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Showing posts with label chemical pollution. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chemical pollution. Show all posts

Sunday, 12 May 2013

You Are A Human Guinea Pig



You Are A Human Guinea Pig
How Americans (and most others) Became Exposed to Biohazards in the Greatest Uncontrolled Experiment Ever Launched

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by David Rosner David Rosner and Gerald Markowitz Gerald Markowitz



 A hidden epidemic is poisoning America.  The toxins are in the air we breathe and the water we drink, in the walls of our homes and the furniture within them.  We can’t escape it in our cars.  It’s in cities and suburbs.  It afflicts rich and poor, young and old.  And there’s a reason why you’ve never read about it in the newspaper or seen a report on the nightly news: it has no name -- and no antidote.   

The culprit behind this silent killer is lead.  And vinyl.  And formaldehyde.  And asbestos.  And Bisphenol A.  And polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs).  And thousands more innovations brought to us by the industries that once promised “better living through chemistry,” but instead produced a toxic stew that has made every American a guinea pig and has turned the United States into one grand unnatural experiment.

Today, we are all unwitting subjects in the largest set of drug trials ever. Without our knowledge or consent, we are testing thousands of suspected toxic chemicals and compounds, as well as new substances whose safety is largely unproven and whose effects on human beings are all but unknown. The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) itself has begun monitoring our bodies for 151 potentially dangerous chemicals, detailing the variety of pollutants we store in our bones, muscle, blood, and fat.  None of the companies introducing these new chemicals has even bothered to tell us we’re part of their experiment.  None of them has asked us to sign consent forms or explained that they have little idea what the long-term side effects of the chemicals they’ve put in our environment -- and so our bodies -- could be.  Nor do they have any clue as to what the synergistic effects of combining so many novel chemicals inside a human body in unknown quantities might produce.


How Industrial Toxins Entered the American Home

The story of how Americans became unwitting test subjects began more than a century ago.  The key figure was Alice Hamilton, the “mother” of American occupational medicine, who began documenting the way workers in lead paint pigment factories, battery plants, and lead mines were suffering terrible palsies, tremors, convulsions, and deaths after being exposed to lead dust that floated in the air, coating their workbenches and clothes.

Soon thereafter, children exposed to lead paint and lead dust in their homes were also identified as victims of this deadly neurotoxin.  Many went into convulsions and comas after crawling on floors where lead dust from paint had settled, or from touching lead-painted toys, or teething on lead-painted cribs, windowsills, furniture, and woodwork.

Instead of leveling with the public, the lead industry through its trade group, the Lead Industries Association, began a six-decade-long campaign to cover-up its product’s dire effects.  It challenged doctors who reported lead-poisoned children to health departments, distracted the public through advertisements that claimed lead was “safe” to use, and fought regulation of the industry by local government, all in the service of profiting from putting a poison in paint, gasoline, plumbing fixtures, and even toys, baseballs, and fishing gear. 

As Joe Camel would be for tobacco, so the little Dutch Boy of the National Lead Company became an iconic marketing tool for Dutch Boy Lead Paint, priming Americans to invite a dangerous product into their children’s playrooms, nurseries, and lives.  The company also launched a huge advertising campaign that linked lead to health, rather than danger. It even produced coloring books for children, encouraging them to paint their rooms and furniture using lead-based paint.


 Only after thousands of children were poisoned and, in the 1960s, activist groups like the Young Lords and the Black Panthers began to use lead poisoning as a symbol of racial and class oppression did public health professionals and the federal government begin to rein in companies like the Sherwin-Williams paint company and the Ethyl Corporation, which produced tetraethyl lead, the lead-additive in gasoline. In 1971, Congress passed the Lead Paint Poisoning Prevention Act that limited lead in paint used for public housing.  In 1978, the Consumer Products Safety Commission finally banned lead in all paints sold for consumer use.  During the 1980s, the Environmental Protection Agency issued rules that led to the elimination of leaded gasoline by 1995 (though it still remains in aviation fuel).

The CDC estimates that in at least 4 million households in the U.S. today children are still exposed to dangerous amounts of lead from old paint that produces dust every time a nail is driven into a wall to hang a picture, a new electric socket is installed, or a family renovates its kitchen. It estimates that more than 500,000 children ages one to five have “elevated” levels of lead in their blood.  (No level is considered safe for children.)  Studies have linked lost IQ points, attention deficit disorders, behavioral problems, dyslexia, and even possibly high incarceration rates to tiny amounts of lead in children’s bodies.

Unfortunately, when it came to the creation of America’s chemical soup, the lead industry was hardly alone.  Asbestos is another classic example of an industrial toxin that found its way into people’s homes and bodies.  For decades, insulation workers, brake mechanics, construction workers, and a host of others in hundreds of trades fell victim to the disabling and deadly lung diseases of asbestosis or to lung cancer and the fatal cancer called mesothelioma when they breathed in dust produced during the installation of boilers, the insulation of pipes, the fixing of cars that used asbestos brake linings, or the spraying of asbestos on girders. Once again, the industry knew its product’s dangers early and worked assiduously to cover them up.

Despite growing medical knowledge about its effects (and increasing industry attempts to downplay or suppress that knowledge), asbestos was soon introduced to the American home and incorporated into products ranging from insulation for boilers and piping in basements to floor tiles and joint compounds.  It was used to make sheetrock walls, roof shingles, ironing boards, oven gloves, and hot plates. Soon an occupational hazard was transformed into a threat to all consumers.

Today, however, these devastating industrial-turned-domestic toxins, which destroyed the health and sometimes took the lives of hundreds of thousands, seem almost quaint when compared to the brew of potential or actual toxins we’re regularly ingesting in the air we breathe, the water we drink, and the food we eat. 

Of special concern are a variety of chlorinated hydrocarbons, including DDT and other pesticides that were once spread freely nationwide, and despite being banned decades ago, have accumulated in the bones, brains, and fatty tissue of virtually all of us. Their close chemical carcinogenic cousins, polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), were found in innumerable household and consumer products  -- like carbonless copy paper, adhesives, paints, and electrical equipment – from the 1950s through the 1970s.  We’re still paying the price for that industrial binge today, as these odorless, tasteless compounds have become permanent pollutants in the natural environment and, as a result, in all of us.


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The Largest Uncontrolled Experiment in History

While old houses with lead paint and asbestos shingles pose risks, potentially more frightening chemicals are lurking in new construction going on in the latest mini-housing boom across America.  Our homes are now increasingly made out of lightweight fibers and reinforced synthetic materials whose effects on human health have never been adequately studied individually, let alone in the combinations we’re all subjected to today. 

Formaldehyde, a colorless chemical used in mortuaries as a preservative, can also be found as a fungicide, germicide, and disinfectant in, for example, plywood, particle board, hardwood paneling, and the “medium density fiberboard” commonly used for the fronts of drawers and cabinets or the tops of furniture. As the material ages, it evaporates into the home as a known cancer-producing vapor, which slowly accumulates in our bodies. The National Cancer Institute at the National Institutes of Health suggests that homeowners “purchasing pressed-wood products, including building material, cabinetry, and furniture... should ask about the formaldehyde content of these products.”

What’s inside your new walls might be even more dangerous.  While the flame retardants commonly used in sofas, chairs, carpets, love seats, curtains, baby products, and even TVs, sounded like a good idea when widely introduced in the 1970s, they turn out to pose hidden dangers that we’re only now beginning to grasp.  Researchers have, for instance, linked one of the most common flame retardants, polybrominated diphenyl ethers, to a wide variety of potentially undesirable health effects including thyroid disruption, memory and learning problems, delayed mental and physical development, lower IQ, and the early onset of puberty.

Other flame retardants like Tris (1,3-dichloro-2-propyl) phosphate have been linked to cancer. As the CDC has documented in an ongoing study of the accumulation of hazardous materials in our bodies, flame retardants can now be found in the blood of “nearly all” of us. 

Nor are these particular chemicals anomalies.  Lurking in the cabinet under the kitchen sink, for instance, are window cleaners and spot removers that contain known or suspected cancer-causing agents.  The same can be said of cosmetics in your makeup case or of your plastic water bottle or microwavable food containers.  Most recently, Bisphenol A (BPA), the synthetic chemical used in a variety of plastic consumer products, including some baby bottles, epoxy cements, the lining of tuna fish cans, and even credit card receipts, has been singled out as another everyday toxin increasingly found inside all of us. 

Recent studies indicate that its effects are as varied as they are distressing.  As Sarah Vogel of the Environmental Defense Fund has written, “New research on very-low-dose exposure to BPA suggests an association with adverse health effects, including breast and prostate cancer, obesity, neurobehavioral problems, and reproductive abnormalities.” 

Teflon, or perfluorooctanoic acid, the heat-resistant, non-stick coating that has been sold to us as indispensable for pots and pans, is yet another in the list of substances that may be poisoning us, almost unnoticed.  In addition to allowing fried eggs to slide right onto our plates, Teflon is in all of us, according to the Science Advisory Board of the Environmental Protection Agency, and “likely to be carcinogenic in humans.”

These synthetic materials are just a few of the thousands now firmly embedded in our lives and our bodies.  Most have been deployed in our world and put in our air, water, homes, and fields without being studied at all for potential health risks, nor has much attention been given to how they interact in the environments in which we live, let alone our bodies. The groups that produce these miracle substances -- like the petrochemical, plastics, and rubber industries, including major companies like Exxon, Dow, and Monsanto -- argue that, until we can definitively prove the chemical products slowly leaching into our bodies are dangerous, we have no “right,” and they have no obligation, to remove them from our homes and workplaces. The idea that they should prove their products safe before exposing the entire population to them seems to be a foreign concept.

In the 1920s, the oil industry made the same argument about lead as an additive in gasoline, even though it was already known that it was a dangerous toxin for workers. Spokesman for companies like General Motors insisted that it was a “gift of God,” irreplaceable and essential for industrial progress and modern living, just as the lead industry argued for decades that lead was “essential” to produce good paint that would protect our homes.

Like the oil, lead, and tobacco industries of the twentieth century, the chemical industry, through the American Chemistry Council and public relations firms like Hill & Knowlton, is fighting tooth and nail to stop regulation and inhibit legislation that would force it to test chemicals before putting them in the environment.  In the meantime, Americans remain the human guinea pigs in advanced trials of hundreds if not thousands of commonly used, largely untested chemicals.  There can be no doubt that this is the largest uncontrolled experiment in history. 

To begin to bring it under control would undoubtedly involve major grassroots efforts to push back against the offending corporations, courageous politicians, billions of dollars, and top-flight researchers.  But before any serious steps are likely to be taken, before we even name this epidemic, we need to wake up to its existence. 

A toxic dump used to be a superfund site or a nuclear waste disposal site.  Increasingly, however, we -- each and every one of us -- are toxic dumps and for us there’s no superfund around, no disposal plan in sight.  In the meantime, we’re walking, talking biohazards and we don’t even know it.


David Rosner and Gerald Markowitz are co-authors and co-editors of seven books and 85 articles on a variety of industrial and occupational hazards, including Deceit and Denial: The Deadly Politics of Industrial Pollution and, most recently, Lead Wars: The Politics of Science and the Fate of America’s Children, (University of California Press/Milbank, 2013).  Rosner is a professor of history at Columbia University and co-director of the Center for the History of Public Health at Columbia’s Mailman School of Public Health. Markowitz is a professor of history at John Jay College and the Graduate Center, City University of New York.


From Huffington Post !@ http://www.huffingtonpost.com/david-rosner/hazardous-chemicals_b_3175796.html
Cross-posted with TomDispatch.com

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Saturday, 5 November 2011

10 Most Toxic Places on Earth


­­10 Most Toxic Places on Earth



Any substance, no matter how seemingly benign it may be, can cause damage to an organism. Something as simple as water can easily become toxic since toxins are dose dependent. As the old saying goes, a couple of drops of poison can kill off an entire pond. Though we do our best to avoid toxic places, some areas of the world are so sick we, as humans, can not continue to ignore them. Here is an eyeopening glimpse into the 10 Most Toxic Places On Earth:

 

10. Karachay




Karachay, a small lake nestled in the Ural mountains in Western Russia, is home to a nuclear waste dumping site so radioactive it has been declared the most polluted locale on the planet. During the early 1950s, the Soviet Union began ditching radioactive waste from Mayak, a nuclear waste storage and reprocessing facility in Ozyorsk, into Lake Karachay. Many years later, the Worldwatch Institute on nuclear waste rendered the area "the most polluted spot on Earth." Radiation levels at the lake are so high that one hour of exposure is considered lethal. The accumulated levels of radioactivity are around 4.44 exabequerels (EBq) with 3.6 EBq of Caesium-137 and 0.74 EBq of Strontium-90. To give better perspective of how toxic Karachay is, the 1986 Chernobyl disaster released between 5 to 12 Ebq of unconcentrated radioactivity. Talk about melt your face off...

 

9. Aral Sea




The Aral Sea, located in Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, was one of the world's four largest lakes until the waters that fed it were diverted for Soviet Union irrigation projects. By 2007, the Aral Sea shrank to a mere 10% of its original size and split into four basins. The resulting devastation to the areas surrounding the sea were catastrophically life threatening to the ecosystem, economy, and people residing near the lake. Toxic chemicals from weapons testing, industrial projects, pesticides, and fertilizer have runoff and been swept by winds into nearby lands and surrounding areas.

People nearby not only suffer from lack of fresh water but also cancer, lung disease, digestive disorders, antibiotic resistant tuberculosis, liver, eye, and kidney disorders, and of course, unusually high mortality rates. To worsen matters, salt from the lake is not only toxic but has a higher salinity than sea water, with levels from what remains of the South Aral measured in excess of 100g/L versus sea water salinity of 35 g/L. The huge plains of what used to be the waters of the Aral Sea are now exposed, causing toxic dust storms and wreaking havoc on crops and humans. Worse yet, the Aral Sea is suspected of contributing to global warming.

 

8. Fresh Kills Landfill




 Staten Island is a borough of New York City, home not only to nearly half a million people, but also home to what was once one of the largest landfills known to man. In 1947, garbage from New York City and its surrounding suburbs was transported to Fresh Kills estuary located in Western Staten Island. The landfill was supposed to be just a temporary solution to what would become a longstanding waste problem. During the second part of the 20th century, the site grew to be 2,200 acres of trash stacked 25 meters taller than the Statue of Liberty. For decades, throes of rats, wild dogs, and other parasitic beasts called Fresh Kills home, feeding off decaying debris and chasing off workers of the landfill.

On March 22, 2001, the Environmental Protection Agency shut down Fresh Kills (and briefly reopened the area post 9/11 to sift through remnants of Ground Zero.) Remarkably, just two years following its shutdown, development to reclaim wetlands and reuse the site for a public parkland were unveiled, wrapped in a tidy 30 year plan destined to include room for nature trails, community events, outdoor dining, and sports fields. Beware if you plan your picnic at Fresh Kills and watch for disease carrying rats. Oh and remember that smell is just methane gases released from decomposing trash beneath your feet.

 

7. Yamuna River




The Yamuna is located in India and flows from the Yamunotri Glacier nestled in the Lower Himalayas and supplies water for 57 million people. As one of the largest tributaries of the Ganges River, the Yamuna travels approximately 855 miles through the entire Ganges Basin to places like Uttarakhand, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, Himachal Predesh, and all the way to Delhi. The Yamuna is considered sacred by Hindus and popular lore states the Yamuna has the potential to free believers from the torments of death. A quick water test may cause believers to reconsider. The Yamuna has "reasonably good quality water" unless you're downriver from Wazirabad. From that point on, copious amounts of fertilizer, sewage drains, trash, herbicides, pesticides, and commercial or industrial have polluted the stream so to speak. It seems the Yamuna collects more than just glacier water as it winds through Bharat. Approximately 58 percent of Delhi's waste is sunk directly into its waters. Care for a garbage swim?

6. La Oroya





La Oroya is literally a smelted mining town located in the Peruvian Andes. Since 1922, the young and old living in La Oroya have breathed in toxic emissions and lived in toxic waste created by the poly-metallic smelter plant owned by a Missouri based company called Doe Run Corporation. La Oroya is home to not only the world's most critical levels of air pollution but also to the highest blood levels known to any children on the planet. An astoundingly astronomical NINETY NINE percent of the children who run and play in La Oroya have blood levels which exceed acceptable limits to qualify for lead poisoning. The plant is reportedly expected to decrease emissions and clean up any residual contamination. Like that will help poor kids who died or now live suffering with heart, bone, intestinal, reproductive, behavioral, and nervous system development issues caused by lead poisoning!

 

5. Kabwe




Kabwe-Ka Mukuba translates to "ore" or "smelting" so it follows that Kabwe is a mine located in Zambia. Though Kabwe outgrew its former name of Broken Hill, the mine has long been rendered one of the worst places on Earth. Originally one of the largest mining complexes, now Kabwe is a barren mess. Once all of the lead, zinc, silver, manganese, cadmium, vanadium, and titanium were extracted from Kabwe, the Blacksmith Institute found Broken Hill to be more than broken. It seems heavy metal tailings (or waste rock) from the mine, primarily zinc and lead, found their way into water supplies, affecting nearly 210,000 people. Additionally, lead and cadmium have been absorbed in areas around the mine, rendering the ground unusable for crops. Blood level lead concentrations in children of Kabwe are up to ten times U.S. Environmental Protection Agency standards. The only good news from the whole mess may perhaps be the mine was officially shut down. Better news is the 1921 find of a human skull known as Broken Hill Man or Rhodesian Man, classified as Homo rhodesiensis or Homo heidelbergensis.

 

4. West Virginia Mountaintop Removal Mining


Disclaimer: tree huggers beware, this will give you nightmares. The most efficient means of completely obliterating purple mountain majesties is happening right in West Virginia's Appalachian Mountains. Though it seems cool to blow apart a mountain to find coal inside, mountaintop removal mining is perhaps the most destructive force caused by man. The process of mountaintop removal begins with clear cutting forests, removing soil, and making way for an 8 million pound dragline to push through rock to get to the coal. Machines then dig out layers upon layers of coal and dump the remains of the former mountaintop (aptly called "overburden") into valleys, blocking off over 1,200 miles of Appalachian headwater streams and rivers. 

To further the ecological burden of a removed mountaintop, the process has been proven to increase erosion (a pretty nasty process when it occurs naturally) and increase polluted runoff. What's left after mountaintop removal mining is a COMPLETELY barren mountain, incapable of EVER sustaining life again.

 

3. Dzerzhinsk


Where was the only place on Earth where a death rate can exceed its birth rate by 260 percent during 2003? Dzerzhinsk. Located in Nizhy Novgorod Oblast, Russia along the Oka River, at approximately 250 miles east of Moscow, Dzerzhinsk is hands down the most chemically polluted place on Earth per the Guinness Book of World Records. Once Russia's primary chemical weapons production site, Dzerzhinsk is now home to approximately 300,000 tons of chemical waste dumped between 1930 until 1998. 

The Blacksmith Institute found during a 2007 study that the life expectancy for men is 42 years and 47 years for women, compliments of dioxins, sarin, leeisite, sulfur mustard, hydrogen cyanide, phosgene, lead, phenol, and other chemicals in the air and water of the city. Additionally, the Ecology Committee of the Russian State Duma has ranked Dzerhinksk as one of the top ten cities with disastrous ecological conditions but the city administration claims otherwise. Local officials insist that pollution levels are moderate. Water tests, however, revealed contaminates were 17 million times higher than levels rendered safe by EPA standards. Better stick to beer if you're traveling through.

 

2. Matanza-Riachuelo River Basin


The Matanza-Riachuelo River is 64 kilometers long and home to 3.5 million people. Unfortunately, the people along the Matanza have only one source of water, straight from the place synonymous with pollution. The Matanza is filled with illegal sewage pipes draining directly into the river. Additionally, along Mantanza-Riachuelo's banks are 13 slums and 42 open garbage dumps. Residents and tourists have reported strong odors released from chemical residue and methane gas emitting from the River. Reports garnered attention from the Blacksmith Institute during 2007 and the Matanza-Riachuelo ranked on the list of the "Dirty Thirty" most polluted places in the world. The Matanza conjures that silly phrase "if it's yellow, let it mellow" but if it's stinkin', you might be sinkin'... into a puddle of toxicity.

 

1. Japan


Constant worry and conflicting reports from various world powers have caused mass confusion over the radioactive nightmare brewing in Japan, compliments of the March 11, 2011 earthquake and tsunami. The course of history changed when Fukushima, Japan's nuclear power plant located in the towns of Okuma and Futaba in the Futaba Fukushima Prefecture, Japan, was rendered as stable as an unmedicated bipolar sociopath by none other than Mother Nature. With a crisis looming in excess of $300 billion bucks, underground threats in the form of aftershocks, the upcoming typhoon season, and, of course, ever rising radiation levels, things on this planet will never be the same.

Things are so bad the Japanese government, notorious for denying the obvious, issued evacuation orders from areas within 20 kilometers of the crippled plant and stated anyone who enters the zone will be arrested. Hey folks, if a government makes it illegal to be within a certain distance of a leaking nuclear reactor, shouldn't we be asking more questions? Just how green is nuclear energy again?


From brainz @ http://brainz.org/10-most-toxic-places-earth/





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