James_Miller comments on Open Thread, Jun. 15 - Jun. 21, 2015 - Less Wrong

5 Post author: Gondolinian 15 June 2015 12:02AM

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Comment author: James_Miller 17 June 2015 05:22:26PM 1 point [-]

Yes, and this is an evil comparable to the slave trade.

Comment author: Douglas_Knight 17 June 2015 06:50:28PM 1 point [-]

Can you provide any evidence that it is true?

Comment author: James_Miller 17 June 2015 07:11:05PM 0 points [-]

I'm basing it on the large amount of harm that malaria does in Africa and by assuming that Western pressure on Africans to not use DDT has made this harm somewhat worse.

Comment author: Douglas_Knight 17 June 2015 07:21:27PM 0 points [-]

It is the existence of Western pressure for which I was asking for evidence.

Comment author: James_Miller 17 June 2015 07:30:08PM *  1 point [-]

From NYT's Kristof

"...the U.S. and other rich countries are siding with the mosquitoes against the world's poor -- by opposing the use of DDT...In the 1950's, 60's and early 70's, DDT was used to reduce malaria around the world, even eliminating it in places like Taiwan. But then the growing recognition of the harm DDT can cause in the environment -- threatening the extinction of the bald eagle, for example -- led DDT to be banned in the West and stigmatized worldwide. Ever since, malaria has been on the rise...But most Western aid agencies will not pay for anti-malarial programs that use DDT, and that pretty much ensures that DDT won't be used...."

From Wikipedia

"Greenpeace supports the Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants, a legally binding international agreement which aims to phase out substances such as DDT. Both the Stockholm Convention and Greenpeace allow DDT to be used for malaria control. However, according to Roger Bate, a libertarian critic of Greenpeace, the organization's campaign to shut down the last major DDT factory in the world located in Cochin, India, would make the eradication of malaria more difficult for poorer countries. Robert Gwadz of the US National Institutes of Health said in 2007, "The ban on DDT may have killed 20 million children."

Although others claim that this isn't true.

Comment author: Douglas_Knight 17 June 2015 07:56:45PM -1 points [-]

Your second quote starts with the clear statement that there is no ban and ends with the a death toll due to this non-existent ban. This should make you suspicious that something is very wrong.

It is certainly possible that there is pressure that goes beyond treaties. And Greenpeace certainly counts as Western pressure. But my experience tracking down such examples puts low prior that there was such a plant at all, let alone a protest.

Comment author: Lumifer 17 June 2015 08:07:43PM *  2 points [-]

my experience tracking down such examples puts low prior that there was such a plant at all

Sigh. Wikipedia (emphasis mine):

Hindustan Insecticides Limited (HIL) is a Government of India enterprise under the Ministry of Chemicals and Fertilizers. It was incorporated in March 1954 in order to start production of DDT for the National Malaria Eradication Programme. ... HIL is the world's largest producer of DDT. The company has three manufacturing units, located at Udyogamandal, near Cochin (Southern India) and Rasayani near Mumbai(Western India) and Bathinda in Punjab (Northern India).

And here's Greenpeace expressing a profound dislike of this particular factory.

As to Mexican DDT, more from Wikipedia:

...Mexican DDT manufacturing plant ceased production due to lack of demand

Comment author: Douglas_Knight 17 June 2015 11:11:50PM -1 points [-]

Your new quote about Mexican DDT is exactly the opposite of your prior quote. Did the factory close because of falling Mexican demand (because of cheaper alternatives, to supply the context of your quote), or because of pressure from America? Again, why do I find it so easy to find Mexican DDT today in America?

Maybe the abandonment of DDT by rich Mexicans has destroyed economies of scale and thus raised the price to Belize. But that is a completely different matter.

Comment author: Lumifer 18 June 2015 01:29:48AM 0 points [-]

Your new quote about Mexican DDT is exactly the opposite of your prior quote.

No, I don't think so. "Lack of demand" is a nice non-committal phrase. Similarly you can say that a guy driven out of business because he wouldn't pay the mafia "closed because he didn't buy fire insurance". I don't know what happened to that factory, but closing due to lack of demand is consistent with US pressure to not use DDT.

Again, why do I find it so easy to find Mexican DDT today in America?

I have no idea. Wikipedia says "India is the only country still manufacturing DDT", but that piece of data seems to be dating back to 2009. Maybe Mexico started again -- it's not a difficult chemical to manufacture.

Comment author: Douglas_Knight 18 June 2015 01:45:44AM 0 points [-]

Yes, that short phrase is non-committal, but it is you who cut it out from the very clear context, once from wikipedia, and once after I explicitly restored it. I'm done.