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Title: Limgaugh Nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Source: Human Events
URL Source: http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?id=20901
Published: Oct 14, 2007
Author: John Berlau
Post Date: 2007-10-14 12:51:03 by Rupert_Pupkin
Keywords: Nobel Prize, Limbaugh
Views: 356
Comments: 17

Rush Limbaugh For The Nobel Peace Prize by John Berlau (more by this author) Posted 05/30/2007 ET

Early this year, two members of the parliament of Norway nominated former U.S. vice president Al Gore for the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize. One of the legislators in Norway -- where the Nobel Committee is based -- argued that Gore deserves the prize to be awarded this fall because Gore “has put climate change on the agenda” and “and uses his position to get politicians to understand.”

In response, the conservative Landmark Legal Foundation nominated another American political figure for the prize: syndicated radio talk-show host Rush Limbaugh. In the letter nominating Limbaugh, Landmark President and fellow radio talk-show host Mark Levin, pressed the case that Limbaugh “gives voice to the values of democratic governance, individual opportunity and the just, equal application of the rule of law.”

In late March, Reuters wire service reported that the head of the committee that awards the Nobel Peace Prize, Ole Danbolt Mjoes, appeared to be leaning Gore’s way. After Gore gave a speech on global warming in Norway’s capital city of Oslo, Mjoes joined other audience members in a standing ovation. Mjoes then told the wire service that while he was attending the speech as a private citizen, he thought Gore was spreading “a very important message.” The Reuters story also quoted the head of the International Peace Research Institute in Oslo as saying, “I have Gore as clear favorite.”

But in terms of public health issues alone, Limbaugh is more worthy of the prize, argues John Berlau, former award-winning journalist and author of the new book Eco-Freaks: Environmentalism Is Hazardous to Your Health. In a letter shared exclusively with Human Events, Berlau makes the case that due in part to Limbaugh’s correcting of the misinformation on the insecticide DDT, millions may be saved from the ravages of the mosquito-borne disease malaria.

Dear Professor Mjoes:

It has come to my attention that two of my fellow countrymen have been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize you will award later this year. They are former Vice President Al Gore and radio talk-show host Rush Limbaugh. Recently, an article from Reuters made it seem like you were leaning toward awarding the prize to Mr. Gore.

If this is the case, I suggest that you reconsider. I work at the Competitive Enterprise Institute, an influential American think tank dedicated to fostering individual freedom and prosperity across the world. I can say without reservation that on one of the most important issues facing the world -- a threat far more immediate than global warming -- Mr. Limbaugh has made the greater contribution to public health. In fact, Mr. Gore’s contributions regarding this issue, by contrast, have been detrimental to public health.

This issue I’m speaking of is the epidemic of malaria in third-world countries. As you know (or should know), malaria kills more than one million people a year and infects hundreds of millions every year. There is a scientific consensus that the best -- and in many cases the only -- effective way to control the mosquitoes that spread this deadly disease is with the insecticide dichloro-diphenyl-trichloroethane, otherwise known as DDT. But DDT unfortunately has been vilified by advocacy groups and the popular press based on junk science.

Over the past decade and a half, Mr. Limbaugh has been at times almost a lone media voice correcting misinformation about DDT and also pointing out its life-saving benefits against diseases like malaria. Mr. Gore, by contrast, has continued to spread DDT myths as well as misleading information about the causes of the malaria epidemic.

Before I go further, let me add this caveat. It would be perfectly understandable to me if neither Mr. Gore nor Mr. Limbaugh became the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize recipient. There are many worthy of this honor in America and around the world. But if Mr. Gore is under serious consideration as a Nobel candidate, Mr. Limbaugh should also be considered under the same criteria.

To choose Mr. Gore would be a precedent. He has not accomplished any of the worthy tasks of other Nobel winners, such as negotiating a peace treaty or uplifting those in poverty. Former President Jimmy Carter’s peace prize in 2002 may have been awarded partly as a political swipe at the Bush administration, but the former president at least had the accomplishments of negotiating a Mideast peace treaty and building homes for the poor. Mr. Gore has done none of those things, but instead was nominated, in the words of one who sponsored his nomination, for putting an issue “on the agenda” and using “his position to get politicians to understand.”

If political rhetoric alone is enough to qualify a person for a Nobel Peace Prize, it is my opinion that Mr. Limbaugh is more than worthy of the honor. He too has put issues “on the agenda” and gotten politicians “to understand.” He has built America’s number one radio talk show that reaches more than 10 million listeners every week. He has done this by airing facts and points of view overlooked by America’s dominant liberal media.

He has also used his influence to counter what has become conventional wisdom regarding many environmental scares. And it is here, in his crusade to correct myths about DDT, that he has played a pivotal role in potentially saving the lives of millions of people in the poorest parts of the world.

The Nobel Committee has itself recognized DDT’s immeasurable contribution to public health. In 1948, the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was awarded to Paul Hermann Muller, the Swiss chemist who discovered DDT’s effectiveness at combating the insects that spread deadly diseases. As the Nobel web site entry for Dr. Muller states, “Field trials now showed it [DDT] to be effective not only against the common housefly, but also against a wide variety of pests, including the louse, Colorado beetle, and mosquito,” The web site notes further that during World War II, DDT “proved to be of enormous value in combating typhus and malaria -- malaria was, in fact, completely eradicated from many island areas.”

And after World War II, DDT eradicated malaria in vast areas of the world, including parts of the southern United States. The Nobel Committee again recognized DDT’s benefits when it awarded its 1970 Peace Prize to American agronomist Norman Borlaug, who was (and, at age 93, still is) a staunch DDT advocate. Borlaug, whose farming techniques have enabled countries such as India to become self-sufficient in food production, has repeatedly said that DDT is essential for public health in the Third World.

Yet unfortunately, DDT’s tremendous benefits became forgotten by opinion makers and the general public. Instead, baseless allegations about DDT were carelessly thrown about. The main person responsible for DDT’s vilification was American author Rachel Carson, whose 1962 book Silent Spring spurred the modern environmental movement. Mr. Gore, for instance, has long cited Ms. Carson as his inspiration. “Rachel Carson was one of the reasons why I became so conscious of the environment,” Mr. Gore wrote in the introduction to Silent Spring’s 30th anniversary edition in 1994.

Yet Mr. Gore and most other admirers of Ms. Carson never pause to consider the damage done to the world as a result of Carson’s distortions and misstatements about DDT. National news outlets took at face value her largely unsupported allegations about DDT harming birds, and her doomsday predictions of untold damage to humans. As my CEI colleagues Jeremy Lott and Erin Wildermuth recently wrote in the Baltimore Sun, “misrepresentation had ridden halfway around the world before sound science could get its trousers on.”

In 1972, U.S. administrative law judge Edmund Sweeney concluded in a government hearing that “DDT is not a carcinogenic hazard to man.” But the Environmental Protection Agency ignored Sweeney’s finding and banned DDT anyway, in a decision that EPA head William Ruckelshaus would later admit was partly “political.”

After the U.S. ban, reports from newspapers and the then-dominant “Big 3” television networks continued an unending barrage of one-sided stories presenting DDT as “double death twice.” The continued attacks led to further devastating effects. Other countries banned DDT, and forced Third World countries to stop using it as a condition of aid and trade with the West. In Sri Lanka, DDT caused the number malaria of cases to fall from more than 2 million to just 17 in 1963. But after DDT use was halted, the number shot back up again to pre-DDT levels of 2.5 million. Today, Sri Lanka still has hundreds of thousands of cases of malaria every year.

But stories such as that of Sri Lanka didn’t get play, because there was no national media outlet interested in relaying them. Until, that is, Rush Limbaugh began his nationally syndicated radio program in 1988. It was a new era in the American media. President Ronald Reagan had just deregulated the airwaves by getting rid of the stifling “Fairness Doctrine” regulation, and Mr. Limbaugh was the first to take advantage of this freedom by presenting a show with an uninhibited conservative viewpoint. And he told his listeners about Sri Lanka and the untold suffering from insect-borne diseases that had occurred because of the DDT ban.

Mr. Limbaugh showed tremendous courage in taking on this issue. He is an entertainer and provocateur, but there were plenty to topics that may have made easier fodder for his show. But Mr. Limbaugh chose to educate his listeners, and he also referred them to books such as Dixy Lee Ray’s Trashing the Planet, where they would get the tools to dissect the DDT myth and other unfounded environmental scares.

Rush’s megaphone helped the real facts about DDT enter public dialogue as they never had before, and there has been a sea change in opinion and policy. Both the World Health Organization and the U.S. Agency for International Development just recently reversed long-held policy and now encourage the limited use of DDT to fight malaria. Even some liberal venues now recognize that DDT’s benefits outweigh its tiny risks. The New York Times Magazine published a largely favorable article on DDT and the paper’s editorial page endorses its limited use in the Third World.

In fact, a prominent activist in the fight against malaria says that Mr. Limbaugh and other talk radio hosts deserve a good deal of credit for educating the public on this important issue. Roger Bate, director of the Washington-based health advocacy group Africa Fighting Malaria, noted in an interview that it was conservative members of Congress, particularly Sens. Sam Brownback, R-Kan., and Tom Coburn, R-Okla., who pushed the foreign aid bodies to change their policies on DDT. And it was hosts such as Mr. Limbaugh who made it politically possible for them to openly advocate a pro-DDT position.

Mr. Bate told me: “Conservative talk radio played a small but important part in the decisions with DDT. I think that it provided support for the conservative Senators Brownback and Coburn, who were instrumental in pushing this in Congress. Without their prodding, it wouldn’t have happened as quickly. Although they are intelligent in their own right, I think their constituents were involved in pushing them to do what was the right thing, and they were educated by talk radio.”

And where was Mr. Gore? Even after the turnabout by the New York Times and other liberal venues, Mr. Gore has never once said that Rachel Carson was wrong. As late as 1996, he called DDT a “notorious compound” that “presented serious human health risks.” The tragedy is that on this issue, Mr. Gore could have used his tremendous political capital to make a difference in reducing malaria deaths. Instead, he either stood silently by or contributed to worsening the epidemic by joining in the vilification of the best tool to fight malaria.

And Mr. Gore is still hindering anti-malaria efforts by spreading misinformation about its main causes. In his movie and book An Inconvenient Truth, Gore blames global warming for recent outbreaks of malaria in the cooler regions of Kenya. But as I have reported in my book Eco-Freaks and elsewhere, the World Health Organization had documented epidemics in those very regions in the 1940s, long before global warming was on the radar screen. The malaria was wiped out there, as elsewhere, by DDT, and unfortunately, as elsewhere, has now returned in the absence of DDT’s use. Also unfortunate is that the establishment media for the most part has not seen fit to correct Mr. Gore on this and many other dangerous misstatements in An Inconvenient Truth.

But Mr. Limbaugh and talk radio are still there spreading the truth about this and other issues. This is why Mr. Limbaugh -- as well as fellow talk show hosts who see it as their mission to educate their audiences about environmental myths, such as G. Gordon Liddy, Mark Levin, and Lars Larson -- all would make more deserving recipients of the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize than the former vice president.

Thank you for taking this letter into consideration.

John Berlau

HUMAN EVENTS readers may also share their opinions on who should be the Nobel Peace Prize recipient by e-mailing the Nobel Committee at comments@nobelprize.org

Or by writing to:

Professor Ole Danbolt Mjoes Chairman, Norwegian Nobel Committee Henrik Ibsens gate 51 NO-0255 Oslo Norway


Poster Comment:

Just when you thought that things couldn't be any more ridiculous than Gore's Nobel Prize, something even more idiotic comes along from the other phony wing of our one party system. I knew the Nobel Peace prize was something of a politicized joke, but this business about Limbaugh belongs in the Onion.

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#1. To: All (#0) (Edited)

The people who nominated Limbaugh called him a hero for advocating the use of DDT in India and Africa. I wonder, would Limbaugh stuff his own fat face with food that was sprayed with DDT, or are people in India supposed to be lab rats for this? Maybe the pill-popping pigboy's real goal was buying some advance shares of whatever companies would start producing DDT when it's reintroduced.

Rupert_Pupkin  posted on  2007-10-14   12:54:22 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: Rupert_Pupkin (#1)

I'm betting that things will not go all that well for Pills in Oslo.

Join the Ron Paul Revolution

Lod  posted on  2007-10-14   12:59:42 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: Rupert_Pupkin (#0) (Edited)

But in terms of public health issues alone, Limbaugh is more worthy of the prize, argues John Berlau

He's worthy of the cat shit smeared in his face award, along with John Berlau, former award-winning journalist and author of the new book Eco-Freaks. I'd be happy to administer the awards.

angle  posted on  2007-10-14   13:03:04 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: Rupert_Pupkin (#0) (Edited)

Mark Levin, pressed the case that Limbaugh “gives voice to the values of democratic governance, individual opportunity and the just, equal application of the rule of law.”

"if people are violating the law by doing drugs, they ought to be accused and they ought to be convicted and they ought to be sent up......The answer to this disparity is not to start letting people out of jail because we're not putting others in jail who are breaking the law. The answer is to go out and find the ones who are getting away with it, convict them and send them up the river, too"

Rush Limbaugh, October 5, 1995, 11:15 AM

kiki  posted on  2007-10-14   13:04:09 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: lodwick, christine (#2) (Edited)

I'm betting that things will not go all that well for Pills in Oslo.

If the best that Oxycontin Man can do is make fun of 12 year old kids on his show and call frontline soldiers who disagree with him "phony troops", it isn't hard to understand why.

P.S. Christine, could you please edit the "Limgaugh" to "Limbaugh" in the title?

Rupert_Pupkin  posted on  2007-10-14   13:05:50 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: kiki (#4) (Edited)

"if people are violating the law by doing drugs, they ought to be accused and they ought to be convicted and they ought to be sent up......The answer to this disparity is not to start letting people out of jail because we're not putting others in jail who are breaking the law. The answer is to go out and find the ones who are getting away with it, convict them and send them up the river, too" - Rush Limbaugh

Mega super dittos Rush! So, when do you start serving your jailtime along with all those other terrible lawbreaking druggies?

Rupert_Pupkin  posted on  2007-10-14   13:08:15 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#7. To: Rupert_Pupkin (#0)

I thought I was reading an article off the Onion.com

A "conservative" is a draft animal that claims we must wear our yokes more or less as they're placed on us. A "liberal" is a draft animal that claims we have a right to shift the yokes from time to time.

"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." --- William Casey, Director CIA (Quote from internal staff meeting notes 1981)

intotheabyss  posted on  2007-10-14   13:08:24 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#8. To: Rupert_Pupkin (#0)

Based on this article, Dr. Rush should be getting not only the Peace prize, but also the Chemistry, Medicine and, given his alleged physical incompatibility that prevented him from gloriously joining the military or keeping a wife happy, he should be getting the Physics prize too.

Antiparty - find out why, think about 'how'

a vast rightwing conspirator  posted on  2007-10-14   13:20:28 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#9. To: a vast rightwing conspirator (#8)

I think we should elect him ruler of the known universe.

A "conservative" is a draft animal that claims we must wear our yokes more or less as they're placed on us. A "liberal" is a draft animal that claims we have a right to shift the yokes from time to time.

"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." --- William Casey, Director CIA (Quote from internal staff meeting notes 1981)

intotheabyss  posted on  2007-10-14   13:22:03 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#10. To: Rupert_Pupkin (#0)

Rush Limbaugh For The Nobel Peace Prize by John Berlau

The person most deserving of a nobel peace prize is Bill O'Reilly. He's done more to promote peace though his "Pave the middle east with a sheet of nuclear fired glass" than Rush could ever dream.

Once done, our troops could come home victorious.

Pinguinite.com EcuadorTreasures.ec

Pinguinite  posted on  2007-10-14   13:25:11 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#11. To: Rupert_Pupkin, christine (#5)

P.S. Christine, could you please edit the "Limgaugh" to "Limbaugh" in the title?

Limbarf is better.

angle  posted on  2007-10-14   13:26:09 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#12. To: Pinguinite (#10)

Sound logic IMHO, hell the more people we kill the less probability of conflicts since there are less people. If Chimperor were really on the ball he would kill everyone but himself and all conflict/war/racism/you name it would be over.

A "conservative" is a draft animal that claims we must wear our yokes more or less as they're placed on us. A "liberal" is a draft animal that claims we have a right to shift the yokes from time to time.

"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." --- William Casey, Director CIA (Quote from internal staff meeting notes 1981)

intotheabyss  posted on  2007-10-14   13:34:47 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#13. To: Rupert_Pupkin (#0)

Pigboy was ranting on his show about how he was a "legitimately nominated candidate" and he should have won. The way these diseased minds work will always and forever puzzle me. A guy who has cheerleaded for wars he won't fight deserves a PEACE prize? The gall. The pure, unmitigated, unalloyed gall.

Honi soit qui mal y pense

Mekons4  posted on  2007-10-14   15:56:18 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#14. To: Rupert_Pupkin (#1)

The people who nominated Limbaugh called him a hero for advocating the use of DDT in India and Africa. I wonder, would Limbaugh stuff his own fat face with food that was sprayed with DDT, or are people in India supposed to be lab rats for this? Maybe the pill-popping pigboy's real goal was buying some advance shares of whatever companies would start producing DDT when it's reintroduced.

In addition to the immediate adverse effects of DDT (killing untold numbers of song birds and bringing avian predators, buteos and accipitors to the brink of extinction because of the thinning of their egg shells, we're finding now that DDT that is sequestered in silt on river bottoms and such for decades does not bio degrade, and if liberated through routine dredging to maintain or improve shipping channels the problem may start all over again.

Dredge spoils are either piled on land or dumped in open water, and either way it can go back into the food chain.

Ugh.

I'm aware that DDT is a cost effective way to control malaria and save perhaps millions of lives, but, I don't want to see anyone make the conscious decision to extinct some species.

it's time to read SILENT SPRING again, and to bring Rachel Carson's masterpiece back into the forefront of our consciousness.

HOUNDDAWG  posted on  2007-10-14   16:15:06 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#15. To: HOUNDDAWG, Rupert_Pupkin, IndieTX, *Agriculture-Environment* (#14)

it's time to read SILENT SPRING again, and to bring Rachel Carson's masterpiece back into the forefront of our consciousness.

That work was discredited a long time ago.

100 things you should know about DDT

Rachel Carson sounded the initial alarm against DDT, but represented the science of DDT erroneously in her 1962 book Silent Spring. Carson wrote "Dr. DeWitt's now classic experiments [on quail and pheasants] have now established the fact that exposure to DDT, even when doing no observable harm to the birds, may seriously affect reproduction. Quail into whose diet DDT was introduced throughout the breeding season survived and even produced normal numbers of fertile eggs. But few of the eggs hatched." DeWitt's 1956 article (in Journal of Agriculture and Food Chemistry) actually yielded a very different conclusion. Quail were fed 200 parts per million of DDT in all of their food throughout the breeding season. DeWitt reports that 80% of their eggs hatched, compared with the "control"" birds which hatched 83.9% of their eggs. Carson also omitted mention of DeWitt's report that "control" pheasants hatched only 57 percent of their eggs, while those that were fed high levels of DDT in all of their food for an entire year hatched more than 80% of their eggs.


"every time government grows it is at the expense of personal liberty" - Ron Paul
"I see the Constitution as being written precisely for one purpose -- to restrain the power of government; never to restrain the people" - Ron Paul

farmfriend  posted on  2007-10-14   16:27:08 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#16. To: kiki (#4)

"if people are violating the law by doing drugs, they ought to be accused and they ought to be convicted and they ought to be sent up......The answer to this disparity is not to start letting people out of jail because we're not putting others in jail who are breaking the law. The answer is to go out and find the ones who are getting away with it, convict them and send them up the river, too"

Maybe the people at Nobel could add a category for meritorious hypocrisy.

"I'd like to live just long enough to be there when they cut off your head and stick it on a pike as a warning to the next ten generations that some favors come with too high a price." Vir Cotto, Babylon 5

orangedog  posted on  2007-10-14   16:33:38 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#17. To: Rupert_Pupkin (#5)

P.S. Christine, could you please edit the "Limgaugh" to "Limbaugh" in the title?

I don't know about that - it's kinda fitting for this insane story.

Caribbean boy gets nobel piece prize nomination and all..

Join the Ron Paul Revolution

Lod  posted on  2007-10-14   17:57:56 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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