

International environmentalists finally are being held accountable for the havoc they are wreaking around the world.
On Jan. 20, the Congress of Racial Equality — a 62-year-old, New York-based civil rights group — and the Women’s National Republican Club convened a Manhattan teach-in to begin educating the public on what they call “eco-imperialism.”
Countless Third Worlders still plunge into darkness every dusk. After they fall asleep, they dream about such things as lights, running water and the defeat of diseases Westerners cannot even remember. Then these Third Worlders awaken … to none of the above.
American and European environmentalists help maintain this grim status quo, even as they claim to pursue the best interests of black, yellow and brown people the world over. Meanwhile, these First World citizens enjoy refrigerators, indoor plumbing, Internet access and CAT scans.
This toxic hypocrisy is the core of eco-imperialism.
Panelists at this symposium, which I moderated, illustrated how eco-imperialism sentences billions to destitution, disease and early graves.
Some 2 billion people on Earth have no electricity, explained Paul Driessen, author of “Eco-Imperialism: Green Power — Black Death” (www.Eco-Imperialism.com). “Wealthy, powerful First World environmental pressure groups are seeing to that,” added Mr. Driessen (who is, like me, a senior fellow with the Atlas Economic Research Foundation). “Their comments reveal an unbelievably callous, paternalistic, eco-centric attitude.”
Listen to the Earth Island Institute’s Gar Smith: “African villagers used to spend their days and evenings sewing clothes for their neighbors, on foot-pedal-powered sewing machines. Once they get electricity, they spend too much time watching television and listening to the radio.”
Brent Blackwelder, president of Friends of the Earth, transforms this prejudice into policy. “It’s just not possible for people to have the material lifestyle of the average American. I’m proud that we’ve been able to block almost 300 hydroelectric projects in developing countries.”
c The same paucity of hydroelectric dams that keeps Third World homes, workplaces, and clinics dark also limits the water treatment that dams facilitate. Rather than turn on faucets, poor women often take water buckets to wells and streams, then carry them home on their heads. When this water is tainted, they and their loved ones frequently suffer diarrhea, dysentery, cholera and other intestinal ailments that kill some 6 million annually.
c Meanwhile, malaria wipes out approximately 1 million Africans every year, mainly boys and girls. “That is roughly like filling seven Boeing 747s with children and crashing them into the ground every day,” said the American Enterprise Institute’s Roger Bate, “a September 11 every 36 hours.” The best and cheapest tool against malarial mosquitoes is DDT, an insecticide that environmental and aid groups hate. The World Health Organization and America’s Agency for International Development, among others, have pressured African, Asian and Latin American governments to abandon DDT, arguing it jeopardizes birds, as may have occurred in America due to widespread agricultural use until 1972.
“Would you choose a bird, or would you choose Fifi?” asked astonished Ugandan businesswoman Fiona “Fifi” Kobusingye. She mesmerized her audience with riveting details about how malaria has killed her son, two sisters and two nephews, one of them as she herself was hospitalized with the disease.
“I have suffered high fevers for days, vomited until I thought I had no stomach left,” she said. “Dehydrated, thirsty and weak, sometimes I could not tell day from night.” Malaria often makes its victims too listless to move, leaving family breadwinners bedridden and turning workers into wards of indigent states.
Africans beg for DDT. Spraying it in small amounts in homes, buses and factories curbs this plague. In 1996, when South Africa “wanted to belong to the Western club that didn’t use DDT,” says AEI’s Roger Bate, malaria cases shot from a few thousand to 65,000 in one season.
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