Carol Ekarius' Toxic Burden Blog: Learn how chemicals affect your health

Toxic Burden is the interface of our environment and our health. For decades we have heard about genes and lifestyle, but environment is the third leg of the stool. This blog will help you learn how toxins affect you, your family and friends.

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Exposed

Yesterday Terry Gross, the host of NPR's Fresh Air, did an interview with Mark Schapiro. Schapiro is the author of Exposed: The Toxic Chemistry of Everyday Products, and What's at Stake for American Power, which I reviewed when it first came out. The program was excellent, and Schapiro said a couple of things that stuck with me:
1.) Gross asked Schapiro how researching the book changed the consumer choices he makes. He said: What really gets me is, I like to have the information, and industry and the government have gone to extraordinary lengths to prevent me, and you, and everybody else, from having the information about these kinds of substances, so that you can make a choice. I think at the very minimum, that is something people can demand. How has it changed how I do things? I smoke, I enjoy smoking, but I know what I am doing, I know the risks and I know what is involved with a cigarette. So the thing that gets me about this whole issue is, what you don't know. Get the information out there and people can make decisions about the risks they are willing to take, but right now the information isn't out there.

2.) At the end, Gross said, "Thanks for all the bad news." Schapiro came back with this: I don't see this book as a bad-news book. I have been following environmental topics for years and I have found these arguments over and over and over again. Environmentalists say, 'Take this stuff out, it's really dangerous' and industry comes back and says 'Get real. We have got to make trade offs in modern society, and we are going to end up throwing people out of work, and it is going to be too expensive, and it will be an economic catastrophe for our country, plus the stuff isn't dangerous anyway.' To be honest I got tired of that dynamic, it gets like Kabuki theater, the same arguments back and forth. Then I started following what was happening in Europe and I said, 'Hey, wait a minute. The world's major economy is requiring that things be done differently, and so what is the reaction?' I started looking at what is the effect in Europe, and the economic catastrophe that was predicted never happened. So it has been a bluff, over and over and over here in the United States as to what is-and-isn't possible. So I see it as the opposite of a bummer. I see it as kind of a new way of looking at things and a new way of looking at what is possible.


Yesterday morning, I had breakfast with a friend. He said something similar to me, about my blog being bad news. But like Schapiro, I don't see knowledge as bad news. I see it as empowerment. When we do know about all this scary stuff, we can weigh risks, we can make educated decisions, and we can demand change. As consumers, I truly believe that we have remarkable power! Vote for safer products every time you go to the store. Let corporations and government know you won't settle for less than full disclosure so you can make educated choices. They will listen.

(Listen to the Fresh Air interview here.)



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2 Comments:

  • At November 28, 2007 3:43 PM , Anonymous Marie Germain said...

    Hello Carol: It is bad news indeed but it must be told. Worse news is finding out when it is too late. The effects of our global toxic body burden are skyrocketing and our health systems are already on the brink. Empowering citizens with solutions takes the bite out of the news. We are producing an Inconvenient Truth scale movie for fall 2008 release worldwide. It's called "287" (as in the number of toxins found in 10 American babies' umbilical cord blood Aug. 2004). Thanks for your great blog. Please visit ours at our movie site and put your comments in. We'll link to your blog as well. Http://287reasons.com. And keep in touch with us!

     
  • At November 28, 2007 3:58 PM , Blogger Carol Ekarius said...

    Marie,
    Thanks for your comment. I will definitely await the release of your movie. And, I will check out your site ASAP,
    Carol

     

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