Rachel Louise Carson was a charter member of the "reality based community." Upon reading the latest revelations about Greenland's glaciers in Friday's
Washington Post, I found myself reviewing the experience and words of Rachel Carson. Her publication of
Silent Spring in 1962 gave birth to the modern environmentalism movement. Ostensibly, the purpose of Carson's book was to educate the public about the dangers of DDT and the harm inflicted upon nature by the pesticide industry. Carson was a university-trained biologist who served in the Federal Fish and Wildlife Service and published numerous books about the world's oceans in the forties and fifties. With precision, hard data, and powerful prose,
Silent Spring illustrated the dangers to our food supply, nature, and way of life. The Tom DeLays of Carson's time responded with a vengeance and warned that her book would cause starvation and famine. Dollar signs were more important to the pesticide industry than sparing generations from daily exposure to toxic chemicals.
Thankfully, President John F. Kennedy and his wife read a condensed version published by
The New Yorker and he commissioned the President's Science Advisory Committee to study the problem of pesticide use. In those days we had a President interested in hard facts and data. Less than a year later the commission issued a report confirming the damaging effects of toxic pesticides. A month before the report was made public, CBS television broadcast a documentary entitled,
The Silent Spring of Rachel Carson despite pressure from sponsors not to show the documentary. This was another time and while broadcasting networks were certainly influenced by corporate sponsors they also had a social conscious that transcended profits.
The exposure resulted in numerous requests for Carson to speak to the dangers of pesticides in the environment. In 1963 she testified before a Senate committee on environmental hazards, insisting that the public had an inalienable right to be free from poisons introduced by others into the environment. Carson also advocated in her testimony for the creation of a Federal agency, free from influence by the private sector to regulate the use and creation of pesticides. Her recommendation later became the Environmental Protection Agency that banned the pesticide DDT in 1972.
Although Carson's research addressed issues far removed from today's challenges, her words echo across time and further illustrate just how shortsighted we've been in the care of our planet. This passage in the final third of Silent Spring is especially striking:
"Through all these new, imaginative, and creative approaches to the problem of sharing our earth with creatures there runs a constant theme, the awareness that we are dealing with life - with living populations and all their pressures and counter-pressures, the surges and recessions. Only by taking account of such life forces and by cautiously seeking to guide them into channels favorable to ourselves can we hope to achieve a reasonable accommodation between the insect hordes and ourselves."
Carson was really speaking to implications far broader than pesticides. Two years before the Beatles first appeared on the Ed Sullivan Show, she was attempting to warn humanity that nature was far more powerful than the modern world. Carson's wisdom is especially poignant today. Indeed, it is apparent that our planet should not only be respected but also feared. Global warming may well be God's blowback for dissing mother Earth. Yet our so called religious President and his culture of life Republican Party see fit to punish anyone who dares speak truth about this unseen ticking time bomb. Bush's propagandists have taken to boasting that the President is reading biographies about his predecessors because he's determined to be a "transformational" figure in history. Sadly, our President and his followers don't seem to grasp that in 2006, preservation of our planet is far more important that bestriding the globe as a 21st century Caesar. Hence, I'd prefer that his librarian wife retrieve a copy of Silent Spring for him instead.
Intrepid Liberal Journal