By Michael Fumento on 12.14.04 @ 12:08AM
She’s the American Public Health Association’s equivalent of a Nobel Laureate.
Pop quiz. For its annual convention the American Public Health
Association (APHA)
chose as its keynote speaker: (a) a top government health official;
(b) a Nobel Laureate scientist; or (c) an activist and shark
assistant who's 20 percent silicone and 80 percent hot air.
The answer, unfortunately, was "c" -- paralegal Erin
Brockovich. According to the APHA, she discussed "her research
and groundbreaking work in the area of industrial environmental
negligence, its devastating effects on the public's health, and her
continued pursuit for justice for those who have been harmed."
In fact, as I have been writing for four years, Enhanced Erin
pursues only that which leads to fame or fortune. Thus in the
Hinkley, California lawsuit (falsely represented in her eponymous
film) that made her both celebrated and rich, there never was
evidence of any excess illness.
Now her firm is suing Beverly Hills High School and practically
every oil company in existence, claiming fumes from a rig on campus
have caused a cancer epidemic among former students. "These
statistics are 20 times higher than the national average for these
specific cancers," Brockovich told a credulous media. But a
University of Southern California study found no abnormal cancer
rate among the alumni and after a contempt of court threat,
Brockovich's firm admitted the "20 times" figure was
fabricated.
No matter, for that's exactly what the APHA finds truly sexy
about Brockovich -- her attacks on corporate America. You might
expect that from a group that hosts a "Peace Caucus" and a
"Socialist Caucus." In fact, the only time I've ever seen a person
actually reading the Communist Party USA newspaper was at an APHA
meeting -- where I saw several.
One major target at the convention was pesticide use. Among the
sessions:
• "Healthy hospitals: Controlling Pests without Harmful
Pesticides," based on promulgations by the extremist groups Health
Care Without Harm and Beyond Pesticides.
• "National Prevalence of Chemical Hypersensitivity and the
Medical Diagnosis of Multiple Chemical Sensitivities." (This might
be interesting if the disorder actually existed.)
• "Human Exposure to Pesticides and Fertilizers among Qat
Producers and Consumers in Yemen." (No, that's not Yemen, Ohio.
Apparently the APHA couldn't find enough problems in the U.S. And
qat, by the way, is an amphetamine-like narcotic shrub.)
• And a personal favorite: Tobacco companies' attempts to
manage public perception of tobacco pesticide risks.
Goodness, we wouldn't want to expose smokers to something that
might be harmful!
But Kevin Marchman, executive director of the National Organization
of African Americans in Housing (NOAAH), knows pesticides used in
the U.S. are safe, and that foods grown with them should be chewed
-- not eschewed. He said so in letters to both the APHA and the
Congressional Black Caucus.
"While I'm sure Erin Brockovich is an expert in these areas," he
told me sardonically, "we don't need the APHA to highlight
activists who focus on issues of little importance to average
Americans."
The NOAAH letters specifically noted APHA presentations that
"focus on the 'wisdom' of avoiding pesticides by eating only
organically-grown fruits and vegetables and encouraging
pesticide-free methods to control cockroach allergens [a.k.a., bug
poop] from contributing to children's asthma attacks."
"The APHA appears to be trying to scare people into eating
organically-raised foods. But we know these aren't accessible to
all, particularly those in the inner city," Marchman said. "They
also cost more. To suggest you're harming your family by not buying
these is wrong-headed. Conventionally-grown fruits and vegetables
are abundant, safe and economical."
Organic food is meant for Birkenstock-wearing, loft-living
yuppies with a need to show the world they can afford to pay extra
for produce that's often inferior. It's not for low-income families
who already lack the vitamins and other nutrients that they require
and that fresh produce provides, even as they over-consume
calories. "The 'buy organic' approach is sure to contribute to the
fast-growing and real concern of obesity, especially in our
children," says Marchman.
As to cockroaches, although environmentalists keep trying to
blame air pollution for rising childhood asthma rates, air
pollution levels have been dropping for decades.
Moreover, black children have as much as six times the rate of
asthma deaths as white ones. Why would air pollution discriminate
on the basis of race?
A 1997 landmark study in the New England Journal of
Medicine should have settled the issue. It found that over a
third of inner-city children were allergic to roach droppings. Yet
over half of their bedrooms "had high levels of cockroach allergen
in dust." And guess what? You don't kill cockroaches with kindness;
it takes chemicals.
"Because we do a lot of work with public housing agencies we
know that pests, and particularly cockroaches, are a huge issue"
says Marchman. "We know a healthy balance of house-cleaning and
pesticides can help rid these communities of pests."
With its chemical-bashing obsession, the American Public Health
Association has made itself a pest. Certainly it is an association,
but at the convention it did little to live up to its name. For its
speaker it got a D-cup; for concern over American public health it
gets an F.
topics:
Environment, Law, Africa, Oil