Extract from EcoWatch
Nov. 18, 2016 06:27PM EST
By Alex Formuzis and Sonya Lunder
Myron
Ebell, head of President-elect Donald
Trump's U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) transition
team, is a notorious denier
of global warming whose biography unashamedly notes that he's
considered a "climate
criminal" by activists and "a superstar of the
denialosphere" by The
Climate War author Eric Pooley. But he's also director of
environmental policy at the Competitive Enterprise Institute, which
touts "the life-enhancing value of chemicals"—chemicals
like arsenic, DDT and PCBs.
One of the the Competitive Enterprise Institute's projects is
SafeChemicalPolicy.org.
The site is bursting with articles and reports that cast doubt on the
dangers of toxic chemicals and
pesticides in food, water and consumer products, and disparage
the work of public health advocates, with Environmental Working Group
(EWG) one of the site's favorite targets.- SafeChemicalsPolicy.org downplays the risks of arsenic
in drinking water and toxic
pesticides found on foods young children love to eat.
- An article on the site says it's wrong
for schools to notify parents before pesticides are sprayed
inside and around schools.
- It disparages public health advocates' concerns over fetuses
being exposed to endocrine
disruptors in the womb, including Monsanto's
notorious PCBs and the now-banned pesticide DDT.
- It actually makes the claim that glyphosate—the
active ingredient
in Monsanto's Roundup, which the World Health Organization
considers probably
carcinogenic to humans—has "liberated" children from
having to work in corn fields, pulling weeds.
"The simple reality," says the site, "is that modern living means living with chemicals." We couldn't agree more. The problem is that too many of those chemicals are hazardous to our health. The EPA is supposed to protect us from dangerous chemicals, not defend them, as Ebell would almost certainly do if he ran the agency.
As it turns out, EWG is a popular target among Trump's other top advisers. Steve Bannon, the former campaign CEO and incoming chief White House strategist attacked us when he was running the alt-right website Breitbart News.
We're used to it. In fact, when science deniers like Ebell and Bannon regularly get worked up over something you've said or done, it usually means you've said or done something right.
* * * *
"Myron Ebell director of environmental policy at the Competitive Enterprise Institute"
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/videos/#207294
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/videos/#207294
i.e. Competitive Enterprise Institute, another pro-corporate think tank subsidized by oil and other fossil fuel fortunes, including the Koch's.
Extract from Dark Money by Jane Mayer: page 219
The Worker
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