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originally posted by: HumansEh
a reply to: pl3bscheese
It is in mankinds nature to move into an area, consume all it has to offer with no thought to regeneration, when that area is depleted and we have reproduced to swell our numbers, we spread and multiply.
We are a cancer upon this world.
You said that you hope that people are working to get a chunk of us off planet.
They are, but it will be the rich, the greedy, the entitled, and the corporate/military (the very ones destroying Earth) that will be the ones on those ships mark my words.
You hope we can leave here before we make it a barren poisoned wasteland.
The rest of the galaxy hopes we don't.
...I do question the obesity claim. There are a host of other common sense, commonly seen reasons why America is an obese country. First up would be activity levels are much lower. In those who maintain higher activity levels, and eat right, you do not see obesity. Because DDT can influence obesity does not necessarily mean it is.
I will also add that your sources are or seem to be impeccable. To be fair I should do more research. I try to maintain an open mind, specially when presented with such data.
Consider, for example, this passage from Edwards’ article: “This implication that DDT is horribly deadly is completely false. Human volunteers have ingested as much as 35 milligrams of it a day for nearly two years and suffered no adverse effects. Millions of people have lived with DDT intimately during the mosquito spray programs and nobody even got sick as a result. The National Academy of Sciences concluded in 1965 that ‘in a little more than two decades, DDT has prevented 500 million [human] deaths that would otherwise have been inevitable.’ The World Health Organization stated that DDT had ‘killed more insects and saved more people than any other substance.’”
In addition, DDT was used with dramatic effect to shorten and prevent typhus epidemics during and after WWII when people were dusted with large amounts of it but suffered no ill effects, which is perhaps the most persuasive evidence that the chemical is harmless to humans. The product was such a boon to public health that in 1948 the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was awarded to Dr. Paul Müller for his discovery of the “contact insecticidal action” of DDT.
Although the use of DDT is not risk-free, there is a vast difference between applying large amounts of it in the environment — as farmers sometimes did before it was banned in the United States — and using it carefully and sparingly to fight mosquitoes and other disease-carrying insects, as it is used in a handful of African and Asian countries even today. It is sprayed or dusted indoors in small amounts to prevent mosquitoes from nesting, so exposures are extremely low. The now well-known problems associated with the thinning of raptor’s eggshells – while always exaggerated – can be completely avoided by using DDT with care exclusively in residential areas, because the chemical remains largely near where it is sprayed. No study has ever linked DDT environmental exposure to harm to human health.
originally posted by: bbracken677
a reply to: soficrow
I did... and I understand, I just have a problem grasping how DDT is responsible for the obesity we see, when people eat like pigs. Restaurants always bring huge servings (except for some of the high end ones). I almost always take home a doggy bag. Then you have those who live on fast food...
originally posted by: Harte
originally posted by: bbracken677
a reply to: soficrow
I did... and I understand, I just have a problem grasping how DDT is responsible for the obesity we see, when people eat like pigs. Restaurants always bring huge servings (except for some of the high end ones). I almost always take home a doggy bag. Then you have those who live on fast food...
Simplest rebuttal is skinny people, if DDT is so pervasive. Right?
Hart