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Silent Spring Is 50: The Credit, and the Blame, It Deserves

Posted: 06/21/2012 2:51 pm

In the 50 years since Silent Spring was published, the environmental movement it helped create has accomplished a great deal. It may be less popular to suggest, but it is no less true, that this seminal book and the movement it helped spawn have also caused a great deal of harm. As much as Rachel Carson's inspiring work deserves significant credit for our cleaner air and water and progress on so many other environmental issues, it also deserves some of the blame for having helped foster a set of accepted truths and common beliefs that have caused enormous damage to human and environmental health.

Given that there will hopefully be a lot of deserved praise for Silent Spring on this anniversary, let's look at the other side of what Carson's cri de coeur, and environmentalism, have done, because there is an important lesson here about the danger of narrow thinking that refuses to see the bigger picture.

Silent Spring and environmentalism played a major role in the public explosion of fear of cancer in the 1950s and 60s. Carson devotes an entire chapter to cancer, "One in Four," and warns that we are "swimming in a sea of carcinogens." As awful as this family of diseases is, the fear is sometimes excessive and dangerous in and of itself, a 'Cancer Phobia' that has led to millions of unnecessary surgeries and treatments that have done more harm than good, and policy that has concentrated more regulatory attention and fiscal resources on cancer than on some other greater threats to both human and environmental health.

Cancer has always been, and remains, the ultimate bogeyman of environmentalism, a fixation that reflects how the environmental movement arose from our 1950s fear of nuclear weapons and the carcinogenic radioactive fallout from nuclear weapons testing. Throughout Silent Spring Carson emphasizes the dangers of industrial chemicals by likening them to radiation. "Chemicals," she writes, "are the sinister and little-recognized partners of radiation in changing the very nature of the world -- the very nature of its life."

So it's no wonder that opposition to various forms of radiation has been another core belief of environmentalism. Consider the costs of that. Most environmentalists oppose food irradiation, a treatment that kills any germs living in the food but doesn't change the food itself. Food irradiation, safe and legal in countries around the world but little used because of environmental opposition, could eliminate millions of illnesses and deaths from food poisoning, and make food production more sustainable by reducing spoilage.

More dramatically, fear of radiation led to extraordinary safety requirements for nuclear power plants, far in excess of controls imposed on other high-risk industrial facilities, which made nuclear power less cost-competitive and led to more reliance on coal. Coal burning produced the devastating damage of acid rain. Particulate emissions from coal have killed hundreds of thousands of people since Silent Spring. And the greenhouse gas emissions from coal have contributed significantly to climate change, a risk that is unfathomably worse than the worst case dangers of nuclear power.

Silent Spring and environmentalism have also given us chemophobia. Carson uses the word 'chemical' like a profanity, with phrases like, "every human is now subjected to contact with dangerous chemicals," "poisonous chemicals," and "chemical death rain." Chemicals are bad has always been a central dogma of environmentalism. A survey in the 1970s asked people what came to mind when they heard the world 'chemical.' The leading answers were words like toxic, hazardous, deadly, destruction, accidents, kill, harmful, bad, and... drum roll please... cancer. (The naivete of this simplistic fear is entertainingly mocked by movement to ban dihydrogen monoxide, or see here.)

But chemophobia is no joke. The insecticide DDT, one of Silent Spring's main
targets, was banned for years before public health officials successfully pleaded with environmentalists to back off and accept that DDT was saving millions of people from one of the greatest killers on the planet, malaria. Chemophobia fueled decades of fear of and bans on some artificial sweeteners, which could have been helping people lose weight. It frightened tens of thousands of women that silicone in their breast implants was a health hazard. It wasn't, but many women suffered complications from having their implants removed, and more suffered from the stress of worrying.

The chemophobia that Silent Spring helped spawn is only one version of another core assumption of environmentalism, that natural is good and human-made is bad. As Carson lamented "With the advent of man the situation began to change, for man, alone of all forms of life, can create cancer-producing substances..." and "in being man-made -- by ingenious laboratory manipulation of the molecules, substituting atoms, altering their arrangement, they (industrial pesticides) differ sharply from the simpler insecticides... derived from naturally occurring minerals and plant products." This "unnatural-o-phobia" naivete does all sorts of harm as well.

Worried about human-made hazards (as we should be), we stringently regulate the production and sale of pharmaceuticals. But not worried enough about natural substances, we fail to regulate herbal remedies with the same caution, and many of these biologically active substances do serious harm that would trigger loud environmentalist protests... if those substances were human-made. Fear of anything synthetic/human-made/unnatural is the foundation of resistance to genetically modified food, which has phenomenal potential not only to feed a growing global population but to do so in a more environmentally sustainable way than agriculture can currently accomplish. "What's wrong with genetic engineering (GE)?" Greenpeace asks, then answers with "Genetic engineering enables scientists to create plants, animals and micro-organisms by manipulating genes in a way that does not occur naturally."

This leads to perhaps the most profound harm of environmentalism. In the process of protecting us from the poisonous effects of modern technology, Silent Spring and the movement it helped spawn have poisoned our ability to think open-mindedly about the benefits of modern technology -- including its environmental benefits -- as well as its many real risks. It is a belief that in some ways humans are a cancer in the natural world. As Carson wrote (in her chapter on cancer), "With the dawn of the industrial era the world became a place of continuous, ever-accelerating change. Instead of the natural environment there was rapidly substituted an artificial one composed of new chemical and physical agents, many of them possessing powerful capacities for inducing biologic change." Or as Bill McKibben argued in the book that helped make him a leader in the environmental movement, the human era has meant The End of Nature. Some call that book the modern Silent Spring, and McKibben the modern Rachel Carson.

This captures the central problem with Silent Spring, and with the more naïve and simplistic strains of environmentalism that it inspired. Carson and McKibben were/are basically right. The central case environmentalists make, that humans are mucking things up in what will almost certainly turn out to be catastrophic ways, is unquestionably true. But we are not separate from nature. Humans are a species too, part of nature, with the capacity not only for unprecedented harm but for phenomenal benefit, even the capacity to avoid some of the catastrophes we're facing. Achieving those benefits and those solutions, however, will require a more open-minded attitude toward the products and processes of our modern world.

The environmentalism Rachel Carson helped spawn with Silent Spring, that simplistically raises alarms about the dangers of our technological world and refuses to acknowledge its promise, impedes solutions, and progress, and may actually be harming the very human and environmental well-being it's trying to protect.

 
 
 

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01:27 PM on 07/18/2012
Quoting from page 12 of Silent Spring: “It is not my contention that chemical insecticides should never be used.” Her claim was that "poisonous and biologically potent chemicals" had been distributed "indiscriminately into the hands of persons largely or wholly ignorant of their potentials for harm".

People took extreme positions and said they took their inspiration from her. A movement evolved after she was dead that took a number of positions you critique. Does that make Carson responsible?
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03:57 PM on 07/06/2012
Congratulations ! David Ropeik - come on down ! You've written the most bogus and ridiculous column ever to appear in HP Green, maybe all of HP. Heckuvajob !
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
05:06 AM on 06/23/2012
No. wrong. You are naive to believe the chemical and nuke companies pr reassuring you how safe modern chemicals, GMO and nukes are. You want GMO displacing natural species all so farmers can use more roundup? you see no danger in that? You know that much GMO is made with a gold gone of similar that shot the desired genes into the dna at random, then breed the surviving organism till see if they got what they wanted, and they always get a whole bunch of unrelated changes too. You se no danger in that?

Incredible.

Or that the irradiation of food, plasticizes it, and substantially changes the chemistry of the food. It also conceals actual purification. Now if you are starving, sure, but then we have the industry pr folks refusing to label it, they obviously have something to hide.

8 million people a year die from cancer. But you think that is irrational fear?

Too many people know a little science and think they can play with it it safely. many cannot. Big business will always cut comers and take chances till systems fail and people die. Never going to change.

And there will always people who say, don't worry, it;s all safe, nothing to worry about, no need to lable or regulate, you are just being irrational.
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Iatros78
Science is the consensus of expert opinion
04:24 PM on 06/22/2012
In her book "Merchants of Doubt: How a Handful of Scientists Obscured the Truth on Issues from Tobacco Smoke to Global Warming," Naomi Oreskes (Professor of History and Science Studies at UCSD) discusses attempts to discredit Rachael Carson and her book "Silent Spring." Carson's work represented a change from "aesthetic environmentalism" (let's keep America beautiful) to "regulatory environmentalism." Regulatory environmentalism represented a threat to the profit margins of polluting/poisoning industries. As a result, industry, following the lead of Big Tobacco, has attempted to undermine science in general in the minds of the public, as well as any efforts to create regulation based on science. Since regulatory environmentalism essentially began with Carson, her book, and the regulation of DDT, industry went after Carson with a vengeance. As Oreskes states, " In the demonizing of Rachel Carson, free marketeers realized that if you could convince people that an example of successful government regulation (i.e. severely restricting the use of DDT) wasn’t, in fact, successful- that it was actually a mistake- you could strengthen the argument against regulation in general.” Thus you have industry front groups and right wing supporters attacking Carson. Right wing economist Thomas Sowell, for example, describes Carson as the "greatest mass murderer in history" regarding regulation of DDT. That's right. Not Hitler, Stalin, or Mao, but Rachel Carson! Such assertions are absurd. The widespread use of DDT was already creating DDT-resistant mosquitos in the US and nowhere was targeted use of DDT prohibited.
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itruth
fideistic deist with socratic tedencies
05:41 AM on 06/22/2012
The 'Law of unintended consequences' would come to mind in this post; we could blame 'Henry Ford' for all the deaths on our roads; add cell phones to the mix and viola, we have a winner.

Silent Spring was a 'Canary in the Coal Mine' for at that time Love Canal and Thalidomide were front page news;
Thalidomide is a sedative drug introduced in the late 1950s that was used to treat morning sickness.[2] It was sold from 1957 until 1961, when it was withdrawn after being found to be a cause of birth defects.

In the mid 1970s Love Canal became the subject of national and international attention after it was revealed in the press that the site had formerly been used to bury 21,000 tons of toxic waste by Hooker Chemical (now Occidental Petroleum Corporation).[citation needed]

If left unfettered, the Petrochemical corporations [of the time] would have successfully polluted every body of potable water in the world! We still have [millions of tons] of chemicals in our soils and waters that enter the food web every second.

Robert Oppenheimer; and others that have been pushed by the powers knew that we can do some things we should wait to do! In our adolescence we make mistakes; with sometime awful outcomes.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
aligatorhardt
Cut on the bias
04:41 AM on 06/22/2012
What a waste of time this article is. The author seems to be trying to make all environmental concerns a black or white question, absolute bad or absolute good. When someone tries to claim DDT, radioactive contamination and chemical hazards are nothing to worry about, then you can figure they are trying to sell something. I some radiation use does good then we should bathe ourselves in it without limit? DDT kills mosquitoes, so we should poison all forms of life including ourselves? This is the same old bull about allowing unlimited hazard because some good might come with it. A typical nuclear power salesman cliche' is since coal is bad and nuclear power is not coal, then we should ignore the harms of nuclear power? There are many ways to make electricity, so we can do without BOTH coal and nuclear power. We can use chemicals, but we need to find out their potential for harm before we scatter them everywhere. Every chemical must be judged on it's own merits, not some stereotype about chemicals are either bad or good. This article is a sales pitch from polluters.
04:35 AM on 06/22/2012
Sorry, but no! While "Silent Spring" may have played it's part as you describe it, it's part was rather minor. Shortly after this book was published, the "info" age began and we started discovering that "We the people" had been lied to by our government as well as "Corp America" about everything from radiation to chemicals. With out these disclosures "Silent Spring" would most likely have been relegated to just another "doomsday" book closet.
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Alex Prior
Abyssum abyssus invocat
04:13 AM on 06/22/2012
I oppose GM Foods not for the reason cited, but simply because we don't have enough information.

At the base level, GM foods need to be tested for safety in humans in the same way that we test drugs.

At the next level, however, GM foods are not like drugs, because drugs don't interact with their environment in the same way that broadacre farming and animal husbandry does. And there have been some nasty shocks, with GM plants going wild and GM genes being found in wild varieties. Until these effects are properly understood, and can be controlled, we have a potential problem - and given the scale of industrial agriculture, a potentially huge problem.
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03:44 AM on 06/22/2012
To be blunt: I don't see here an intellect deep enough, nor a spirit vital enough, to enlighten anyone on this subject.

This is just academic log-rolling, and an example of the very thing it presumes to object to.

Rachel Carson was a determined and original thinker. To discuss her flaws in this superficial way is like saying horses are inadequate because they don't lay eggs.

As for GMO in foods, this has always been a red herring. GMO's are a strategy for control of the food supply. The inherent dangers, or benefits, of the organisms is secondary, though of course critical in their own right.
02:11 AM on 06/22/2012
Ah, yet another person who thinks that massive use of DDT would have been a good thing. This idea is just grossly misinformed. In fact, today, many malarial areas have DDT-resistant insects, and they have had these insects for years. Greater use of DDT would simply have made it happen sooner. And, since DDT isn't bio-degradable, we would now be living with the consequences of that massive use. Banning it was simply the right thing to do.

Donald C. Lindsay, Ph.D.
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02:08 AM on 06/22/2012
Hmmm.... we need to inform the Justice Dep't that "herbal remedies" are unregulated. Seems like we could release about a million people from jails and stop the medical Mary Jane crackdown...

Guess they haven't read your book.
How ironic the article is about a misleading book :)
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02:02 AM on 06/22/2012
Ah yes, all those videos of all those pesky kids we being fogged with DDT in their swimming pools in sub-Saharan Africa...

...What's that? Oh, those kids were in NYC? Hmm. Well, I'm sure none of them died of malaria, praise the nerve agent industry. What is the malaria death rate in NYC these days, what with DDT still being banned there and all. Just think, all those poor souls that could've been saved, but for Ms. Carson's sham of a book, biased up with facts 'n stuff...
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mrkurtzhedead
I'll be back, when it's dark!
01:43 AM on 06/22/2012
A terrible lack of research about malaria. In which malarial countries was DDT banned before the anopheles mosquitoes developed resistance to it? What numbers do you have to back up that any ban lead to deaths by malaria?
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Overtone
See bio on the Aesop Institute website
01:32 AM on 06/22/2012
For a glimpse of the little recognized real danger of nuclear nightmares see Stop Three Ticking Time Bombs at www.aesopinstitute.org Two of those time bombs are nuclear.

Humanity is now threatened as never before. Preventing the worst may still be possible but it will take a massive, rapid, wise emergency program to insure human survival.
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intotheabyss
Imperialism is a form of insanity.
10:14 PM on 06/21/2012
Another lame establishment-centric article. Useless babble being passed off as serious commentary. No wonder we're in so much trouble.