The Hundred-Year Lie: How to Protect Yourself from the Chemicals That Are Destroying Your Health |  | Author: Randall Fitzgerald Publisher: Plume Category: Book
List Price: $15.00 Buy Used: $5.63 as of 7/31/2010 04:44 CDT details You Save: $9.37 (62%)
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Seller: SPM Enterprises Rating: 67 reviews Sales Rank: 13757
Media: Paperback Pages: 304 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6 Dimensions (in): 8.4 x 5.4 x 0.7
ISBN: 0452288398 Dewey Decimal Number: 613 EAN: 9780452288393 ASIN: 0452288398
Publication Date: June 26, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description In a devastating exposé in the tradition of Silent Spring and Fast Food Nation, investigative journalist Randall Fitzgerald warns how thousands of man-made chemicals in our food, water, medicine, and environment are making humans the most polluted species on the planet. A century ago in 1906, when Congress enacted the Pure Food and Drug Act, Americans were promised "better living through chemistry." Fitzgerald provides overwhelming evidence to shatter this myth, and many others perpetrated by the chemical, pharmaceutical, and processed foods industries. In the face of this national health crisis, Fitzgerald also presents informed and practical suggestions for what we can do to turn the tide and live healthier lives.
Consider this: The average American carries a "body burden" of 700 synthetic chemicals Chemicals in tap water can cause reproductive abnormalities and hermaphroditic birth A 2005 study of lactating women in eighteen U.S. states found perchlorate (a toxic component of rocket fuel) in practically every mothers breast milk
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 67
A sobering look at the dire consequences of the highly toxic world we have created in just the past century. April 2, 2007 Paul Tognetti (Cranston, RI USA) 105 out of 107 found this review helpful
Just over a century ago, the Congress passed the Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906. According to author Randall Fitzgerald it was this legislation that reassured the American public that the food and medicines they were consuming had been thoroughly tested and were safe to use. As it turns out nothing could be further from the truth! "The Hundred Year Lie" tells the sordid story of a century of deception and irresponsibility by the companies who process our food and manufacture the drugs and chemicals we use everyday. Indeed, the promise of "a better life through chemistry" is a notion we all need to examine and seriously reconsider.
At a bare minimum, reading "The One Hundred Year Lie" will make you stop in your tracks and think about all of the different chemicals you are ingesting and coming into contact with every day. It is not just the voluminous amounts of additives in your food that you must worry about. Stop and consider all of the personal care products you use on a daily basis. Add to that the over-the-counter and prescription drugs you may be taking and all of the household cleaning products that you employ. Then think about all of the chemicals that are applied to our clothing, our bedding and to our furniture. Next, you might want to consider the flouride in your municipal water supply and maybe the highly toxic arsenic in all of that pressure treated lumber around your property. Now if you are a pretty unscientific sort like me you will then appreciate Randall Fitzgerald's attempt to explain the concept of "synergy". Most people just take it for granted that the products they use must have been thoroughly tested and deemed completely safe to use. It is when you discover that the scientific community, the manufacturers themselves and various government regulators really have absolutely no idea how these different chemical concoctions are going react with each other in the real world that you just might become a bit concerned. On many different levels "The Hundred Year Lie" challenges the way we live our lives today and implores each of us as individuals and society in general to make the necessary changes before more damage is done. I simply cannot imagine that anyone who reads this book will not feel compelled to make some significant changes in his or her own lifestyle. In our never-ending quest for comfort and convenience we have done considerable damage to our our own personal well-being and to our environment. Some say the damage may be irreparable. This is a fascinating and well written book that is certainly worth your time and attention.
Highly recommended!
"If there was any danger, someone would tell us!" December 31, 2006 John Morley (La Canada, CA USA) 58 out of 60 found this review helpful
As Al Gore's movie makes "inconvenient truths" about global warming more understandable, this book will open your eyes to the unintended damage being done to you, those you love and and every other creature on the planet.
In a story that makes clear the need for this book, the author stands outside a Wal*Mart. Shoppers are rushing past a state-mandated sign that warns of chemicals inside that are "known...to cause cancer, birth defects and other reproductive harm." He stops a shopper to ask if she had thought about the sign. She brushes past with the dismissal that, "If there was any danger, someone would tell us!"
Well, you are being told. If--like the shopper and most of the rest of us--the signs with the bold letters aren't clear enough for you, this book certainly is.
Fitzgerald is a professional writer, rather than a scientist, activist, politician or scholar. This may be why his book is an enjoyable read and easy to understand. And it's unburdened by the technical complexities or alarmist attacks that are too common to writing on this topic.
Also to its credit, the book goes beyond gloom and doom to offer practical solutions that you can begin right now. Although nothing quick or easy is promised, the case that we need to do something is made starkly compelling. Getting informed is the first step, and this book is information that we all need now to make better choices concerning every detail of what we eat and how we choose to live.
Character Assassins Love Anonymity October 19, 2006 Randall Fitzgerald (California) 43 out of 45 found this review helpful
When I see a book review from an anonymous self-styled critic impugning the motives or integrity or background of a book author,I am reminded of the adage that 'cowards hide in the shadows of their own dark spirits.'
The prevous review characterizing me as being an editor with Phenomena is inaccurate and irrelevent. That magazine has not been published for several years now, though the four issues that were released did contain articles from me as a freelance writer. Those articles concerned scientific research into claims about the existence of psychic phenomena. This association is irrelevent because, during 36 years as a newspaper and magazine journalist, I have written about every subject you can imagine. Do the three books that I wrote about government disqualify me from writing about medical science subjects? Of course not.
As to the accusation that my conclusions in The Hundred Year Lie are pseudo-science, the anonymous accuser cites no examples and has nothing to offer, which tells me the person has not read the book. This book is a warning of where we are headed if current trends continue. Dozens of physicians and scientists cited in the book, and interviewed during the research process of the book, concur with the book's findings. Only someone with a dogmatic or arrogant point of view, or someone who works for one of the industries being criticized in the book, could reach a pseudo-science conclusion based on not having fairly considered the evidence.
--Randall Fitzgerald, author of The Hundred Year Lie
Fitzgerald's book is not abstract October 22, 2006 Alexandre Merineau (Montreal, Canada) 41 out of 43 found this review helpful
Fitzgerald goes where few would dare in this meticulously researched Magnum
Opus on the rise and ubiquity of unsafe and largely untested synthetic
chemicals passing as food, medicine, and their undeniably extreme impact on
our ability as a species to maintain our health
and civilization. Impressive...
Fitzgerald's book is not abstract, it is not philosophical, it is not a cheap
attempt at self or product promotion, and it is completely devoid of
finger-pointing or blame.
Even when he identifies the culprits that have generated, maintained and
profited from what he calls "The Synthetics Belief System" (a century old
attempt to equate the application of synthetic chemical "discoveries" to food,
medicine and consumer goods with notions of identity, self-worth, and the
myths of "progress, all promoted by the processed food, pharmaceutical and
chemical institutions... and our blind belief) he convincingly points that it is
we consumers, we employees, we stockholders, we government officials and the
electorate that are ultimately keeping this pattern of "accelerating
degeneration" in place...all because we have come to aggressively demand all
this synthetic chemical "food stuff" and "medicine stuff" and "consumer stuff"
as our birthright. We have been taught an awful lesson.
The implications are such that our actual birthright (a state of "naturally
occurring health" as he puts it, where the body burden of synthetic chemicals
is allowed to be eliminated, a point he drives home in the book by chronicling
a experiment in detoxification himself) has been deftly robbed from everyone
on the planet, including the planet itself it seems. We have become entirely
dependent on stuff that is clearly destroying our health.
In fact, we are complicit in this attack on everybody's health by maintaining
our habits, which in turn are heavily reinforced by everything we hear and see
everywhere on a daily basis.
I saw how my purchase decisions are not only destroying my health and the
health of my family (even my kid's ability to reproduce) but how MY consumer
choices are in fact destroying people everywhere, animals everywhere and the
very ecosystem we entirely depend upon.
I'm a Gen-X'er with a predilection for healthy living. He's a Baby Boomer.
Regardless, everybody everywhere is confronted with this super-massive
problem. Like the old Palmolive ad kept repeating on TV when I was a kid:
"You're soaking in it!" That's the problem nobody wants to talk about.
Luckily Fitzgerald offers us a framework in which to begin dealing with these
realities, not just talk about it like some novelty item that is as dangerous
as any WMD. I'd say the Synthetic Belief System is the WMD we need to be
talking about as citizens of all countries.
Read this book.
Not to be Ignored June 27, 2006 Michael Crowley (Arizona) 41 out of 44 found this review helpful
Randall Fitzgerald's "The Hundred Year Lie" is the most important, convincing and blunt health-related book I've read since Colin Campbell's "The China Study." My immediate reaction after finishing this book was fear, but it was followed rather quickly by a sense of empowerment and determination. I am recommending this book to friends and everyone in my family.
Mr. Fitzgerald has packed an enormous amount of alarming and scientifically-based information on a wide range of topics that directly impact our health and quality of life into an engrossing, well-organized and shocking book. Even though much of this information has been available (with a bit of effort) for some time, I have not seen it organized so ingeniously or presented in such a stark, authoritative and grounded fashion. By "grounded", I mean that it is alarming in its content but not hysterical in its tone. Hundreds if not thousands of scientists worldwide have been trying to sound the alarm about the effects of synthetic chemicals on our environment, bodies and reproductive capacity for several years, but because the information is so upsetting it has not been readily accepted or discussed by the larger population.
In one of the book's most mesmerizing chapters, Fitzgerald crafts a painstaking, revealing time-line of our last century in which it becomes possible to fathom the causes and effects set into motion by the introduction of synthetic chemicals, drugs and food additives to our lives. It becomes virtually impossible to accept that the exponential rise in cancer, heart disease, birth defects and diabetes are wholly unrelated to these trends in our dietary habits and exposure to unregulated toxins in our food, water and environment.
Mr. Fitzgerald deftly juggles a wide variety of subjects, but the chapter that most outraged me is his chapter on the effects of endocrine-disrupting chemicals on the reproductive potential of many species--including the human being. I knew that entire populations of amphibians and fish had been decimated by herbicides, fungidcides, pesticides and plastics, but I had no idea the extent to which the human population had been impacted.
Among the many facts presented in this book worth careful consideration is that ten percent of American couples are unable to conceive, and that a recent study of in vitro fertilization revealed that 80% of three hundred embryos sampled from healthy women in their twenties were genetically defective (the actual percentage was probably higher, as only eleven chromosomes were tested). If that is not enough, consider that a 2001 study in China "found that 85 percent of university students tested were infertile."
Am I the only one who finds the implications of this chilling? And Fitzgerald provides page after page of this sort of information along with a bibliography whose sources verify it. I had trouble believing, for example, that in Canada there is a grossly disproportionate ratio of female to male births (less than 35% males) and was able to corroborate this by reading a study on a website managed by concerned scientists and cited in "The Hundred Year Lie." Yes, it is hard to believe--and, Yes, it appears to be true.
One reason this book is so solid is that it is not bogged down in sentiment or emotionalism, nor is it an environmental manifesto encouraging some sort of assault against the chemical, pharmaceutical and government regulatory agencies. It is blunter than that, and more in touch with the sad reality we face: We simply will never be able to count on the accurate dissemination of information about how to eat and live healthfully from government agencies like the USDA, the chemical industry that introduces thousands of untested chemicals into our foods and plastics every year, or from the pharmaceutical companies that have a vested interest in Americans remaining chronically ill with cancer, coronary disease, auto-immune disorders and diabetes. One look at the absurd Food Pyramid should tell you all you need to know about the reliability of the government regarding nutritional and health matters.
"Hundred Year Lie" is lean and "nutrient-dense" almost to the point of being factually overwhelming. There is no padding, no wasted prose. Fitzgerald's book is an eloquent, provocative, thoroughly-reasoned and ruthlessly pragmatic examination of the situation we find ourselves in, not as it could or should be in some Utopian world. He urges us to take responsibility for our own lives, to disease-proof our bodies and environments to the degree feasible--because, realistically speaking, this is our only option if we want to attempt to free ourselves from the misery of chronic disease. Admittedly, this is not a message most Americans seem to want to hear right now, which is one reason I fear this important book may not receive the attention it deserves. My hope is that we will be surprised, and that this extraordinary book will awaken people.
My only criticism of this book is that I wish it were footnoted--I just like footnotes in science and health-related books. On the upside, the text and bibliography are so comprehensive that it is a simple matter to pursue avenues of interest raised by Fitzgerald. I believe this book is an important achievement: the right book, appearing at the right time, and I hope people read it and alert others about the content contained in it.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 67
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