The legacy of Silent Spring provides an object lesson in the importance of bringing the global-warming con artists to trial. No one was ever forced to answer for the misery inflicted by that book, or the damage it dealt to serious science. Today Rachel Carson is still celebrated as a hero, the secular saint who transformed superstition and hysteria into a Gospel for the modern god-state. The tactics she deployed against DDT resurfaced a decade later, in the Alar scare. It’s a strategy that offers great reward, and very little risk. We need to increase the risk factor, and frighten the next generation of junk scientists into being more careful with their research. If we don’t, the Church of Global Warming will just reappear in a few years, wearing new vestments and singing new hymms… but still offering the same communion of poverty, tyranny, and death.
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
Silent Spring, redux
Hot Air has an interesting and reflective perspective on the Silent Spring attack on DDT and its effect on the world. It seems the church of environmentalism started quite a few years back (as Rush would say, with the decline of communism, its adherents moved into the environmental movement). Read it here:
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