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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
19 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Exposes various environmental panics.,
By A Customer
This review is from: Apocalypse Not: Science, Economics, and Environmentalism (Hardcover)
Modern environmentalism is thoroughly polluted by junk science and cynical hysterics. As Ben Bolch and Harold Lyons detail in their new book Apocalypse Not, a vast portion of what passes for environmentalism is little more than scare-mongering.
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Is There Really an Environmental Crisis?,
By
This review is from: Apocalypse Not: Science, Economics, and Environmentalism (Hardcover)
Is the planet earth headed for disaster? Are we depleting the ozone level too quickly? Are chemicals and pesticides going to kill us all? What about acid rain and nuclear power? Environmentalists claim that greenhouse gases are going to warm the earth so much that the polar ice caps will melt and there will be coastal flooding and mass hysteria. But is all of this really true? Is there really an environmental crisis that mankind has caused, or is this all just another fallicy created by environmental extremists and power- hungry politicians in order to scare the public and push their respective agendas on the people?According to the authors, Ben Bolch and Harold Lyons, the entire environmental movement is, for the most part, a poliical hoax! With global warming, for instance, the public has been scared into believing that the earth is going to get so warm that the ocean levels will rise and cities like Miami and New York will be submerged under water. The authors don't deny that the actual surface temperature of the earth has increased over the past 50 years. Scientific studies do, indeed, show that it has increased. What the authors argue is that the slight warming of the earth is natural and has occurred many times in the past, when the earth has gone through periods of cooling and warming. The contribution of mankind, to the warming process, is too miniscule to make any significant difference and we don't really have enough weather records, from far enough back, to draw any definite conclusions. The authors show some examples of how chemical phobia has been touted by environmentalists as a serious threat and that all Americans "live in peril". Alar is one such chemical and so is dioxin. Then, there's the continuous scare over asbestos. Corporations are usually blamed for all of these problems. No one ever bothers to point out how chemicals have helped mankind over the years. Why corporations and economic activity are always made to take the blame, I'm not sure. I assume it's because corporations have money, and are therefore a good target to go after, by both environmentalists and their political allies in Washington. The type of politician who engages in this type of game is always the type who wants more regulation, and more taxes. Chemical phobia provides a means to scare people into submission, making ordinary Americans think that more government control is necessary to save their lives. There are other issues, too, that the authors mention, to make their point. Remember the radon gas scare a few years ago? People across the nation were worried that they were going to die in their sleep from radioactive gas poisoning. Overzealous government officials seized the opportunity to call for more regulations of individuals and businesses, and expand government control and power. They did the same thing with other concerns, too, like acid rain and ozone depletion. "Apocalypse Not" is a 140 page paperback book that's quick and easy to read. It will help to dispell the myths of the global warming scare, chemical phobia, nuclear power, and other concerns. You will sleep better at night once you realize that the earth is not going to be destroyed by toxic gases, acid rain, ozone depletion, or any other of the usual environmental concerns.
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