The Medical Establishment Turns its Back
I met him recently through at a family event.
Since he prefers not to be identified, I'll call him "James," which is not his real name.
James moved slowly with the use of a cane; a distinguished looking senior with graying hair.
At dinner, he confided in me with bits and pieces of his personal story.
It was both amazing and tragic.
He had worked for a number of years in the farm chemical industry in western Canada.
Industry "experts" convinced him at the time that the chemicals he was working with were so safe, "I would have drunk them if they had asked me to!"
Turns out, he didn't have to.
James is convinced that, merely inhaling their fumes over the years was enough to change his life forever. And not for the better.
Later, at my request, James sends me a hand-written letter, going into more detail.
In 1960, in a small southern prairie town, he was training to become a grain elevator manager. At that time, the chemicals he handled included 2-4-D. That's a weed killer heavily used in farming all over the world for more than half a century. Various studies have linked it to a wide range of adverse human health effects. It is similar to Agent Orange, widely used by the US military against the enemy in Viet Nam.
James says, at the time, there was no storage space for the chemicals so they were kept in his office, where he breathed in their fumes. Later, at another location and another job in the same province, he went to work spraying roadsides, using products he says "Were hard to get for the average home owner."
He then moved to another area of the province where many different crops were grown.
There, he says, a surprising number of new chemicals, including bug-killers and fungicides, were "big sellers." He describes fumes from the huge chemical warehouse at that location as "almost putrid."
And there, he says, he actually lost his sense of smell.
In 1991, he was gripped with full-bodied seizures and tremors. He was forced to retire and lost his driver's license, which he has never gotten back.
Several visits to a big city hospital turned up nothing.
Finally, a full medical team of specialists "Grilled me for six hours."
He gave them a list of every chemical he had ever handled, sold or otherwise come into contact with and the companies which sold them to him.
Then, they dropped a bombshell on him.
He says the team asked "'What would you do if we told you it was definitely the chemicals which caused your medical problems?'
I explained it would be very nice to receive workers' compensation for this.
They put their heads together and, after a short conference, they asked if I would go after the chemical company responsible. My answer was 'yes.' They then informed me that, if litigation ever took place, they would not help me! This was a real slap in the kisser as this was totally unexpected."
James says his motor skills have been damaged and walking is a real effort.
He says his memory has also been damaged. He says people who obviously know him say "hello," but he has no idea who they are.
He gets bad tremors daily, although medication keeps them under control.
James has chosen not to let us use his real name, publicly. He says he lives "quite comfortably now," considering all his ailments. So he says he just doesn't want to stir up a public "hornet's nest" this late in life.
Meanwhile, a veteran medical ethicist at the University of Manitoba, Paul Schafer, says he has never heard a story exactly like this one. But he has heard similar ones. Prof. Schafer is Director of the University's Centre for Professional and Applied Ethics and recipient of many awards over the years, including the University Teaching Service Award for excellence in the classroom.
Schafer concludes, "Doctors (and even public health officials) who blow the whistle on industries or industrial chemicals often find themselves embroiled in controversy, which can be career-damaging. Some are brave and speak out; many are cowardly and shut up."
Larry Powell "Paths Less Travelled. stories rarely told by mainstream media."



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I'm a long-time journalist, activist, photographer and writer based in rural, western Manitoba. I spent about 15 years with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, mostly as a radio news reporter in western Canada. I specialize in stories about agriculture and the environment
...I'm a long-time journalist, activist, photographer and writer based in rural, western Manitoba. I spent about 15 years with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, mostly as a radio news reporter in western Canada. I specialize in stories about agriculture and the environment. In the year 2000, I formed a citizens group to successfully oppose plans for a complex of factory hog barns in my community. I was a candidate for the Green Party in the provincial election in Manitoba in 2003. Now that I am no longer a full-time employee as a reporter, I have more time to research and write and do the occasional news story for CBC on a freelance basis. I wriite many articles and letters to the editor, on topics like climate change and depleting world resources. I strongly support sustainable, organic, family farms as opposed to the predominant, disastrous "agribusiness" model of monocropping, the over-application of pesticides and genetic modification. I also strongly support the "eat local" movement. For about 5 years, my wife and I produced certified, organic vegetables to sell at farmers' markets.
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