Guest guest Posted October 7, 2001 Report Share Posted October 7, 2001 FTI! MM / NIF ----- Original Message ----- From: " Myrl Jeffcoat " <myrlj@...> <myrlj@...> Sent: Sunday, October 07, 2001 10:13 PM Subject: DOW ~ From Jon Rappoport's Boycott Page > The following article is from Jon Rappoport's Boycott Page, it is also > linked from Silicone City @ http://www.homestead.com/siliconecity > > Myrl > > ------- > DOW ~ From Jon Rappoport's Boycott Page > > http://home.earthlink.net/~alto/boycott.html#dow > > Number two in chemical sales in the U.S. Employees: 58,000. Sales: $20 > billion. Headquarters: Midland, Michigan, U.S. > > Dow, the manufacturer of Napalm and Agent Orange during Vietnam War, and now > the target of a billion dollars worth of lawsuits over their highly > destructive silicone breast implants, is partners with the drug firm Ely > Lilly in Dow Elanco, a spinoff company that is the largest producer of > insecticides and fungicides in the U.S. > > Dow must have a magnetic attraction for severe defoliants. Having distanced > itself from Agent Orange -- its partner Lilly now makes Tebuthiuron, an > herbicide that kills soil so that no plants can grow on it in the furture. > Sounds like a weapon of war. > > Of course Dow also tries to distance itself from dioxin (contained in tis > Vietnam era Agent Orange), but Greenpeace reports that hugely produced > chlorine based Dow products -- pesticides, solvents and PVC plastics -- are > the single largest source in the world of dioxin today. > > Dow owns n Merrell Dow (MMD), a major pharmaceutical house. Like all > drug companies, whether you know it or not, the commercial output of MMD is > chillingly toxic. Let's start there. > > Examples: > > MMD's vaginal supository AVC cream is used to treat candida albicans. The > PDR states that there is no data available on the long term potential of AVR > for causing cancer of birth defects, but " deaths associated with > administration of oral sulfonamides (such as AVC) have reportedly occured > form hypersensitivity reactions, agranulocytosis, aplastic anemia and other > blood discrasias. " . . . Comforting. > > Bentyl, Dow's drug for irritable bowel syndrome, also has in the PDR listing > " no known data " for long term potential carcinogenicity or birth defects, > but " psychosis has been reported in sensitive individuals. " There are also, > the PDR says, reports of deaths from respiratory collapse. > > Cardizem, the Dow drug for hypetension and angina, carries the PDR caution: > " Worsening of congestive heart failure has been reported in patients with > preexisting impairment of ventricular function. " > > Nothing could prepare a sane person for the PDR's description of Dow's > Clomid, a drug that attempts to produce ovulatory stimulation so that > pregnancy can occur in women for whom that would otherwise be unlikely. > > Here is a partial list of Clomid's post-marketing adverse effects: > > seizure > stroke > psychosis > cataracts > posterior vitreous detachment > arrhythmia > tachycardia > hepatitis > liver and breast and pituitary and ovarian and kidney and tongue and bladder > cancer > brain abscess > tubal pregnancy > uterine hemorrhage > ovaian hemorrhage > In the babies born to the mothers taking Clomid, there have occurred: > neuroectodermal tumor > thyroid tumor > leukemia > abnormal bone development including skeletal malformations of the skull, > face, nasal passages, jaw, hand, limb and foot joints > malformations of the anus, eye, lens, ear, lung, heart and genitalia > dwarfism > deafness > mental retardation > chromosomal disorders > neural tube defects > > Lorelco, Dow's drug aimed at lowering cholesterol, has this ominous PDR > caution: females should be warned not to become pregnant for at least six > months after discontinuing Lorelco. Lorelco's adverse effects? > > > Gastrointestinal bleeding > vomiting > low hemoglobin > fetid sweat > impotency > anorexia > diminished sense of taste and smell. > > Dow makes Norpramin, an antidepressant. The PDR states: " It is important > that this drug be dispensed in the least possible quantities to depressed > outpatients since suicide has been accomplished with this class of drug. " > > Some of the effects of Norpramin are: > > both elevating and lowering of blood sugar levels > heart block, myocardial infarction, stroke > sudden death > hallucinations, delusions > tremors, ataxia, peripheral neuropathy, seizures > dilation of urinary tract > bone marrow depression > vomiting, black tongue, hapatitis > impotence, painful ejaculation, testicular swelling > weight gain or loss. > > (Note: In these drug summaries I don't even bother to comment about the > uniform unworkability of the drugs on the causes of the illnesses for which > they are prescribed nor will I comment on a further danger: the effects of > combining several durgs at once. Nor on the fact that OTHER non-toxic > remedies and approaches to health would eliminate the need for these drugs > and their poisonous effects.) > > Dow makes Rifadin, a " semi-synthetic " antibiotic for the treatment of > tuberculosis. The PDR comments, " Rifadin has been shown to produce liver > dysfunction. Fatalities associated with jaundice have occurred in patients > with (previous) liver desease. " The PDR further issues a bizarre warning -- > " Rifadin can cause the urine, feces, saliva, sputum, sweat, and tears to > turn red-orange. " Permanent discoloration of soft contact lenses may occur. " > > The suggested Rifadin dosage for people with TB is 600mg a day for six to > nine months. Yet the PDR gives this warning: " High doses of Rifadin greater > than 600mg given once or twice a week have resulted in high incidence of > adverse reactions, including leukopenia (abnormal decrease in white blood > corpuscles), thrombocytopenia (abnormal decrease in blood platelets), acute > hemolytic anemia, shock, renal failure. " > > Among Rifadin's other advese effects are anorexia, vomiting and menstrual > distrubances. > > I have tried in listing adverse effects to avoid dipping into the explicit > PDR category " rare " and the category, " has been found to occur in less that > 1% of people taking drug and vanishes upon discontinuing drug. " That leaves > the open categories of " general advese effects " or " we don't really know how > many people on the drug suffer from these effects " or the " these effects are > reported to occur after drug is marketed to the public and there is no way > to prove the effects are caused by the drug. " I have relied for the most > part on these three last categories. > > Dow and Ely Lilly and Company of Indianapolis are partners in a corporation > called Dow Elanco, one of the largest producers of agricultural chemicals in > the world. As a 40 percent partner Lilly falls within the purview of Dow and > so I have justifiably include its drug products under the umbrella of Dow in > this section. > > Lilly manufactures Heparin sodium (derived form the intestinal mucosa of > pigs), a blood anticoagulant used to prevent clotting. Says the PDR, > " hemorrhage can occur at virtually any site in patients recieving Heparin. > Patients on the drug can develop an " irreversible aggregation of (blood) > platelets . . . (which) may lead to gangrene of the extremities . . . (and) > amputation, mycardial infarction, pulmonary emoblism, stroke and possibly > death. " > > Lilly's Nalfon is an NSAID for (non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug). Every > year in the U.S. seven to eight thousand people die from the administration > of NSAIDs and between 70,000 to 80,000 are hospitalized from their use. > > Lilly's Prozac is the wildy popular " in " anti-depressant of the moment. > Prior to its release, it was never tested on humans for longer than thirteen > weeks. Prozac has been associated with suicidal and murderous behavior, and > the dampening of sexual desire. Its other effects include insomnia, anxiety, > and anorexia (in 9 percent of the patients in clinical trials). Fifteen > percent of the 4,000 patients who received Prozac in pre-release clinical > trials discontinued treatment due to " an adverse event. " > > Diethylstilbestrol, a Lilly drug, is a synthetic estrogenic substance used > for breast cancer and prostate cancer (as a palliative only). The PDR > states, " WARNING: USE OF ESSTROGENS HAS BEEN REPORTED TO INCREASE THE RISK > OF ENDOMETRIAL CARCINOMA. ESTROGENS SHOULD NOT BE USED DURING PREGNANCY. ITS > USE MAY CAUSE SEVERE HARM TO THE FETUS. More PDR quotes on this drug: > > " A recent study reported a two to threefold increase in the risk of gall > bladder disease occuring in women receiving post-menstrual estrogen therapy > . . . " > " In a large prospective clinical trial in men, large doses of estrogen . . .. > comparable to those used to treat cancer of the prostrate . . . have been > shown to increase the risk of non-fatal myocardial infarction, pulmonary > emoblism. . . " > Adverse reactions to diethylstilbestrol include breakthrough bleeding, > spotting and change in menstrual flow; vomiting; cholestatic jaundice; > hemorrhagic skin eruption; corneal curvature; and migraine. > All these effects for a cancer treatment that is admittedly only a > palliative? > > (Note: The January 28, 1994, Congressional Quarterly in its report, > Regulating Pesticides, points out that pollutants in the environment are > being found to contain estrogenic substances. And that several researchers > have linked exposure to estrogens with cancer, including breast cancer. (Now > read the above section the drug diethlystilbestrol again and if you mind > isn't completely blown, check your breath on a mirror.) > > > The above list and description of medical drugs is centainly not meant to be > all-inclusive vis-a-vis Dow. It is just a bitter sample. If you find > yourself saying, " Well, even if these drugs have some horrible effects, the > doctors who prescribe them must know what they're doing " , consider that once > people said exactly that about the U.S. corporations who were busy spilling > poisonous chemicals into the rivers of this land. " They must know what > they're doing. They would never . . . " But they did. And these corporations > are manufacturing the kinds of medical drugs I've just been describing AND > the industrial chemicals AND the pesticides. Wake up and smell the poisons! > > Who could present a complete and specific portrait of Dow's yearly > industrial wastes? Inform, Inc. (New York City) has done an analysis of > quantity in its Toxics Watch 1995 report. It culls the top twenty > corporations from a total of 10,840 parent companies in the U.S. Dow ranks > sixth in " production-related toxic chemical wastes, carcinogens and ozone > depleting chemicals . . . " . How many pounds of waste are we talking about > defecated by Dow into the world? 517.5 million pounds for 1992! Half a > billion pounds. > > of the National Coalition Against the Misuse of Pesticides > names Dow's pesticide Dursban as a serious creator of health problems: > nausea, headaches, behavioral changes in children. She told the > Multinational Monitor that at least one out of every two phone calls that > her office takes about pesticide complaints concerns Dursban. The Pesticide > Action Network states that Dow produced or sold three pesticides on their > " Dirty Dozen " list before 1980. One of these DBCP, ordered to be phased out > by the EPA, now shows up being sold by Dow to the Dole Corporation, which > has used it on its banana plantations in Costa Rica. DBCP contaminated > ground water for several thousand square miles in the California central > valley and caused sterility in agricultural workers. Four other Dow > agricultural chemicals, Gallant, Verdict, Gauntlet, and Tridal, banned by > the EPA, have shown up in Africa, Latin America, Central America, Asia and > Europe. > > Beyond the products mentioned so far, what to boycott made by Dow? > > Styrofoam labeled plastic products, agricutlural herbicides (Starane, Spike, > Treflan), the soil fumigant Telone, and two insecticides, Dursban and > Lorsban. > It makes over-the-counter drugs: Norhistamine (cough), Cepacol, Gly-Oxide > (antiseptic), Cepastat lozenges, Citrucel laxative, Delbrox (ear care), > Gaviscon (antacid), the calcium supplement Os-Cal. > > Household products include Ziploc Bags, Fantastik Cleaner, Handi-Wrap, Saran > Wrap, Spray 'N Wash, Dow Bathroom Cleaner, Glass Plus Multi-Surface Cleaner, > Smart Scrub, Ultra Yes laundry detergent, Vivid bleach and Style and Perma > Soft hair products. > It should also be noted that Dow manufactures benzene, widely acknowledged > as a carcinogen. > > Of course, all this information is faxed and internetted around the world, > people outside the U.S. will find the Dow subsidiaries in their countries > and the products they make. In the U.S. the reference text The Directory of > Multinationals is a good source for the names of these subsidiary > corporations. > > So to this point, you have much more than sufficient evidence of massive > toxicity to justify a boycott of Dow. You can also see that boycotting their > products is in some cases awkward, because wholesalers and companies, not > individuals, are Dow's customers. More reason to press disinvestment, making > it unconscionable to hold stock of this company. > > We welcome additions and more complete descriptions of products entered by > other researchers. But don't accept any softening of the boycott stance or > baloney about how Dow is improving its environmental responsibility. Despite > changes, these corporations are toxic from top to bottom. Do you negotiate > with them? Let other groups do that. This is a global educational campaign > to isolate the biggest chemical companies from the rest of us who want a > world we can live in. Expose the naked truth. Poison is poison. > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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