The article below demonstrates the serious implications of allowing Pantheism to dictate agriculture and environmental policy instead of Christianity. “The dose is the poison,” is a scientifically sound principle. It is also a principle rooted in Biblical truth – that we live in a world created by a sovereign God of order; a world in which all component parts were designed to work together in perfect equilibrium. The reality of sin and corruption in today’s world does not negate this foundational nature of the created order.
In contrast to this perspective is today’s Pantheistic utopianism with its call for a “zero tolerance” standard for chemical contaminants. “Zero tolerance” is not simply a scientific curiosity; it’s an expression of religion, a blasphemous expression of false worship.
Sound science is, theologically and historically, rooted in Christianity. Pantheism is an anti-scientific religion. American farmers and other interests had better work hard to throw the anti-chemical pantheistic monkey off their backs.
Forbes – April 2, 2010
Activists Seek To Derail Agriculture
By Jeff Stier
A lawsuit in the “judicial hellhole” that is Madison County, Ill., against the makers of the world’s most widely used herbicide threatens to undermine our way of evaluating risks in this country. If the lawyers–and the anti-chemical, anti-business activists–get their way, American agriculture will be forced back to practices of the pre-industrial age. And that will be only the first step in the “environmentalist” agenda to roll back progress.
If you think that’s an exaggeration, think again. A finding against Syngenta, which manufacturers atrazine, would set a very dangerous precedent, with repercussions for farmers and anyone who enjoys their bounty. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), unfortunately, has now loaned its weight to the activists’ Luddite effort to restrict or ban a number of safe and useful agricultural chemicals in common use–with atrazine, the most effective weed-killer available, only one of the targets.
Atrazine has been widely used for over 50 years and is credited with dramatically increasing yields of corn and sugar cane (among other crops) while reducing the need for other, cruder weed-killers, saving embattled farmers precious money. There has never been a single instance of adverse health effects in humans reliably attributed to exposure to atrazine when used as licensed.
Nevertheless, lawyers specializing in working with anti-business activists recruited a few local water systems to sue Syngenta in Illinois beginning in 2004, alleging that there was too much atrazine in their drinking water. The litigants demanded expensive water filtration systems, paid for by the chemical company. This, despite the fact that the monitored atrazine levels, including some occasional spikes, did not violate EPA guidelines for average concentrations. They were permissible and posed no health risk for anyone drinking the water.
However, the plaintiffs do not accept even the hyper-stringent guidelines of the EPA and asked the court to accept only a “zero tolerance” standard for chemical contaminants. Now, perhaps sensing increasing anti-chemical sentiment in Washington, the same groups have filed a similar lawsuit in federal court. The water system litigants plead for funding for expensive filtration systems to filter atrazine from their drinking water.
If, as the plaintiffs allege, their only concern were atrazine, they could stop worrying about drinking-water filtration and rest easy. However, if this case is upheld, lawyers and activists will have manipulated scientifically unsophisticated juries into rejecting the basic toxicological precept that “the dose makes the poison.” Everything is toxic at some level but harmless in small enough amounts. Since scientists can now detect substances at parts per trillion, an amount smaller than a drop in an Olympic-sized pool, and thus can find at least some trace of almost any chemical in almost any location, a zero tolerance approach would essentially bar the use of any chemical pesticide (or even fertilizer) in American agriculture.
This anti-atrazine litigation has the potential to reverse the “Green Revolution” in agro-science that has helped feed the world for decades.