I nominate Lawrence Summers for the Natural Solutions Foundation Hall of Shame. Perhaps the fact that he has been nominated for a second term as the Secretary of the Treasury by our newly elected President should widen that nomination.
The following memo by Lawrence Summers was written in 1991, when Mr. Summers was the Chief Economist for the World Bank. Mr. Summers was President of Harvard University until he noted in public that women lack the mental ability to do science.
Just in case you thought that the notion of a genocidal agenda by the global elite is “just a conspiracy theory”, please read the words of Mr. Summers himself rationalizing polluting the developing world because it is cheap, effective and the increased cancer ratios will not show since the people there do not live long enough to develop the cancers.
This insane “logic” was effectively pierced by the Brazilian Minister of Environment whose comments follow.
Mr. Summers is, as of today, President Obama’s pick for Secretary of the Treasury, a position he held under President Clinton as well.
Health Freedom? Freedom? Personal Rights? Protecting the Vulnerable? You tell me.
And then make sure you do everything you can to support the Natural Solutions Foundation in our support of your health and freedom. Click here (http://drrimatruthreports.com/?page_id=189) to donate, here (http://drrimatruthreports.com/?page_id=187) to join the Health Freedom Action eAlert list, here (http://www.NaturalSolutionsFoundation.org) to learn more about the International Decade of Nutrition and the Valley of the Moon Eco Demonstration Project and here (http://www.ValleyoftheMoonCoffee.org) to order our magnificent Shade Grown, Friendly Food Certified Valley of the Moon Coffee. It’s free from pesticides, herbicides and other dangerous “cides” and every bag supports the work of the Natural Solutions Foundation. It’s our first product grown to teach farmers how to reclaim the production of food without chemicals or dangerous processes. Each $25 donation brings you a half pound of this exceptional coffee and a donation receipt for $20. Try it yourself and give it to your friends and colleagues. It really is “A Little Bit of Heaven in a Cup(TM) which supports health, not disease, the environment, not devastation and helps us keep your health and freedom intact against the other side, whoever they might be.
Yours in health and freedom,
Dr. Rima
Rima E. Laibow, MD
Medical Director
Natural Solutions Foundation
www.HealthFreedomUSA.org
www.GlobalHealthFreedom.org
www.NaturalSolutionsFoundation.org
www.ValleyoftheMoonCoffee.org
www.Organics4U.org
www.NaturalSolutionsMarketPlace.org
DATE: December 12, 1991
TO: Distribution
FR: Lawrence H. Summers
Subject: GEP
‘Dirty’ Industries: Just between you and me, shouldn’t the World Bank be encouraging MORE migration of the dirty industries to the LDCs [Less Developed Countries]? I can think of three reasons:
1) The measurements of the costs of health impairing pollution depends on the foregone earnings from increased morbidity and mortality. From this point of view a given amount of health impairing pollution should be done in the country with the lowest cost, which will be the country with the lowest wages. I think the economic logic behind dumping a load of toxic waste in the lowest wage country is impeccable and we should face up to that.
2) The costs of pollution are likely to be non-linear as the initial increments of pollution probably have very low cost. I’ve always though that under-populated countries in Africa are vastly UNDER-polluted, their air quality is probably vastly inefficiently low compared to Los Angeles or Mexico City. Only the lamentable facts that so much pollution is generated by non-tradable industries (transport, electrical generation) and that the unit transport costs of solid waste are so high prevent world welfare enhancing trade in air pollution and waste.
3) The demand for a clean environment for aesthetic and health reasons is likely to have very high income elasticity. The concern over an agent that causes a one in a million change in the odds of prostrate cancer is obviously going to be much higher in a country where people survive to get prostrate cancer than in a country where under 5 mortality is is 200 per thousand. Also, much of the concern over industrial atmosphere discharge is about visibility impairing particulates. These discharges may have very little direct health impact. Clearly trade in goods that embody aesthetic pollution concerns could be welfare enhancing. While production is mobile the consumption of pretty air is a non-tradable.
The problem with the arguments against all of these proposals for more pollution in LDCs (intrinsic rights to certain goods, moral reasons, social concerns, lack of adequate markets, etc.) could be turned around and used more or less effectively against every Bank proposal for liberalization.
Postscript
After the memo became public in February 1992, Brazil’s then-Secretary of the Environment Jose Lutzenburger wrote back to Summers: “Your reasoning is perfectly logical but totally insane… Your thoughts [provide] a concrete example of the unbelievable alienation, reductionist thinking, social ruthlessness and the arrogant ignorance of many conventional ‘economists’ concerning the nature of the world we live in… If the World Bank keeps you as vice president it will lose all credibility. To me it would confirm what I often said… the best thing that could happen would be for the Bank to disappear.” Sadly, Mr. Lutzenburger was fired shortly after writing this letter.
Mr. Summers, on the other hand, was appointed the U.S. Treasury Secretary on July 2nd, 1999, and served through the remainder of the Clinton Administration. Afterwards, he was named president of Harvard University.
http://www.whirledbank.org/ourwords/summers.html
For more information on Mr. Summers and his current status as a nominee, see
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/max-blumenthal/lawrence-summers-africa-i_b_141706.html
There has been a good deal of hoopla recently about the absurdity of drinking filtered, bottled, or other wise special water. It is more expensive (true), it has plasticizers in the water from the most commonly used type of bottles and these confer dangers (true) and it is unnecessary since municipal water in the US is safe and wholesome (manifestly untrue). The article posted below makes it very clear that the water you drink from municipal supplies can kill you, or at least change your biology significantly, whether you want it to or not.
I agree, as an environmentally aware physician, that plastic bottles are dangerous. Bis-Phalates are bad for you. I also agree that water which is merely put into jugs and bottles from common municiple taps are absurd, deceptive and should be clearly labled, “Nothing but tap water at a premium – no charge for the plasticizers”.
But the notion that water supplies in the US are anything close to safe is patently absurd. Water is frequently poisoned, yes, poisoned, with fluoride compounds (often derived from uranium mining but too expensive to dispose of according to EPA standards, so it is more profitably sold), chlorine, aluminum (to “polish” the water and give it sparkle) and a host of other unwise and dangerous compounds.
So yes, the bacteria that are tested for, including E. coli, a component of human and animal feces which is uses as an index organism (that is, if it is present, so are other dangerous components of feces), which were those of concern when water purification became a public responsibility in the late 18, early 19th century, are not present, mostly, in the water supply of most municipalities.
But benzine and other industrail wastes, pesticides, herbicides, waste-water emissions from nuclear stations which can legally (!) be discharged into water ways, land fill leachates, acid rain-dissolved chemicals and compounds legally and illegallly dumped, etc., etc., etc., plus the lead from the solder used on the water pipes in places like New York City (!) make unfiltered municipal water a highly dangerous bet for drinking, cooking or sterilizing.
You see, bacteria were of major concern. But the standards for metals, industrial compounds (which did not even exist when purification was being standardized, and a host of recent problems makes the quality of water, aside from its bacteria-free status, highly problematic, indeed.
Plastic is a serious concern, it is true. Use glass. Buy bottles of stuff in heavy glass, dump it out, wash the bottles out and use them instead of plastic to hold the water you filter with heavy duty, NOT pitcher-type filters. I prefer reverse osmosis filters with the capacity to add minerals back in. But clean water in glass bottles is essential for life, health and well-being.
And then there are the pharmaceuticals. See below!
Yours in health and freedom,
Dr. Rima
Rima E. Laibow, MD
Medical Director
Natural Solutions Foundation
www.HealthFreedomUSA.org
www.GlobalHealthFreedom.org
www.NaturalSolutionsFoundation.org
www.Organics4U.org
www.NaturalSolutionsMedia.tv
www.NaturalSolutionsMarketPlace.org
bottlesTons of Drugs Dumped Into Wastewater
https://mail.google.com/mail/?ui=2&ik=afbdc5dc14&attid=0.0.1.2&disp=emb&view=att&th=11c6a797e3776720
Bryant Sears, working in a Teflon suit and wearing goggles and rubber gloves, sorts leftover medicines and contaminated packing one-by-one at Abbott Northwestern Hospital, May 13, 2008 in Minneapolis. Items are put into separate barrels and bins, depending on their differing disposal standards and methods. (AP Photo/Jim Mone)
by Jeff Donn Martha Mendoza and Justin Pritchard
U.S. hospitals and long-term care facilities annually flush millions of pounds of unused pharmaceuticals down the drain, pumping contaminants into America’s drinking water, according to an ongoing Associated Press investigation.
[Bryant Sears, working in a Teflon suit and wearing goggles and rubber gloves, sorts leftover medicines and contaminated packing one-by-one at Abbott Northwestern Hospital, May 13, 2008 in Minneapolis. Items are put into separate barrels and bins, depending on their differing disposal standards and methods. (AP Photo/Jim Mone)]Bryant Sears, working in a Teflon suit and wearing goggles and rubber gloves, sorts leftover medicines and contaminated packing one-by-one at Abbott Northwestern Hospital, May 13, 2008 in Minneapolis. Items are put into separate barrels and bins, depending on their differing disposal standards and methods. (AP Photo/Jim Mone)
These discarded medications are expired, spoiled, over-prescribed or unneeded. Some are simply unused because patients refuse to take them, can’t tolerate them or die with nearly full 90-day supplies of multiple prescriptions on their nightstands.
Few of the country’s 5,700 hospitals and 45,000 long-term care homes keep data on the pharmaceutical waste they generate. Based on a small sample, though, the AP was able to project an annual national estimate of at least 250 million pounds of pharmaceuticals and contaminated packaging, with no way to separate out the drug volume.
One thing is clear: The massive amount of pharmaceuticals being flushed by the health services industry is aggravating an emerging problem documented by a series of AP investigative stories – the commonplace presence of minute concentrations of pharmaceuticals in the nation’s drinking water supplies, affecting at least 46 million Americans.
Researchers are finding evidence that even extremely diluted concentrations of pharmaceutical residues harm fish, frogs and other aquatic species in the wild. Also, researchers report that human cells fail to grow normally in the laboratory when exposed to trace concentrations of certain drugs.
The original AP series in March prompted federal and local legislative hearings, brought about calls for mandatory testing and disclosure, and led officials in more than two dozen additional metropolitan areas to analyze their drinking water.
And while most pharmaceutical waste is unmetabolized medicine that is flushed into sewers and waterways through human excretion, the AP examined institutional drug disposal and its dangers because unused drugs add another substantial dimension to the problem.
“Obviously, we’re flushing them – which is not ideal,” acknowledges Mary Ludlow at White Oak Pharmacy, a Spartanburg, S.C., firm that serves 15 nursing homes and assisted-living residences in the Carolinas.
Such facilities, along with hospitals and hospices, pose distinct challenges because they handle large quantities of powerful and toxic drugs – often more powerful and more toxic than the medications people use at home. Tests of sewage from several hospitals in Paris and Oslo uncovered hormones, antibiotics, heart and skin medicines and pain relievers.
Hospital waste is particularly laden with both germs and antibiotics, says microbiologist Thomas Schwartz at Karlsruhe Research Center in Germany.
The mix is a scary one.
In tests of wastewater retrieved near other European hospitals and one in Davis County, Utah, scientists were able to link drug dumping to virulent antibiotic-resistant germs and genetic mutations that may promote cancers, according to scientific studies reviewed by the AP.
Researchers have focused on cell-poisoning anticancer drugs and fluoroquinolone class antibiotics, like anthrax fighter ciprofloxacin.
At the University of Rouen Medical Center in France, 31 of 38 wastewater samples showed the ability to mutate genes. A Swiss study of hospital wastewater suggested that fluoroquinolone antibiotics also can disfigure bacterial DNA, raising the question of whether such drug concoctions can heighten the risk of cancer in humans.
Pharmacist Boris Jolibois, one of the French researchers at Compiegne Medical Center, believes hospitals should act quickly, even before the effects are well understood. “Something should be done now,” he said. “It’s just common sense.”
___
Some contaminated packaging and drug waste are incinerated; more is sent to landfills. But it is believed that most unused pharmaceuticals from health care facilities are dumped down sinks or toilets, usually without violating state or federal regulations.
The Environmental Protection Agency told assembled water experts last year that it believes nursing homes and other long-term care facilities use sewer systems to dispose of most of their unused drugs. A water utility surveyed 45 long-term care facilities in 2006 and calculated that two-thirds of their unused drugs were scrapped this way, according to the National Association of Clean Water Agencies.
An internal EPA memo last year included pharmaceuticals on a list of “major pollutants of concern” at health care businesses. Still, few medical centers keep comprehensive records of drugs they cast down toilets or into landfills. When data are kept, drugs and tainted packaging are combined in the same totals.
In an attempt to quantify the problem, the AP examined records in Minnesota, where state regulators have pushed hospital administrators to keep closer track than elsewhere. Fourteen facilities were surveyed, in a range of settings from rural to urban. The AP projected those annual totals onto the national patient population for hospitals and adjusted for the relatively lower pharmaceutical use of Minnesotans. Since long-term care facilities generate more drug waste than hospitals, the AP conservatively doubled the number.
That calculation produced an estimate of at least 250 million pounds of annual drug waste from hospitals and long-term care centers, further complicated by the fact experts say drugs might account for only up to half of pharmaceutical waste, while the rest is packaging.
The AP estimate excludes many other sources of health industry drug waste, from doctors’ to veterinary offices. Smaller medical offices typically dispose of expired samples and unwanted drugs like ordinary consumers – with little forethought.
Alan Davidner, president of Vestara of Irvine, Calif., which sells systems to manage drug waste, says his limited sampling suggests the health care industry’s contribution could even be higher.
Plus, untold amounts of pills and tablets are being thrown away each year at federal and state correctional institutions.
At a state prison in Oak Park Heights, Minn., nurse Linda Peterson says the hospital unit serving inmates statewide has been throwing away up to 12,000 pills a year. She says some heart medicines and antibiotics are simply chucked into the trash. Tightly regulated narcotics susceptible to abuse go down the toilet.
“We flush it and flush it and flush it – until we can’t see any more pills,” she says.
She notes the presence of nursing homes, a hospital and another prison in the same area. “So what are all these facilities doing, if we’re throwing away about 700 to 1,000 pills a month?”
___
The EPA is considering whether to impose the first national standard for how much drug waste may be released into waterways by the medical services industry, but Ben Grumbles, the EPA’s top water administrator, says a decision won’t be made until next year, at the earliest.
So far, regulators have done little more than politely ask the medical care industry to stop pouring drugs into the wastewater system. “Treating the toilet as a trash can isn’t a good option,” says Grumbles.
Some think it’s time to do more than ask. “It’s strange that we have rules about the oil from your car; you’re not allowed to simply flush it down the sewer,” says U.S. Rep. Tim Murphy, R-Pa. “So why do we let these drugs, without any kind of regulation, continue to be flushed away in the water supply?”
Landfills are one alternative. At least they don’t empty directly, and immediately, into waterways like some sewage.
Marjorie E. Powell, a lawyer for the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, says landfills are “more environmentally friendly,” while EPA spokeswoman Roxanne Smith contends that landfilling of hazardous pharmaceutical waste “poses little threat to the public.”
Still, Grumbles acknowledges that landfills, while safer, are not a permanent solution. That’s because pharmaceuticals can eventually reach waterways from landfills through leaks or intentional releases of treated seepage known as leachate.
An agency staffer wrote in a memo last year: “EPA recognizes that residuals in the leachate could contaminate groundwater supplies and ultimately reach water treatment plants, but disposal into the trash is currently considered a BMP” – or best management practice.
Already, researchers have detected trace concentrations of drugs – including the pain reliever ibuprofen and seizure medicine carbamazepine – in seepage or groundwater near landfills.
Environmental professionals outside government are reaching a consensus that incinerators are the best disposal method.
“That’s the best practice for today because we don’t really know what the hell to do with the stuff,” says industrial engineer Laura Brannen, an executive at Waste Management Healthcare Solutions, of Houston. She says burning destroys more drug waste than all other methods, though some contaminants may escape in smoke and ash.
On a recent day at Abbott Northwestern Hospital in Minneapolis, Mary Kuch was getting ready to squirt leftovers from a syringe of hydromorphone, a powerful morphine derivative, into a sink. When she started out in nursing 18 years ago, “I took it for granted, because I was a young nurse, and that’s what other nurses did,” she says. “But I did find it strange.”
These days, only four gallons – drugs with high potential for abuse – go down the hospital’s drains each year. Nearly all leftover medicine and contaminated packaging are instead tossed into black bins and rolled to a hospital storage room crammed with scores of 55-gallon drums.
There, waste-company employee Bryant Sears – dressed in a Teflon suit, rubber gloves and goggles – conducts a sorting operation. Pills, blister packs and liquid medicines collected in vials, along with syringes and IV bags, are separated out according to differing disposal standards and methods. Occasionally, he glances at a wall-sized placard with details on which drug goes where – hazardous waste in one barrel, nonhazardous in another. A roll of “hazardous waste” stickers hangs from a pole on the wall.
Sears points to some epinephrine, a heart drug, saying, “Now that it’s past its expiration date, it’s waste.”
These leftovers and discards ultimately will be incinerated.
EPA’s Smith says even municipal burners unapproved for hazardous waste “will destroy all but a minute fraction” of organic compounds – the kind found in pharmaceuticals.
But Stephen DiZio, a manager with the California Department of Toxic Substances Control, says not so fast. “I don’t think we’re encouraging incineration of anything. The public outcry would be so great.”
The push for incineration hides an irony. Several decades ago, drug waste was routinely chucked into the trash and burned in hospital or city incinerators.
Then came a national campaign against air pollution. Most hospitals shut down their burners, and city incinerator managers became pickier about what they’d accept. With options restricted, hospitals began shipping more drug waste to landfills – and dumping more into toilets and sinks.
___
A few choices are expanding. Some states have passed laws to make it easier to contribute unused drugs to charity pharmacies that supply low-income patients.
Also, a small share of unused drugs is shipped back to manufacturers for credit – and incineration, waste consultants say. But the drugs are supposed to be sent back in original packaging – sometimes impractical because the packaging is discarded or damaged.
Several long-term care residences want to deploy automatic drug-dispensing machines that suppliers would refill often to reduce waste.
While not yet practical, there are several experimental technologies, such as destroying trace drugs with an electrical arc, microwaves, or caustic chemicals.
Increasingly, some bureaucrats and health professionals are suggesting that drug makers help pay costs of managing drug waste. But the pharmaceutical industry says there’s insufficient evidence of environmental harm to warrant the expense!
But impatience is mounting. Even the EPA has begun to take such suggestions seriously. Grumbles says drug makers “should do more for product stewardship and meds retrieval now.” He says it would be unwise to wait for all the proof.
For now, many health facilities, especially small ones, are put off by the cost of proper handling. Drugs deemed hazardous by the EPA – about 5 percent of the market – might cost up to $2 a pound to incinerate in a certified hazardous waste incinerator, says Vestara’s Davidner. A pound might cost 35 cents to burn in a regular trash incinerator.
Tom Clark, an executive at the American Society of Consultant Pharmacists, wonders: “When you can flush it down the toilet for free, why would you want to pay – unless there’s some significant penalties?”
© 2008 Associated Press
© Copyrighted 1997-2008
www.commondreams.org