**Please note I am not Devil's Kitchen**
Last Friday the 13th March, as aficionados of popular culture will attest, was Comic Relief and Red Nose Day. The feel-good factor cup ranneth over in raising money for charities not only at home, but very much abroad, especially Africa. Presenter Claudia Winkelman triumphantly said £78 million had been raised, pushing the final figure since the BBC began thirty years ago to over £1 billion. Delights usually include the cringe worthy actor trying to dance, the footballer trying to act, and the TV presenter trying to sing. Sometimes euthanasia might be kinder.
One of
this years highlights was In The Loop's, foul mouthed Malcolm Tucker and Dr.
Who's current incarnation Peter Capaldi slumming it in Malawi looking
at the plight of malaria ravaged children. He implored us to donate for
mosquito nets which prevents transmission of the disease. I certainly do
not want to make light of a child's death, but we were treated to scenes of
five children and even more under a bed as hospitals are overwhelmed. One of
the scenes was the distressing death of Thenbani aged 3 years and 8 months of
malarial induced cardiac arrest. The caption then reads "His death
could have been prevented."
Too damn
right.
It is not
the wicked west and tight-fisted Brits to blame, but the Green Movement and by
implication its apologists at the BBC. Malaria was on the verge of being
eradicated world-wide in the early 1960s. It is down to one very long word, and
its marginalisation and banning:
Dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane.
DDT as we
commonly know it, is sprayed on the swamps where the mosquitoes bred, it was
highly effective. For example in Sri Lanka in 1948, had 2.8 million cases and
by 1963, just 17. Zanzibar saw 70% of its population infected in 1958 dropping
to 5% in 1964. After DDT spraying stopped, Sri Lanka returned to 2.5 million
cases and Zanzibar 55% infection rates. It was estimated at the time by
the US Agency for International Development's Chief Malaria Officer that
continued use of DDT would have eradicated 98% of the disease. DDT is estimated
by Drs. Michael Arnold Glueck and Robert J. Cihak, to have saved 500 million lives.
Why was
DDT banned? It was the publication of a book by Rachel Carson called
"Silent Spring." DDT was accused of causing breast cancer, diabetes,
killing birds and animals, the former by causing their egg shells to be too thin.
Almost certainly junk science, the mirage still appears among us, as
former Vice President Al Gore said in 1994 “Because Carson’s work led to a ban
on DDT, it may be that the human species...or at least countless human lives,
will be saved because of the words she wrote.”
The BBC
have not been shy in banging Carson’s drum. In 1999 it copied
and pasted from the World Wide Fund for Nature’s press release that,
“The chemical DDT is so dangerous that it should be banned
everywhere..”
In 2003 it reported
reduced infertility from DDT and “The chemical has already been linked to
premature births and low birth weights.”
The BBC on this 2014 copyrighted GCSE exam Bitesize,
revision text says, “An example of bioaccumulation is the use of DDT as an insecticide in the 1950s and
1960s. Birds of prey were badly affected because it made the shells of their
eggs very thin, causing them to break easily when the birds tried to incubate
them.”
As recently as January
2014 they wrote that there maybe a link between DDT and Alzheimer’s
disease.
DDT was
banned in the USA in 1972 with Europe following soon after, despite egg shell
thin evidence. If I can quote
directly from the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA’s) report.
“Judge Edmund Sweeney
concluded that ― ‘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 does not have a deleterious effect on freshwater fish, estuarine
organisms, wild birds or other wildlife..’”
Administrator
Ruckelshaus was not persuaded or perhaps wanted to make a name for himself saying
he “was convinced that the continued massive use of DDT posed unacceptable
risks to the environment and potential harm to human health. On June 14th 1972,
Administrator Ruckelshaus cancelled nearly all of the remaining Federal
registrations of DDT products.”
Empirical
evidence seems redundant.
The
United Nations Environment Programme of 2001 saw the passing of the Stockholm
Convention calling for DDT's restriction and partial elimination and a legally
binding treaty was signed on the 17th May 2004 by 173 countries. Although
theoretically it could have limited deployment for “Vector Control,” a discouraged
world padlocked the chemical shed. The EPA‘s reaction above no doubt set the standard
of expecting everyone to comply with the Silent Spring being waved at them.
What
evidence is there Carson's hypothesis holds water? None, it is junk science.
On breast
cancer in 1997 and published in the New England Journal for Medicine, lead
author Dr. David Hunter concluded "Our
data do not support the hypothesis that exposure to 2,2-bis
(p-chlorophenyl)-1,1,1-trichloroethane (DDT) and PCBs increases the risk of
breast cancer."
In the UK
the Wilson Report from 1969. "Review
of organochlorine pesticides in Britain" found “no close correlation
between the decline in population of predatory birds, particularly the
peregrine falcon and the sparrow hawk, and the use of DDT."”
Ospreys in the USA thrived with
191 in 1946, to 288 in 1956, to 457 in 1967, and 630 in 1972.
On egg shells
typical papers such as Dr. ML Scott's from 1975, "Effects
of PCBs, DDT, and mercury compounds upon egg production, hatchability and shell
quality in chickens and Japanese quail,” concluded "Dietary
polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), DDT and related compounds, in well controlled
experiments, produced no detrimental effects upon egg shell quality”"
Shortly
before his death in 2004 Dr. Gordon Edwards, Professor Emeritus of Entomology at
San Jose State University, savaged the agreement. “The ban on DDT, founded on
erroneous or fraudulent reports and imposed by one powerful bureaucrat, has
caused millions of deaths, while sapping the strength and productivity of
countless human beings in underdeveloped countries. It is time for an honest
appraisal and for immediate deployment of the best currently available means to
control insect-borne diseases. This means DDT.”
Hope in
2006 seemed to re-emerge. At the World Health Organization (WHO), Japanese Dr. Arata Kochi was appointed to
head up the anti-malaria programme. Known for his abrasive, get things
done style, he stated that DDT was the most effective means of eradicating
malaria. Ironically he found an ally in President George Bush and his head
of the $1.2 billion malaria programme, Admiral Timothy Ziemer said "that (DDT) must be deployed as robustly and
strategically as possible.”
Kochi
also criticised the use and sale of drugs to combat malaria as it reduced
resistance. Big Pharma was not happy.
However,
many African countries are reluctant to return to DDT as Europe and the USA may
block agricultural exports, in case the products become tainted with DDT.
Malawi's biggest currency earner is tobacco making up 70% of foreign currency
receipts. Arguing against the BBC/green scientific orthodoxy could be
catastrophic. DDT’s pariah status remains unchanged.
So Africa
and other parts of the world are condemned to have Sir Terry Wogan join Dermot
O'Leary in the Floral Dance and the dreadful Russell Brand doing cheap and
unfunny jokes at Jeremy Clarkson's expense, while the ravages of malaria are
causing 98 million cases and an estimated 584 000 deaths, 90% are in Africa. It
seems the orthodox of Groupthink on left/liberal science of malaria control has
been all pervasive and has set a precedent for over 50 years. It seems that
questioning DDT as a killer is still verboten. Analogies of challenging
"man-made" global warming and the harm of second hand cigarette smoke,
where many scientists have been cowered and bullied into silence are persuasive.
The BBC complicit and collaborating with their cohorts in the Green
Movement may have inflicted Biblical levels of pestilence on the world. If
DDT saved 500 million when it was used, it could imply 500 million people may
have been lost subsequently.
One could conclude that BBC mosquito nets are throwing dead babies out
with the swamp water.
12 comments:
Would anyone really expect anything different from the moronic Greens?
Very good, keep it up.
Gutted you are not DK.
Not really sure what you want from me? There are atrocities the world over. Some are deliberate, some like those caused by the Greens are because of well intentioned ignorance and stupidity.
I detest the Greens, they are utterly stupid, ignorant, dangerous and cause huge harm to mankind and the planet. But they are not usually deliberately evil....can one hate someone for being stupid?
If I had the power to reverse that decision about DDT I would do it today.....I can do nothing but comment, vote, and show the Greens for what they are.....
Anonymous Carnwennan : Fear not I have passed on your comments to DK.
To fight malaria, #DDT is not sprayed in swamps. It's sprayed in homes and sleeping quarters, to target the malaria-carrying mosquitoes.
One error among many.
If you're going to quote Judge Sweeney, please do so.
Judge Sweeney did not find that DDT is harmless. Quite to the contrary, Sweeney wrote in the findings of the hearing:
[quote] 20. DDT can have a deleterious effect on freshwater fish and estuarine organisms when directly applied to the water.
21. DDT is used as a rodenticide. [DDT was used to kill bats in homes and office buildings; this was so effective that, coupled with accidental dosing of bats from their eating insects carrying DDT, it actually threatened to wipe out some species of bat in the southwest U.S.]
22. DDT can have an adverse effect on beneficial animals.
23. DDT is concentrated in organisms and can be transferred through food chains. [end quote]
See page 92, here: http://www2.epa.gov/sites/production/files/documents/ddt_C.pdf
So, killing 500 million people is OK then?
So, Anonymous: You're really bad at math?
DDT got into the fight against malaria in 1946. Estimated annual malaria deaths in 1946 were 5 million. 69 years ago.
Had the death toll of malaria remained the same, how many would have died since 1946?
The 500 million lives saved was an editing error. It was printed in 1970.
You may want to check with your physician. DDT poisoning in humans, acutely, causes a loss of reasoning, sometimes demonstrated as inability to do basic math. Good news is that it's rarely fatal, except when those with DDT poisoning insist that bed nets not be deployed against malaria, because DDT is better. It's a delusional claim on their part, but it's a claim that costs real lives.
You can read the origin of the 500 million error here: https://timpanogos.wordpress.com/2009/06/22/encore-post-rebutting-junk-science-100-things-to-know-about-ddt-point-6/
While we're correcting errors, let's take special note that in almost every year since publication of Silent Spring, worldwide malaria deaths have DECLINED.
In 1962, WHO estimated malaria deaths at more than 4 million per year, worldwide.
In 2014, WHO estimates worldwide malaria deaths at fewer than 610,000. Since Rachel Carson published, more than 96 million people have been saved from death by malaria -- mostly without DDT, if the authors here are to be believed.
I'm bothered by 600,000 dead, Anonymous. That's too many. Every malaria death is preventable.
But insistence on slandering Rachel Carson, environmentalists, and the medical care people who actually fight malaria, does nothing to reduce the death toll. Falsely blaming them for 500 million deaths only increases the slander.
https://timpanogos.wordpress.com/2014/05/30/yes-malaria-is-still-a-plague-its-not-rachel-carsons-fault-and-your-saying-so-probably-kills-kids/
I am confused as to why such a stupid article would be posted/published especially given this:
The only remaining legal use of DDT is to control malaria-carrying mosquitoes. A devastating disease, malaria kills more than 800,000 people every year, the majority of deaths among children in Sub-Saharan Africa. Indoor spraying with DDT is one of a number of tools being used to control malaria around the world. Only in rare cases is it the most effective choice.
Unfortunately, vocal groups such as Africa Fighting Malaria continue to promote a simplistic "DDT or nothing" debate, ignoring on-the-ground evidence from around the world that more effective approaches are saving lives without putting communities in harm's way from exposure to the long-lasting chemical.
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