Our health and the environment
Gadfly has been accused, in the past, of neglecting the nitty-gritty and addressing nothing less than planetary matters. Gadfly pleads guilty and sheepishly explains that grand matters matter.
For
this issue of the Sylvanian, the Gadfly Revelry & Research team has
investigated family farming. What could be more local than family
farming?
Family
farming goes back to 13,000 BP (Before the Present), but we need to go
back only to mid-20th century for our story of the epidemic in cancer we
see today. My residency training, 1956 to 1959, was a time of intensive
medical/surgical education. I went through the pathology accession
books of cases from 1945 through 1950 to identify
cases of inflammation, cysts, tumors, and relevant systemic disease — anything that
would be important for a young hospital resident to study. Among all the cases of
cancer, I found only two of prostate cancer, and relatively few of breast cancer. Re-
member, this was a large hospital with an active operating room, sending lots of tis-
sue specimens to pathology lab for analysis. Today, every man knows more than two
friends, neighbors, and relatives afflicted with prostate cancer; and every woman
knows several with breast cancer. Between those early post-war years and today, there has been an explosion in prostate and breast cancers, a literal epidemic.
cases of inflammation, cysts, tumors, and relevant systemic disease — anything that
would be important for a young hospital resident to study. Among all the cases of
cancer, I found only two of prostate cancer, and relatively few of breast cancer. Re-
member, this was a large hospital with an active operating room, sending lots of tis-
sue specimens to pathology lab for analysis. Today, every man knows more than two
friends, neighbors, and relatives afflicted with prostate cancer; and every woman
knows several with breast cancer. Between those early post-war years and today, there has been an explosion in prostate and breast cancers, a literal epidemic.
Here’s the story.
During
WW II, the chemical companies were busy making ex- plosives for shells
and bombs. When the war ended, they were less celebratory than the rest
of the country, for they suddenly had idle production capacity. Their
best [amoral] minds identified any groups who might be customers for the
large quantities of chemicals they could and would produce. Ah, the
farmers! So, they promised the farmers of America higher yields by
killing off the insect pests that ate up a goodly portion of their
crops. They also promised to make farming less labor-intensive by
killing off all the weeds that competed with the food crops for the
nutrients of the soil.
The
farmers bought it. The use of chemicals in farming soon was soon
advertised as “conventional,” and the use of the farmers’ families to
weed the rows and pick off the bugs from the growing food crops was
disdained as crazy and called “organic.” Chemicals were advertised to
bring “Miracles through Chemistry.” But, chemicals became pervasive in
our air, soils, foods, and bodies. Many of these chemicals that infested
our environment were harmful to our tissues and organs, and some even
were proven to cause cancer. Eventually, the word chemical became
associated in the public mind not with “miracles,” but “toxic.”
Still,
the chemical companies — Monsanto was their poster child — would not be
deterred. By the 1960s, only 20 years after WW II, chemical warfare
[remember Agent Orange] was used in Vietnam. PTSD rates soared. The main
culprits were: proven Agent Orange exposure and the lies behind the
war.
Now
in the 21st century, the chemical companies complain bitterly when
Michelle Obama plants an organic garden on the White House grounds. The
First Lady has stood her ground and didn’t cave in to industry demands. She, unlike her husband, is one tough hombre for the greater good. She is a model for the rest of us.
All
told, there was one major change from the time when nylon was the only
synthetic plastic — and when I could find only two cases of prostate
cancer in five years
of reviewing everything that went through the Pathology Department of a
large City Hospital — until now, when prostate and breast cancer is
epidemic. That change is the flooding of hundreds of thousands of
artificial chemicals into the environment. All of us, were we to have
blood tests, would show, literally, dozens of toxic chemicals in every
system of our body and brains. Other changes — our diets, our sedentary
activities, computer use — all are minor compared to the soup of
chemicals in our environments since the mid-20th century.
It is time to become angry, maybe to get mad.
[Also published in the Sylvanian, Winter 2017]