Democracy Gone Astray

Democracy, being a human construct, needs to be thought of as directionality rather than an object. As such, to understand it requires not so much a description of existing structures and/or other related phenomena but a declaration of intentionality.
This blog aims at creating labeled lists of published infringements of such intentionality, of points in time where democracy strays from its intended directionality. In addition to outright infringements, this blog also collects important contemporary information and/or discussions that impact our socio-political landscape.

All the posts here were published in the electronic media – main-stream as well as fringe, and maintain links to the original texts.

[NOTE: Due to changes I haven't caught on time in the blogging software, all of the 'Original Article' links were nullified between September 11, 2012 and December 11, 2012. My apologies.]

Sunday, February 12, 2012

Opposition to asbestos reaches 'critical mass'

If you were a private investor looking to sink some money into a promising venture, the expansion of an asbestos mine in Quebec may not sound like a great bet these days.

Quebec’s asbestos industry has been taking a heavy pounding of late, with two damning documentaries airing on CBC and Radio-Canada, renewed calls from politicians in Quebec City and Ottawa to outlaw the cancer-causing mineral, and a review launched into some industry-funded research at McGill this week.

On Friday, the opposition Québec Solidaire called on the provincial and federal governments to stop financing the asbestos industry and to ban export of the mineral.

Parti Québécois mining critic Martine Ouellette told Canadian Press she wants a parliamentary commission to look at the issue.

The calls are partly in response to a documentary aired on Radio-Canada Thursday evening “that reveals the true face of a lobby that in the past has had no scruples at all about manipulating the facts to the detriment of human health to defend its financial interests,” according to the Québec Solidaire statement.

McGill University announced Thursday it has launched a preliminary review into the work of professor emeritus John Corbett McDonald, after the university received a letter last week signed by dozens of academics, physicians and researchers accusing some McGill researchers of being controlled by the asbestos industry.

On Friday, an official complaint was lodged with McGill by many of those same academics.

“We call on McGill University to carry out a thorough, independent and transparent investigation of the allegation that the Quebec asbestos industry had improper influence over the epidemiological research carried out by Prof. J. C. McDonald and his unit at McGill; that the research is flawed, lacks transparency and contains manipulated data; that requests for the study data to be released have been refused; that the research minimized the threat to health posed by chrysotile asbestos; and that Prof. McDonald and others at times denied that the asbestos industry was funding the research,” reads the complaint.

A letter attached to the complaint says that no one within the department of epidemiology, of which McDonald is a past chair, should be conducting the preliminary review.

“It is our understanding that (members of that department) were involved in the research in question or are related to Prof. McDonald by family ties,” the letter says.

The Radio-Canada documentary detailed how the asbestos industry in Quebec engaged McDonald to produce studies that would raise doubt about U.S. studies that showed chrysotile causes cancer.

“The Quebec asbestos lobby continues today to cite McDonald’s research as evidence that exposure to levels of chrysotile asbestos fibres two hundred times higher than permitted in Europe, the U.S. and most of Canada, will cause no harm to health,” the letter charges.

The signatories also note that McGill has been asked to investigate these complaints in the past. In October 2002, Dr. David Egilman of Brown University complained to McGill about McDonald’s research. That complaint was dismissed “with two brief paragraphs in a letter of January 2004 and no full transparent investigation.”

Reacting to the CBC documentary, a representative of the Westmount company that is trying to expand and reopen the Jeffrey asbestos mine in Asbestos wrote to federal Members of Parliament and senators in Ottawa to defend the industry.

“The story relates to a time when the reality of the chrysotile industry and chrysotile products were entirely different from what they are today,” wrote Balcorp Ltd. spokesperson Guy Versailles.

A briefing document accompanying the letter notes that “chrysotile and amphiboles are not the same substance,” that the Jeffrey Mine is “a source of chrysotile asbestos and not the hazardous amphibole asbestos,” and that chrysotile can be used safely.

NDP MP Pat Martin, who for years has been fighting Canada’s export of asbestos, said this shows the industry is still trying to sow confusion as to whether chrysotile asbestos, a cancer-causing substance banned in more than 50 countries, is really all that harmful.

“The opposition to asbestos in Canada has really reached a critical mass now,” Martin said. “It has taken a frustratingly long time, but just as the tobacco industry survived 50 years longer than it should have through denial and junk science and aggressive political lobbying, so has the asbestos industry lasted this long.”

Meanwhile, the Quebec government is still waiting for promoters of the Jeffrey Mine expansion project to prove they have $25 million in private investments all firmed up – a condition demanded by the government if it is to provide a promised $58-million loan guarantee.

Original Article
Source: windsor star 
Author: Michelle Lalonde 

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