Deadly
Environmentalists
By Walter E. Williams
Wednesday, August 15, 2007
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Environmentalists, with the help of politicians and
other government officials, have an agenda that has
cost thousands of American lives.
In the wake of Hurricane Betsy, which struck New
Orleans in 1965, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
proposed building flood gates on Lake Pontchartrain,
like those in the Netherlands that protect cities from
North Sea storms. In 1977, the gates were about to be
built, but the Environmental Defense Fund and Save Our
Wetlands sought a court injunction to block the
project.
According to John Berlau's recent book,
"Eco-Freaks: Environmentalism is Hazardous to
Your Health," U.S. Attorney Gerald Gallinghouse
told the court that not building the gates could kill
thousands of New Orleanians. Judge Charles Schwartz
issued the injunction despite the evidence refuting
claims of environmental damage.
We're told that DDT is harmful to humans and
animals. Berlau, a research fellow at the Washington,
D.C-based Competitive Enterprise Institute, says,
"Not a single study linking DDT exposure to human
toxicity has ever been replicated." In one
long-term study, volunteers ate 32 ounces of DDT for a
year and a half, and 16 years later, they suffered no
increased risk of adverse health effects.
Despite evidence that, properly used, DDT is
neither harmful to humans nor animals, environmental
extremists fight for a continued ban. This has led to
millions of illnesses and deaths from malaria,
especially in Africa. After WWII, DDT saved millions
upon millions of lives in India, Southeast Asia and
South America. In some cases, malaria deaths fell to
near zero. With bans on DDT, malaria deaths and
illnesses have skyrocketed.
Environmental extremists see DDT in a different
light. Alexander King, co-founder of the Club of Rome,
said, "In Guyana, within almost two years, it had
almost eliminated malaria, but at the same time, the
birth rate had doubled. So my chief quarrel with DDT
in hindsight is that it greatly added to the
population problem." Jeff Hoffman, environmental
attorney, wrote on grist.org, "Malaria was
actually a natural population control, and DDT has
caused a massive population explosion in some places
where it has eradicated malaria. More fundamentally,
why should humans get priority over other forms of
life? . . . I don't see any respect for mosquitos in
these posts." Berlau's book cites many other
examples of contempt for human life by
environmentalists and how they've made politicians
their useful idiots.
In 2001, thousands of Americans perished in the
terrorist attack on the World Trade Center. In the
early 1970s, when the World Trade Center complex was
built, the asbestos scare had just begun. The builders
planned to use AsbestoSpray, a flame retardant that
adhered to steel. The New York Port of Authority caved
in to the environmentalists' asbestos scare and denied
its use. An inferior substitute was used as
fireproofing.
After the attack, the National Institute of
Standards and Technology (NIST) confirmed other
experts' concerns about asbestos substitutes,
concluding, "Even with the airplane impact and
jet-fuel-ignited multi-floor fires, which were not
normal building fires, the building would likely not
have collapsed had it not been for the
fireproofing."
Through restrictions on asbestos use, our naval
vessels are more vulnerable to our enemies, a disaster
waiting in the wings. The Columbia spaceship disaster
was a result of the EPA's demand that NASA not use
freon in its thermal insulating foam.
Congress mandates auto fuel mileage standards --
Corporate Average Fuel Economy, or CAFE, standards --
resulting in lighter, less crashworthy cars. In 2002,
the National Academy of Sciences calculated that CAFE
standards caused 2,000 additional traffic deaths each
year. In 1999, a USA Today analysis of government and
Insurance Institute data found that since the 1970s
CAFE standards went into effect, 46,000 people died in
crashes which they would have likely survived had they
been riding in heavier cars.
None of this is news to politicians. It's just that
environmental extremists have the ears of politicians,
and potential victims don't.
Dr. Williams serves on the faculty of
George Mason University as John M. Olin Distinguished
Professor of Economics and is the author of More
Liberty Means Less Government: Our Founders Knew This Well.
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