Total Pageviews

Wednesday, April 29, 2020

Earth Day 1970 -- Predictions made 50 years ago

20 million Americans 
turned out for the 
first Earth Day
on April 22, 1970.

It was a bipartisan 
project, supported by 
President Richard Nixon, 
and California Governor 
Ronald Reagan.

There were programs 
at more than 2,000 
college campuses, 
10,000 elementary 
and high schools, 
and thousands 
of other places. 

I was in high school
at the time, but can only
remember protesting
the Vietnam War !


One popular Earth Day 
1970 guide was: 
The Environmental 
Handbook, compiled by 
"Friends of the Earth", 
about the perils of 
rising population 
and depletion of 
nonrenewable 
resources. 

People were told 
that even stopping 
economic growth 
completely 
might not be 
enough to prevent 
an ecological crisis !



In the Handbook, 
an essay called 
"The Limits 
of Adaptability,"
by biologist 
René Dubos,
claimed that:
"the dangers posed 
by overpopulation 
are more grave 
and more immediate 
in the U.S. than in 
less industrialized 
countries. 

This is due in part 
to the fact that each 
U.S. citizen 
uses more 
of the world's 
natural resources 
than any other 
human being
and destroys them 
more rapidly, 
thereby contributing 
massively to the 
pollution of his own 
surroundings and 
of the earth as a whole."



Handbook editor 
Garrett De Bell's 
essay claimed: 
"If you wanted to design 
a transportation system 
to waste the earth's energy 
reserves and pollute the air 
as much as possible, 
you couldn't do much better 
than our present system 
dominated by the automobile."



Handbook contributor 
and political scientist 
Robert Rienow, 
and his wife, 
author Leona 
Train Rienow, 
declared that: 
"A New Yorker 
on the street 
took into his lungs 
the equivalent 
in toxic materials 
of 38 cigarettes a day. 

... This generation
is indeed going to 
have to choose 
between humans 
and the automobile. 

Perhaps most families 
have too many of both."



Stanford biologist 
Paul Ehrlich predicted
devastating famines 
that would kill tens 
of millions of people 
in Asia, Africa, 
and Latin America 
by the end 
of the 1970s, 
and smog disasters 
in Los Angeles and 
New York would kill 
200,000 Americans 
in 1973. 

"Most of the people 
who are going to die 
in the greatest cataclysm 
in the history of man 
have already been born." 

He added that by 1975,
"some experts feel that 
food shortages will have 
escalated the present level 
of world hunger and starvation 
into famines of unbelievable 
proportions. Other experts, 
more optimistic, think the 
ultimate food-population 
collision will not occur 
until the decade 
of the 1980s."



In January 1970, 
Life magazine warned:
"In a decade, urban dwellers 
will have to wear gas masks 
to survive air pollution."




But the New Republic 
columnist James Ridgeway 
wrote shortly after 
the First Earth day: 
“Ecology offered liberal-minded 
people what they had longed for, 
a safe, rational and above all 
peaceful way of remaking society
 . . . [and] developing a 
more coherent central state. . .” 

Unfortunately, 
that has not changed.