The Myth of Living Safely
in a Toxic World
by Sandra Steingraber
In These Times magazine, April 2001
In the spring of 1997, after four years of research and writing,
I published Living Downstream, a book that explored the relationship
between human cancer and environmental contamination. Soon after,
I was sent by my publisher on a two-week book tour that lasted
a year and a half. It finally ended in September 1998 when I gave
my last phone interview while sitting on a towel: I was in labor
with my first child, and my water had just broken. I canceled
an appearance in Boston that was scheduled for later that evening
and headed to the hospital to give birth. Then I went on a self-declared
maternity leave.
The 18 months I spent on the road with Living Downstream formed
an amazing journey. It was an odyssey that took me not only to
bookstores, radio studios and the sets of Hollywood talk shows,
but to medical schools, college campuses, public libraries, church
basements, union meeting halls, the floors of various state legislatures
and the headquarters of the Environmental Protection Agency. I
met with university presidents, ministers, rabbis, pediatric oncologists,
breast cancer activists, government scientists, business leaders
and elected officials-but mostly I talked with a lot of plain,
ordinary folks. I spoke with mothers of children with brain tumors
who lived near Superfund sites; Montana wheat farmers worried
that herbicides had something to do with their high rates of Iymphoma;
student athletes curious about the pesticides used on the fields
where they practiced; wealthy retirees wondering about the chemicals
sprayed on their beloved golf courses; native women in Alaska
who live near old military installations that leak PCBs; and sheep
farmers in Ireland who suspected that insecticides were poisoning
their drinking water.
In all these conversations, public and private, I became impressed
with how deeply citizens are concerned with the question of how
human health is connected to the health of our planet. The subject
of my book was clearly a topic on a lot of people's minds. On
the other hand, I became equally impressed at the inability of
many of my readers to imagine themselves taking action to redress
their situation. Even I among those wholly convinced l that toxic
chemicals were contributing to the growing burden l of cancer
and birth defects in their communities, few seemed to believe
it was possible to bring about an end to their production, use
and disposal. Among the few who did, fewer still could imagine
what they themselves could do to bring about such a change. It
was as though the presence of harmful chemicals in our air, food,
water and bodies was an immutable fact of the human condition
and not the result of short-sighted human decisions that could
be modified or radically altered. "It's just all so depressing,"
many would sigh as I signed their books.
I didn't know how to rescue my audiences from their own fatalistic
thinking, and its manifestation during our discussions frustrated
me. Perhaps because I'm a cancer survivor myself-I was diagnosed
with bladder cancer at the age of 20-I view despair as a waste
of time. Cancer patients learn to have hope in desperate circumstances,
and we don't tend to surrender when the odds are stacked against
us. If we could just bring this same damn-the-torpedoes attitude
to our political lives, I thought, we would be a powerful force
to reckon with. In this, I tend to side with my Canadian friend,
the children's singer Raffi, who argues that pessimism-with its
smug presumption that solutions to our current predicament do
not exist and cannot possibly lie just ahead of us-is a form of
arrogance. "No new paradigm has ever sprung from the cynicism
of arrested imagination," writes Raffi in his autobiography.
But I also began to see that another obstacle was preventing
my readers from finding the courage to act on their convictions.
I call it the myth of living safely in a toxic world.
It works like this. Environmental education in this country
tends to focus on individual actions. From Earth Day pamphlets
to college environmental science textbooks, we are exhorted to
recycle, compost our food scraps, turn off the tap while brushing
our teeth, and insulate our attics. If we are interested in protecting
our own health against a toxic onslaught, we might be advised,
say, to air out our freshly dry-cleaned suits before hanging them
in the closet, or give up dry-cleaning altogether. We are not
told how we might collectively persuade the dry-cleaning industry
to switch over to non-toxic, wet-cleaning technology. (The dry-cleaning
solvent perchloroethylene is a suspected carcinogen and a common
contaminant of drinking water. In Ithaca, New York, where I live,
the headlines this morning announce a final plan for remediating
the contaminated soil and groundwater at one local dry-cleaning
shop; the problem was first discovered 10 years earlier. Such
stories are replicated across the United States.)
Or consider the widespread contamination of ocean fish with
mercury, which is now widely acknowledged as a threat to public
health. The official response of our state and federal governments
has been to warn the most vulnerable among us-pregnant and nursing
mothers-to restrict their consumption of fish. Meanwhile, the
industries responsible for creating the problem-coal-burning power
plants, for example-are not warned to restrict their emissions
of mercury. (OK, as of January 2001 they have been so warned,
but electric utilities will not be forced to do anything about
it until 2007, which leaves all of us having babies now with no
other choice than to forgo tuna sandwiches in order to protect
the brains of our unborn children.)
This relentless attention to individual sacrifices seems almost
unique to environmental issues. Other human troubles-shootings
in schools, intoxicated drivers on the highway, cigarette addiction
among teen-agers-are widely understood as political problems requiring
political solutions. Thus, a million moms march on Washington
to demand changes in handgun regulations, Mothers Against Drunk
Drivers pushes for lower legal limits or blood alcohol levels,
and tobacco advertising is restricted. We somehow understand that
inviting individual citizens to just say no to firearms, liquor
and cigarettes isn't the total solution.
In contrast, we pretend as if we can all live safely in a
toxic world if we as individual consumers just give up enough
stuff: stop eating meat, stop eating fish, stop drinking tap water,
stop swimming in chlorinated pools, stop microwaving in plastic,
swear off dairy products, remove shoes at the door so as not to
track lawn chemicals into the living room, handwash silk blouses
rather than drop them off at the dry-cleaners. Or worse yet, we
pretend we can shop our way out of the environmental crisis: buy
air filters, buy water filters, buy bottled water, buy pesticide-removing
soaps for our vegetables, buy vitamin pills loaded with anti-oxidants
to undo whatever damage we can't avoid. It's as though we all
aspire to become the ecological equivalent of the boy in the bubble.
No wonder people feel depressed.
Fortunately-and I do think it is fortunate-few of these lifestyle
sacrifices actually offer much real protection for public health.
The reason I think this is good news is that the sooner we quit
trying to turn our bodies and homes into fortresses against toxic
invasions, the sooner we'll realize that we have no choice but
to rise up and demand an end to the invasion. The hard fact is
that we cannot opt out of the water cycle or the food chain.
Consider drinking water. You might think you can save yourself
from exposures to carcinogens in tap water by purchasing bottled
water. But the sense of safety offered by bottled water is a mirage.
Because the industry is unregulated, there is no telling what's
actually in the bottle. It frequently contains trace contaminants.
In some cases, it even is tap water. Moreover, it turns out that
breathing, not drinking, constitutes our main route of exposure
to volatile pollutants in tap water. This is because most of them-solvents,
pesticides, byproducts of water chlorination-easily evaporate.
As soon as the toilet is flushed or the faucet turned on, these
contaminants leave the water and enter the air. A recent study
shows that the most efficient way of exposing yourself to chemical
contaminants in tap water is to turn on a dishwasher. (This surprises
you?) Drink a bottle of French water and then step into the shower
for 10 minutes, and you've just received the exposure equivalent
of a half-gallon of tap water. In short, we are all obligated
to protect public drinking water, with which we enjoy the most
intimate of relationships whether we want to or not.
Well, then, I'll just filter all the tap water coming into
my house, you might be thinking here. Think again. Even if these
gadgets worked perfectly-and they don't-you are faced with changing
them every three to six months. You're left with a spent water
filter laden with all the chemical toxics you're determined to
keep out of your own body. Now what are you going to do? Throw
it in the trash so it can end up leaching in a landfill and contaminating
someone else's well? Or become a source of dioxin when it's shoveled
into an incinerator and lit on fire? Filters for tap water are
nothing more than a way of playing an elaborate shell game with
harmful chemicals.
Or consider breast milk, that most perfect form of infant
nutrition, with its unsurpassed powers to boost IQ, fend off infectious
diseases, encourage the development of the immune system, and
prevent diabetes, allergies and obesity. Because it exists at
the top of the human food chain, mothers' milk has become the
most chemically contaminated of all human foods. It carries concentrations
of organochlorine pollutants that are 10 to 20 times higher than
cows' milk. Indeed, prevailing levels of chemical contaminants
in human milk often exceed legally allowable limits in commercial
foodstuffs. Thus, on average, in industrialized countries, breast-fed
infants ingest each day 50 times more PCBs, per pound of body
weight, than do their parents. The same is true for dioxins.
We cannot ask newborns to become vegetarians. (Soy-based formula
is far inferior to human milk. Even as chemically compromised
as human breast milk is, breast-fed babies still end up smarter,
healthier, less prone to leukemia and exhibiting superior motor
skills when compared to their formula-fed counterparts. ) We could
encourage their mothers to make such changes in their diet, but
it turns out that the lifestyle approach to cleaning up breast
milk is not very effective. Unless they are strict vegans, vegetarians
have just as much dioxin in their fat tissues-from which breast
milk is manufactured-as meat-eaters. And even among those who
forswear all animal products, veganism must be long standing-commencing
a decade or more before a woman becomes pregnant-to result in
meaningful declines in breast milk contamination. A Dutch study
has compared macrobiotic mothers-whose protein sources come primarily
from grains and legumes-with omnivorous mothers.
The milk of macrobiotic mothers contained less PCBs, but their
DDT levels were no different. Moreover, the nursing infants of
macrobiotic mothers were still ingesting levels of contaminants
that were two to eight times higher than the "allowable"
daily intake.
On the other hand, political action works great to purify
breast milk. I am pleased to report that average concentrations
of certain key breast milk contaminants-DDT, PCBs and dioxins-have
declined dramatically since '70s. This improvement is a direct
consequence of bans, tighter regulations, incinerator closings,
emission reductions, permit denials, right-to-know laws and tougher
environmental enforcement. We nursing mothers owe a great debt
to thousands of anonymous citizens from all around the world who
worked to stop toxic pollution at its source.
The way we repay this debt-and continue the process of detoxification-is
to stop distracting ourselves with individual sacrifices and get
involved with the political struggle. Start by finding out what
toxic chemicals are being released into your home community by
visiting www.scorecard.org and entering your zip code in the empty
box. Then take a look at some of the 35,000 pages of internal
chemical industry documents that formed the basis of Bill Moyer's
expose, Trade Secrets, which was recently broadcast on PBS. These
are available in the Chemical Industry Archives at www.ewg.org.
Sit for awhile with the new knowledge you gain from these
two Web sites and notice what emotions and ideas come up for you.
Ask yourself if we have a human rights problem here. Ask yourself
how other human rights activists you admire once prevailed against
formidable opponents-how women won the right to vote, how abolitionists
succeeded in divorcing our economy from slave labor, how workers
won the right to a weekend. I think you will find depression and
cynicism soon yielding to inspiration and courage.
***
On the faculty of Cornell University, Sandra Steingraber lives
in Ithaca, New York, with her husband, Jeff de Castro, and their
breast-feeding, two-year-old daughter, Faith. Her new book, Having
Faith: An Ecologist's Journey to Motherhood, from which some of
this essay is adopted, will be published in October.
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