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toxic life

apocalypse in the oceans

A terrifying article from Alternet.

Meanwhile, overfishing has created some 150 “dead zones” — oxygen-free patches of ocean that can sustain no life — around the world: Some of these patches, Grescoe tells us forebodingly, “are now as large as Ireland.” In search of seafloor-dwelling species such as the trendy monkfish — long ignored, then popularized singlehandedly by Julia Child in 1979 — bottom-trawls weighing more than 26,000 pounds each rake and flatten wildlife-rich undersea peaks, leaving a paved-looking flatness in their wake. Oh, and a large percentage of coral reefs worldwide are dying or already dead. Oh, and those bluefin tuna and halibut steaks you like? Say it with me: Mercury. Those jumbo fried shrimp battened on pesticides and antibiotics in bacteria-riddled Chinese farms, their decomposing flesh treated with borax? How’s your health insurance?

It is happening right this minute but not quite right before our eyes. This is exactly the sort of thing our species prefers not to think about. What kind of catastrophe is it? Take your pick. Ecological. Medical.

If we wanted to, we could bombard our readers with stories such as this. Corporate industrial civilisation is bad news for the planet. In this culture environments and habitats are destroyed for short term economic gain.

“This kind of attitude lies at the heart of the problems facing the oceans,” he seethes. “It is the ongoing plunder of the seas, done in the name of keeping a boat afloat for another season, and multiplied a hundred thousand times in all the ports of the world …. If this were still the age of inexhaustible cod mountains and endless salmon rivers, such a display of spirit might be admirable. It is the essence of the indomitable, short-sighted, buck-passing Atlantic fisherman: an independent, almost lordly working-class hero, romanticized to death in our culture. As long as there is a single jellyfish left in the ocean, he will be ready to go out and catch it.” And jellyfish, down at the foot of the food chain, will be the last edible species out there in a not-too-distant future when our great-grandchildren, Grescoe half-jokes, will eat “peanut butter and jellyfish sandwiches” and “jellyfish and chips.”

Peanut butter, only if they are able to grow peanuts where they live. And jellyfish? Only if they live near the coast (as the seas rise more of us will be near the coast!).

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profitable pollutants

A recent brief article in the Ecologist lists a few of the toxins that we are exposed to, that make money for the companies manufacturing them.

It usually takes a major public health crisis to remove profitable toxins completely from marketplace. In the mean time most of us continue to be exposed to a variety of profitable poisons, including:

Fluoride

Sold as the solution for all our dental woes in major-brand toothpaste, this chemical is also routinely added to the water supply of some six million Brits. Historically used as a rat poison, fluoride is linked to cancer, brittle bones and thyroid disease.

Shocking news about fluoride.
The fluoride cover up.
Why We Changed Our Minds About Water Fluoridation

The proponents of water fluoridation argue that it is safe – although how a highly toxic substance can be safe (or even beneficial) when added to water supplies and toothpastes is mindboggling!
The reality seems to be that several industries (aluminium is an example) had a waste problem with fluoride, which was solved by convincing people it was a good idea to add it to water supplies!

stop fluoride

MTBE

Methyl tertiary-butyl ether (MTBE) is used as an additive for petrol. Primarily through leaks and spills, massive quantities of MTBE are known to have entered the environment, polluting soil and, more alarmingly, water supplies. MTBE is a known health risk and many US states have banned its use. The Bush administration aborted plans for a nationwide ban.

Aspartame

One of the world’s most popular artificial sweeteners. Studies have shown it to be a neurological toxin, as well as a potential carcinogen. In spite of this, aspartame is widely used in everything from soft drinks to children’s medicines. Manufacturers are now working on a ‘safer’ version called neotame.

Aspartame controversy.
Aspartame & Aspartame Poisoning
Aspartame Side Effects
sweet poison the book

Flame retardants

Brominated flame retardants (BFR) are used to prevent electronics, clothes and furniture from catching fire. Considered highly important to the electronics industry, BFRs accumulate in human breast milk and food items. Studies suggest BFRs are toxic towards the liver, thyroid and neurodevelopment.

PVC

One of the most valuable products in the chemical industry, polyvinyl chloride (PVC) is used abundantly in everyday plastics. It is known to harm the environment and human health at all stages of its life cycle, with links to cancer and damage to the immune and reproduction systems.

Greenpeace against PVC
Should We Phase Out PVC?
Making the Case Against PVC: The Healthy Building Network’s “Must Read” List

PFOA

Perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) is the main compound in Teflon, the non-stick, stain-resistant material used in cooking utensils, clothing and food packaging. Known to get into the human bloodstream, PFOA is considered a likely human carcinogen by the US Environment Protection Agency.

Phthalates

Chemicals that are used to soften plastics and also as an ingredient in common cosmetics. Known to be absorbed into the body, phthalates have been linked to birth defects and are considered a probable cause of cancer.

PFOA Concerns Regarding Exposure & Products Such As Dupont Teflon

In a sane world nothing would be released into the environment unless it was proven 100% safe, to people, animals, plants and the environment generally. It is crazy to allow poisons to be manufactured, released. Do no harm is a good motto, and one which humans should all follow. If we carry on releasing poisons eventually everywhere becomes contaminated, as it is now. Like frogs in slowly heating water, we are unable to see the damage that all this contamination is having on us and the rest of creation – will we allow corporations to poison the world right until it is too late for all of us?
How many people with cancer do you need to know before you start to say ‘enough’? When will you wake up and smell the poison?

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sam suds and the case of PVC: the poison plastic

PVC (polyvinyl chloride) plastic, commonly referred to as vinyl, is one of the most hazardous consumer products ever created. PVC is dangerous to human health and the environment throughout its entire life cycle, at the factory, in our homes, and in the trash. Our bodies are contaminated with poisonous chemicals released during the PVC lifecycle, such as mercury, dioxins, and phthalates, which may pose irreversible life-long health threats. When produced or burned, PVC plastic releases dioxins, a group of the most potent synthetic chemicals ever tested, which can cause cancer and harm the immune and reproductive systems.

More information on http://www.pvcfree.org/.

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