nets. Nets! As if this were the 19th
century! It's obvious that the agencies involved in this struggle
are reluctant to reach for the spray can, or even discuss it.
The hidden
hand behind this horror is none other than the environmentalists.
The frenzy against DDT launched their movement. It is what emboldened
them, and gave their political agenda momentum. In some ways, their
campaign against DDT perfectly sums up their political bent: using
state power to ban products and services that help humans, and thereby
cause history to roll backward.
The extent
to which the green movement is wrapped up in this history is obvious
from the fact that we are living through a genuine silent spring,
with the press ignoring the causes of malaria. The New York Times
presents the epidemic as "mystifying," and most people know
nothing about the role of the environmentalists who are responsible
for millions of deaths by malaria, and in Africa, of all places,
the continent that the left claims to love to help.
Does no one
at the New York Times read back issues? The full case is
presented in the zillion-word magazine masterpiece from Tina Rosenberg,
"What
the World Needs Now Is DDT" (April 11, 2004).
The politics
of the environmentalists are increasingly predictable and obvious.
They oppose all forms of capitalistic innovation. Indeed, they represent
a special kind of danger to the human race that socialism never
did. At least the socialists favored human progress, or at least
said they did. These greens are against all that. They claim that
we should be happy to live amidst disease, filth, and death, if
only the bugs and birds can be left alone to thrive and kill us.
It's
as if the socialists discovered that their plan created poverty,
and so decided to change their names to environmentalists and make
poverty their goal.
And note how
their agenda fits so well with the state agenda. The state hobbles
and hinders productivity in millions of ways through its taxing,
regulating, and warmongering. But that makes little difference to
the state, which prefers the exercise of power to the good of society.
So too do the environmentalists pursue their agenda without regard
to the effects on human society.
Currently,
there are many environmental issues alive in the policy world, from
the debate over sprawl to the frenzy over global warming. The environmentalists
have the upper hand in all of them, which is a crying shame, given
that they’re responsible for millions of lost lives – in just one
of their conquests. More victories for them are sure to make life
worse for all of us.
June
29, 2006
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail] is president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, editor of LewRockwell.com,
and author of Speaking
of Liberty.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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