Guest guest Posted November 26, 2002 Report Share Posted November 26, 2002 http://www.bcaction.org/Pages/SearchablePages/1998Newsletters/Newslett er050F.html Newsletter #50–October/November 1998 Return to Search | Return to Chronological List | Return to Topic List Public Relations and Cancer by Judy Brady Excerpted with permission from the Women's Cancer Resource Center's Center News, Fall 1997 Breast Cancer Awareness Month (BCAM) is here. For those who don't know, BCAM is a very slick public relations campaign designed by Zeneca's once-parent company, Imperial Chemical Industries. Zeneca, now an independent chemical/pharmaceutical corporation, has been joined by many other companies who have discovered that aligning themselves with the breast cancer movement is good for their public image and thus, their profit margins. Zeneca maintains control and final veto power over the financing and publicity of BCAM and its message: raise more money for research and get a mammogram. It's a smooth move for an outfit like Zeneca. These folks are the fourth largest producer of pesticides in the U.S., the manufacturer of the most widely prescribed drug for breast cancer (tamoxifen, also listed under Proposition 65 as a carcinogen), and now sole owner of Salick, Inc., a management company which runs a chain of cancer care centers. With BCAM it's got breast cancer all wrapped up in the pretty little pink ribbon. And it gets thousands of well-meaning women to wear that pink ribbon, converting those women into tools for the cheapest public-relations masquerade ever designed. The principal purpose of BCAM is to divert attention from the causes of the cancer epidemic (like pesticides produced by Zeneca and ionizing radiation from Hanford's government-owned nuclear reactors) and focus instead on that which is profitable for the industry (e.g., drugs and mammograms). Since this ploy has been highly successful, other industries and organizations have followed suit and joined in the chorus of denial. After all, you've got to protect your investments. Here are a few examples: It is finally coming to light that Americans have been irradiated to a much greater extent than most of us have known. For instance, the 1986 Chernobyl accident is by conservative estimate responsible for a 30% increase in leukemias among American children.1 When my first child was born in Iowa (25 years earlier), the doctors were anxious that I breastfeed instead of using a bottle because they feared that formula had been contaminated by Strontium 90 -- fallout from nuclear bomb testing. Now we find that people as far away as the East Coast states were also exposed. But the nuclear industry has a powerful friend in the American Cancer Society (ACS). One of the organization's vice presidents, Dr. Clark Heath, who can always be counted upon to defend industry, says, " I would not be greatly concerned. " 2 We in California are still facing the possibility of a nuclear waste dump in Ward Valley, which will definitely leak and absolutely guarantee many more cancers a few years down the road. Harvard University, which enjoys a reputation as one of the world's most prestigious academic institutions, recently released from the Harvard Center for Cancer Prevention a report on cancer which made the astonishing announcement that only 2% of cancers were due to " environmental pollution. " That's puzzling until you see the list of funders for the Harvard Department of Health Policy and Management which reads like the Fortune 500 of industrial polluters: Chemical Manufacturers Association, Chevron, Dow Chemical, DuPont, Monsanto, Texaco, etc.3 There are more ways than one to cover up the causes of cancer and protect industry profits. The ACS does it by endorsing products for money. They recently made a $4 million deal with a nicotine-patch company and Florida orange juice companies for the use of their name in commercials. The orange juice commercials tout the wonders of Vitamin C, but needless to say, the ACS never supported Linus Pauling when he proposed that it could prevent cancer. And there is, of course, no mention of the pesticides used in Florida orange groves, Monsanto's Round-Up (glyphosate, which produces cancer in test animals) being the most common. Then there's the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation, which indiscriminately accepts money from polluting industries.4 Every year in October they stage the multimillion dollar " Race for the Cure " in cities all around the country. The event promotes mammograms despite the fact that even so well-known a breast cancer specialist as Susan Love does not advocate screening mammograms for premenopausal women.5 There is never a word about the causes of cancer in any of the promotional materials for the race. In April the Komen Foundation is going one better; this year they are staging the " Drive for the Cure. " In a deal made with BMW, the Komen Foundation hopes to raise $1 million. In each city in nearly every single state, guests will be invited to test drive specially marked BMW cars, and for each mile driven the Komen Foundation will get one dollar. True to form, the Komen Foundation ignores the fact that cars and cancer are like matches and fire—one is sure to produce a certain amount of the other. The chemical benzo(a)-pyrene is part of the exhaust of cars, and it is one of the most powerful carcinogens known. That same chemical, present also in cigarette smoke, has been isolated as the element which causes cells in the lungs of smokers to become cancerous, and it undoubtedly figures in the lung cancers of nonsmokers, largely because of gas-powered vehicles. It was connected directly to breast cancer by the Peralta Cancer Research Institute in the 1980s. Unfortunately, some grassroots cancer groups, often chronically underfunded, are also lured into overlooking cancer causes by the promise of a few more greenbacks. For instance, the Breast Cancer Fund (which lists Chevron as one of their corporate supporters) is hosting a fundraising golf tournament (in October, naturally) at the Crystal Springs Golf Course. They seem to have forgotten—perhaps they never knew?—that breast cancer among women golfers has become a serious issue because golf courses are routinely soaked with herbicides and pesticides, ten of which, according to scientists with the National Coalition Against the Misuse of Pesticides, are known carcinogens.6 At the First World Conference on Breast Cancer in Kingston, Ontario, a French corporation, Rhône-Poulenc Rorer, had a booth among the breast cancer groups. Rhône-Poulenc Rorer is one of the largest chemical corporations in the world, specializing in the production of organochlorine pesticides. They have one plant in West Virginia identical to the Union Carbide plant in Bhopal, India—which leaked thousands of pounds of the deadly chemical methyl isocynate into the air 11 years ago—and the West Virginia plant is the only one in the world that has taken no safety measures to protect the surrounding community.7 But Rhône-Poulenc Rorer has given money to the National Alliance of Breast Cancer Organizations. Allowing them a presence at the conference in Kingston was a coup for their public image. The " art " of public relations creates an effective cover-up for the dirty practices of Rhône-Poulenc Rorer, Zeneca, government, industry and others evading questions of primary cancer causation in favor of profits. 1 British Medical Journal, 1997; 314:1202. 2 " Nuclear Test 'Hot Spots' Probably All Over Country, " San Francisco Chronicle, July 26, 1996. 3 Crowley, Ellen, " Follow the Money, " Women's Community Cancer Project Newsletter, Spring 1997. 4 Including Chlorine Chemical Council, a trade association for the chemical/pesticide industries. 5 " Mammography Madness, " Women's Health Advocate Newsletter, May 1997. 6 Porter, Jerry, " LPGA Learns Realities of Breast Cancer, " USA Today, Nov. 7, 1991. 7 A letter from the Cancer Prevention Coalition to the Women's Environment and Development Organization, Feb. 24, 1995. http://www.bcaction.org/Pages/SearchablePages/1998Newsletters/Newslett er050F.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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