President Obama:
“The…. true burden of environmentally induced cancer has been grossly underestimated….The panel urges you most strongly to use the power of your office to remove the carcinogens and other toxins from our food, water, and air that needlessly increase health care costs, cripple our Nation’s productivity, and devastate American lives.“
Some strong words coming from a report issued today by the Presidential panel on cancer.
Linking cancer to environmental causes rather than lifestyle marks a major reversal from previous reports, and stands out as an alarm raised by a governmental group—making its voice heard officially and urgently.
It’s about time, I thought, when I read a preview last night by New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof. Since this report affects every person on the planet, I envisioned this as major news, a Blink moment—for the globe.
In a way it was— Blink and you could have missed the story. Even before the stock market tanked.
To be fair, today was a big news day. Though the report surely stirred up controversy and conversation in the industries involved, most consumers would have to search to find it buried beneath stories on Lawrence Taylor’s arrest, and a cow stuck on a roof.
Seriously. I hoped for another type of Blink — the concept coined by Malcolm Gladwell —representing the power of the instinct; the instant conclusions the mind makes in about 2 seconds.
To me it seems instinctive to understand that the use of chemicals produces results that are sometimes desirable, sometimes dangerous. In 2010 it’s hard to imagine that a presidential panel should have to push for action about something that seems as clear as our rivers and lakes used to be.
The panel that issued this report was created when the war on cancer began during the Nixon administration in 1971. At that time, one in 12 women would get breast cancer in her lifetime. Today that is one in 7. Thyroid cancer was once rare; today cases are skyrocketing and scientists have no idea why. In 1960 the chances of getting malignant melanoma, the most dangerous form of skin cancer, were one in 600. By 2000 the chances had leaped to one case per 74 people. Today, the odds are one in 58. And experts say the alarming increases cannot all be explained by earlier screening, smoking, diet or lifestyle.
Hopefully the strong words delivered by this panel will turn into strong action—beginning with the passage of the 2010 Toxic Chemicals Safety Act. This was recently introduced in Congress, expanding the public’s right to know about the health risks of chemicals –and requiring industry to prove they are safe.
Besides pressing representatives to pass the act, the average person can, at the very least, heed the panel’s warning and follow the recommendations to take action on their own—filter water, eat organic, read labels. I’m not a scientist, but I don’t think you need to be in order to see there’s a link between chemicals and cancer– just Blink.
Also posted on the Huffington Post.
“In 2010 it’s hard to imagine that a presidential panel should have to push for action about something that seems as clear as our rivers and lakes used to be.”
I just thought this quote from the brilliant Darryle Pollack’s current blg should get another read. Thanks for posting this Darryle.I printed out the full report (it used almost a whole ream of paper!) and will dig into it today. It seems that many of things that have worried me (chemicals, radiation, etc…) were worth worrying about!
Myra, of course I thought of you the instant I saw this news story—and knew how meaningful it would be—and now I’ll rely on you and your knowledge to go through the full report.
Actually, you’re the perfect example of Blink–when you started your backyard garden (which later turned into Earthbound Farm)—were advised to use pesticides, but you INSTINCTIVELY knew that was not a good idea. How amazing your whole future rested on that pure instinct.
HEre’s a link to Earthbound Farm website for anyone who wants more information about organic produce.
http://www.ebfarm.com/
Darryle’s on commission from Earthbound Farm, FYI -fulll disclosure.
I’m just your biggest fan.