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The Garage of Death

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Why are we so afraid of insects? A Better Way to Kill ... Draw a line between Iraq and Dow Chemical. What links the two? Some History ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Garage of Death


1
The Garage of Death
  • Better Living Through Chemicals

2
Creepy Crawlies
  • What bugs give you the heebie jeebies?
  • What was the biggest bug you have ever killed?
  • Why are we so afraid of insects?

3
A Better Way to Kill
  • How do your parents or neighbors get rid of pests
    using less lethal means?
  • Why are organic foods becoming so popular?
  • If we hate pesticides so much, why do we use them?

4
Follow the Money
  • Pesticides are a 30 billion a year industry
  • The industry grew after WWII. Guess why.
  • Draw a line between Iraq and Dow Chemical. What
    links the two?

5
Some History
  • The following text excerpts come from
  • Industry Attacks on Dissent From Rachel Carson
    to Oprah published in Dollars Sense
  • Forty years after the publication of Silent
    Spring, corporations are still producing
    poisonsand still trying to keep critics from
    fighting back.
  • By LAURA ORLANDO
  • http//www.dollarsandsense.org/archives/2002/0302o
    rlando.html

6
Black gold, Texas tea
  • Before World War I, about half of the industrial
    products in the United States were made from
    renewable resources, such as plant-, wood-, and
    animal-based materials. In the 1920s and 1930s,
    oil and chemical companies like Union Carbide,
    Shell, and Dow expanded their interest in
    petrochemical manufacturing. The petrochemical
    industry, strengthened immensely by World War II,
    replaced renewable materials with synthetic
    organic compounds made from the by-products of
    oil and natural gas for instance, synthetic
    rubber replaced natural rubber, chemical
    detergents replaced animal-based soaps, and
    polyester replaced cotton. In the 1950s and
    1960s, the thriving plastics industry accelerated
    the shift even more. Today, 92 of the materials
    used for U.S. products and production processes
    are nonrenewable.

7
The War at Home
  • In many cases, the processes used to manufacture
    synthetic products created toxic wastes, and
    often the products themselveseither intact or
    when dissipated into the environmentwere harmful
    to life. Among the most lethal of these products
    were synthetic pesticides. Before 1940, most
    pesticides were made from plants a few were made
    from toxic metals like arsenic and mercury. But
    the synthetic chemicals created for chemical
    warfare during World War II were found to be
    highly effective weed and insect killers. So in
    1945, with strong government backing, these
    poisons entered commercial markets. Within ten
    years, synthetic pesticides had captured 90 of
    the agricultural pest-control market. Pesticides
    such as dichloro diphenyl trichloroethane (DDT),
    dieldrin, and aldrin were dropped from planes
    like bombs over Dresden. State and federal
    government agencies blanketed neighborhoods with
    poisons in an attempt to eradicate pests like
    gypsy moths and Japanese beetles.

8
Government Industry
  • Rachel Carson understood the forces at work in
    government and industry. Having served on the
    staff of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service for
    16 years, she was well aware of government's role
    in promoting and defending chemical poisons. "The
    crusade to create a chemically sterile,
    insect-free world," Carson wrote, "seems to have
    engendered a fanatic zeal on the part of many
    specialists and most of the so-called control
    agencies." We were living, she said, in an era
    "dominated by industry, in which the right to
    make a dollar at whatever cost is seldom
    challenged. When the public protests, confronted
    with some obvious evidence of damaging results of
    pesticide applications, it is fed little
    tranquilizing pills of half truth. We urgently
    need an end to these false assurances, to the
    sugar coating of unpalatable facts."

9
Were smarter now, right?
  • The facts about chemical production today are
    sobering. The world uses five billion pounds of
    pesticides every year, with almost half used in
    the United States. According to the Federal
    Emergency Management Agency, as many as 500,000
    U.S. products pose physical or health hazards and
    can be defined as "hazardous chemicals." U.S.
    industry uses 70,000 different chemical
    substances, but there is little or no attempt to
    assess their health or environmental impacts.
    Each year, over 1,000 new synthetic chemicals are
    introduced in the United States. But only a small
    fraction of these are tested for carcinogenity or
    endocrine disruption, and there is little
    understanding of how they interact with each
    other. The list of known poisons is long and
    troubling. It is as if we have forgotten, or have
    never known, "that which is good."

10
Mr. Totahs Garage of Death
  • Here are a few products currently in my garage
    along with their active ingredients.
  • Roundup Glymphosaten
  • Weed-B-Gon Dimethylamine (salt of
    dichlorophemoxyacetic acid)
  • Snail Slug Killer Pellets Deadline
    Metaldehyde
  • Giant Destroyer (for gophers) sodium nitrate,
    sulfur, charcoal
  • Drano sodium hydroxide
  • Bug-B-Gon Diazinon
  • Raid imiprothrin, cypermethrin
  • Orthene Systemic Insect Control Acephate
  • Bug-Geta Plus Carbaryl metaldehyde
  • Ortho Crabgrass Killer calcium acid,
    methanearsonate
  • Ortho Malathion Xylene Malathion

11
Why you should check your garage
  • EPA sharply restricts consumer use of diazinon,
    nation's 2 selling home and garden insecticide
  • Diazinon called unsafe for home use but will
    remain on store shelves for at least another
    three years
  • EPA scientists found the product exceeded safety
    standards by a wide margin. The action follows on
    the heels of the EPA's June 8 announcement
    banning Dursban, the nation's 1 selling home bug
    killer.
  • Both diazinon and Dursban are organophosphates,
    nerve gas derivatives originally developed during
    World War II. These chemicals were identified as
    top priorities for regulation by the EPA after
    the FQPA passed, due to the high risk that they
    present to the developing brains and nervous
    systems of infants and children.
  • From http//www.ewg.org/reports/diazinon/pr.html

12
A Better Way
  • Integrated Pest Management
  • Definition (from http//cipm.ncsu.edu/)
  • Integrated Pest Management is the coordinated use
    of pest and environmental information along with
    available pest control methods, including
    cultural, biological, genetic and chemical
    methods, to prevent unacceptable levels of pest
    damage by the most economical means, and with the
    least possible hazard to people, property, and
    the environment". Proceedings of the National
    Integrated Pest Management Forum. 1992. American
    Farmland Trust

13
If Youre going to San Francisco
  • Be sure to wear flowers in your hair (treated the
    IPM way)
  • Four-hundred hungry goats and tons of corn meal
    mulch prevent weeds from taking over City parks
    and watersheds, giant heaters kill termite
    colonies deep inside of building walls, and
    donut-shaped devices floating in City ponds
    release mosquito-eating microorganisms. San
    Francisco is pioneering environmentally sound
    ways to manage urban pests, and other city
    governments are taking notice.
  • San Francisco adopted an Integrated Pest
    Management (IPM) ordinance in October 1996, which
    commits the City to a pest management approach on
    its own property that minimizes the use of toxic
    chemicals and gets rid of pests by methods that
    pose a lower risk to public and environmental
    health.
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