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Plastic Water Bottles Won't Hurt You
· Wednesday, October 27, 2010
Canada has announced it will ban the chemical bisphenol A -- known as BPA -- which is used to make plastic water and baby bottles.
The head of the Canadian environmental group Environmental Defence is thrilled:
"Kudos to the federal government. ... We look forward to seeing BPA legally designated as 'toxic' as soon as possible."
But the evidence doesn't actually show that BPA is toxic. Europe's equivalent of the FDA concluded: "(T)he data currently available do not provide convincing evidence of neurobehavioral toxicity."
Richard Sharpe of the University of Edinburgh explained:
"Some early animal studies produced results suggesting the possibility of adverse effects relevant to human health, but much larger, carefully designed studies in several laboratories have failed to confirm these initial studies."
The initial studies injected BPA into animals, rather than giving it by mouth, which is how we humans are exposed. Since BPA degrades in the gut when we consume it, very little gets to our cells.
Yet many people are sure BPA causes not only breast and prostate cancer but also obesity, diabetes, attention deficit hyperactivity, autism, liver disease, ovarian disease, disease of the uterus, low sperm count and heart disease. When a chemical is said to cause so many disorders, that's a sure sign of unscientific hysteria. But a documentary called "Tapped" says it's true. It quotes experts claiming "BPA may be one of the most potent toxic chemicals known to man."
Nonsense. Not only is there no good evidence that BPA locked into plastic can hurt people, it actually saves lives by stopping botulism.
"Since BPA became commonplace in the lining of canned goods, food-borne illness from canned foods -- including botulism -- has virtually disappeared," says the American Council of Science and Health.
You never hear the good news about BPA in the mainstream media. Fear-mongering gets better ratings.
"Tapped" also asserts that other dangerous chemicals poison bottled water. In the film, toxicologist Dr. Stephen King says that we should be "horrified" at all those chemicals. But when we called King, he sent us a study saying "testing" reveals a surprising array of chemical contaminants in every bottled water brand analyzed -- at levels no different from those routinely found in tap water.
"Tapped" claims cancer rates are up because of these chemicals, but that's another myth. Cancer incidence rates are flat. They would have declined if not for new screening methods. Life spans are up, too.
Not every mom has fallen for the BPA scare. "Truth or Scare," the blog of a woman who calls herself "Junk Science Mom," recently called out one of the people behind the anti-BPA campaign: scaremonger/hustler David Fenton:
"If you believe what you see and hear in the media, those fighting an unnecessary battle against bisphenol-A (BPA) are altruistic individuals concerned about health and safety. ... But there is an ugly truth behind the scenes that you will never hear about in the media. Greed, propaganda, political agendas, profits, lies and scams. And it all can be tied to one person and one powerful PR firm. David Fenton and Fenton Communications. ...
"He is the puppet master, and we moms are his puppets. He orchestrates the scare, and we, being fearful for our children, unknowingly carry out his plan for him. He comes out a winner, and we are duped into wasting our time, money and energy fighting a battle that never needed to be fought."
Good for you, Junk Science Mom, whoever you are. "Truth or Scare" is a wonderful addition to the debate.
But if BPA isn't toxic, why will Canada ban it? And why have Connecticut and Minnesota already done so? Because scientifically illiterate legislators are quick to panic. When the media sensationalize, legislators respond. Two FDA scientists -- Ronald J. Lorentzen and David G. Hattan --[AZ1] note the bias toward sensationalism: "The disquieting public invocations made by some ... about the perils of exposure (to BPA) ... galvanize the public debate."
When even notoriously risk-averse FDA scientists speak out against the BPA panic, the scaremongers must have gone absurdly far.
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Robert
Sure. Then there's this: Dihydrogen monoxide is colorless, odorless, tasteless, and kills uncounted thousands of people every year. Most of these deaths are caused by accidental inhalation of DHMO. Ban DHMO. Before it's TOO LATE!
Posted October 27, 2010 at 7:39:48 AM
Bruce R Pierce
Robert
Since DHMO is only dangerous if inhalation happens lets sit down and have a glass and talk about it's other dangers.
Posted October 27, 2010 at 7:52:51 AM
John H
It's my understanding that DHMO is being unfairly targeted. In it's natural form DHMO is severly WATERED down, and when ingested in larger quantities, causes nothing more than an urge to excuses oneself from the room.........
Posted October 27, 2010 at 10:01:59 AM
Convet
Indeed.
Posted October 27, 2010 at 1:52:27 PM
Chris Dunn
As I understand it, there are plans already underway to place DHMO into containers made with BPA for public distribution!
Posted October 27, 2010 at 3:44:13 PM
p3orion
Over 99.9% of people who die from any disease can be shown to have consumed traceable quantities of L-ascorbate within the previous year. Many people have had consumed it within only days of their deaths. Millions of Americans, EVEN INFANTS, are exposed to L-ascorbate every day, many without even knowing. Not even school lunches are free from it.
Despite these undeniable facts, corporate interests have pushed for its increased use by all Americans, even gaining the assistance of the state Chambers of Commerce in Florida and California in their efforts to increase profits from their production of the compound. But obviously this CHEMICAL, also known as ascorbic acid, needs to be banned immediately. For the children.
Oh wait... L-ascorbate is vitamin C? Never mind.
Posted October 27, 2010 at 3:49:09 PM
Sewing Susie
Then again, many years ago women who worked in canneries died at very high rates, due to benzene inhalation (used as solvent for the seal gasket on cans).
And any homemaker with a lick of sense made her own vinegar, because any rat's patoot could bottle dilute hydrochloric acid and label it as vinegar, and sell it to the unwary.
Some balance is needed. Don't throw the baby out with the bathwater, and take us back to the "good ol' days" when this sort of thing could be done to people and who gives a rip?
Posted October 27, 2010 at 4:13:47 PM
BoFromTexas
C'mon guys, everyone knows it's the quantity of DHMO that is dangerous. When diluted with agricultural chemicals and a few live alligators, it becomes extremely toxic. Bad stuff. Too bad Florida is covered with the stuff.
Posted October 27, 2010 at 9:15:45 PM
common scents
E-colonist take every opportunity to scare people about chemicals; while not admitting or not knowing that all living organisms are made up of "chemicals". Some are deceitful and some are ignorant, but there agenda is to legislate us back to the stone age.
Posted October 28, 2010 at 11:29:41 PM
sunforester
Why is it so easy for junk science to be credited as fact? Could it be due to the dumbing-down of our science education for decades, along with the promoting of junk science (global warming, autism-causing vaccines, environmental tobacco smoke, the list goes on and on and on...) by our all-pervasive media?
Why are we so surprised and outraged by another junk science scam? We are natural suckers for it, and it is not an accident that we are. We all need to regain respect for science, and hold our scientific experts accountable as the real deal. We all need to hear and explore the facts by real scientists, not plaintiff lawyers and others who stand to reap huge rewards for our gullibility (for example, our #1 junk scientist Al Gore).
We all need to demand more accountability and transparency for all the critical facts that are offered as the foundations of our decisions. We all need to promote critical thinking among ourselves and discourage the lemming-like acceptance of ideas that may be very appealing but dead wrong.
It is not just our money at stake, but our own lives that are at risk by our willingness to be ignorant and believe in whatever is thrown at us, no matter how unsupported and unsubstantiated by real science and the truth it represents.
Posted October 30, 2010 at 4:23:43 PM
Christine
Potentially dangerous substances are ubiquitous in our environment and are allowed, by our government to be "innocent until proven guilty" and this is just not okay. Any science can be called "junk science" if you analyze it who it's funded by and what motivation has brought the study about in the first place. "Junk science" exists for BOTH sides of this arguement. It is much easier to ignore the real science that supports the countless environmental links to many illnesses.
Posted December 22, 2010 at 11:13:57 AM