Pharmaceuticals, Pesticides, and Radiation
Cause Breast
Cancer...
While Wealthy Non-Profits and
Feds Protect Industry
by Lynn Landes
They’re good girls and boys. Racing for the cure. Crying for
the cameras. Sharing their pain. Wearing that crown of thorns like a halo. Nice
folks. And aren't they "better people" for just having
"survived" breast cancer?
Or...are they being played for suckers? Conned by a clever
marketing strategy that makes heroes out of victims, and saints out of sinners.
Racing for the cure, but running from the cause.
Most of the well-financed breast cancer organizations make
little or no mention of the non-genetic causes of breast cancer. Go to their
websites. Read their literature. These organizations don't focus on the
environmental and pharmacological causes of this epidemic because it's a dank
dark alley that leads right to their corporate sponsors.
"National Breast Cancer Awareness Month was
established by Zeneca, a bioscience company with sales of $8.62 billion in
1997. Forty-nine percent of Zeneca's 1997 profits came from pesticides and
other industrial chemicals, and 49% were from pharmaceutical sales, one-third
(about $1.4 billion's worth) of which were cancer treatment drugs," says
the Green Guide, a publication of Mothers & Others for a Livable Planet.
Zeneca also makes Tamoxifen, "a known carcinogen"
according to the National Institutes of Health (NIH). After only a few years of exposure, Tamoxifen
can actually cause breast cancer, says a 1999 study from Duke University.
"There is strong evidence of Tamoxifen’s toxicity, including high risks of
uterine, gastrointestinal and fatal liver cancer," reports The Cancer
Information Network, adding, "The Breast Cancer Prevention Trial (BCPT)
conducted by the National Surgical Adjuvant Breast and Bowel Project (NSABP)
"found that women taking Tamoxifen had more than twice the chance of
developing uterine cancer compared with women on placebo."
General Electric is a huge global conglomerate that
provides all kinds of products and services. GE also owns health clinics that
use GE equipment that can expose patients to different types of radiation. GE
makes ultrasound, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and mammography machines -
a known cause of breast cancer in younger women. In addition, there are 91
nuclear power plants based on the GE design operating in 11 countries,"
says GE on its website. Nuclear power plants are a known source of radiation
leakage.
Radiation is a "complete carcinogen" says Dr.
Peter Montegue, in his 1997 5-part series, "The Truth About Breast
Cancer." Montegue writes, "Very few things have the ability to
initiate cancer AND promote it AND make it progress. Things that can do this
are called "complete carcinogens."
By analyzing 50 years of U.S. National Cancer Institute data, Dr. Jay
Gould, director of the Radiation and Public Health Project, Inc., says,
"of the 3,000-odd counties in the United States, women living in about
1,300 nuclear counties (located within 100 miles of a reactor) are at the
greatest risk of dying of breast cancer." GE is also a contributor to many
efforts to "battle" breast cancer.
Other corporations, such as Rhone-Poulec, Rohm & Hass,
Eli Lilly Novartis, American Cyanamid, and Dupont, have also profiteered from
both sides of this manufactured epidemic.
In addition to these duplicitous industries and their
heavily financed non-profit partners-in-deception, is the National Institutes
of Health (NIH). Its cozy relationship to (and increasing financial reliance
on) business and industry through organizations like the Centers for Disease
Control Foundation, is a blatant conflict of interest. Not surprisingly, the
NIH website for breast cancer research is very similar to research funded by
the top breast cancer organizations... it's all about detection, cures, and
genetics. Of the 14 areas of research listed, only 2 studies relate to the
links between breast cancer and non-genetic influences. And those studies dismiss the notion of any
connection.
The NIH studies are grossly misleading.
On June 26, 2002, the Centers for Disease Control (CDC,
part of NIH) issued a news release that said, Study Finds No Association Between
Oral Contraceptive Use and Breast Cancer For Women 35 and Over. Actually the
study did not include women older than 65 or younger than 35, which begs the
question, "Why not?" What also makes this study hard to swallow are
the results of the study on Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) two weeks later.
On July 9, 2002 (and after more than forty years of widespread use) the NIH
announced that HRT (low dose estrogen plus progestin), can cause an increase in
heart attacks, strokes, blood clots, and ...breast cancer.
So, are we to believe that the low dose estrogen-progestin
combination is okay for contraception, but not for menopause?
Actually, there was no difference between the outcome of
those two studies, admitted Dr. Bob Spirtas, of the National Institute of Child
Health and Development (part of NIH), in a conversation with this writer. A
woman's risk for breast cancer is 16% higher at the time she is taking oral
contraceptives or HRT and for five years after she stops, at which point the
risk is 3% or "statistically insignificant," said Dr. Spirtas.
Well, that certainly wasn't the message conveyed by the
NIH, which seemed to give oral contraceptives a clean bill of health.
The NIH has also come to the rescue of the chemical
industry. On May 15, 2001, the NIH announced, "DDT, PCBs Not Linked to
Higher Rates of Breast Cancer, an Analysis of Five Northeast Studies
Concludes." However, the highly
regarded authors of OurStolenFuture.com point out that most studies are flawed,
"The problem is that DDE and the commonly-studied most persistent PCBs act
as an anti-androgen and anti-estrogens, respectively, not estrogens. Findings
that indicate these contaminants are not associated with breast cancer risk are
completely irrelevant to the hypothesis that xenoestrogens may induce breast
cancer."
It's pretty clear. We're firing blanks in this "war
against breast cancer." While
industries release toxic chemicals, unsafe drugs, and radiation, they also fund
government agencies and large non-profits who provide effective
"cover" for their devastating activities.
I call
it the Breast Cancer Money-Go-Round.
Lynn Landes
is a freelance journalist specializing in environmental
issues. She writes a weekly column which is published on her website
www.EcoTalk.org
and reports environmental news for DUTV in Philadelphia, PA.
Lynn's been a radio show host and a regular commentator for a BBC radio
program.
Links:
http://www.monitor.net/rachel/r571.html
http://dukemednews.duke.edu/news/article.php?id=354