|
|
|||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Recently, the debate over some of the biggest environmental issues global climate change, population growth and depletion of resources, and chemical toxins has taken on an antiscientific tone. Enjoying new access to the mainstream media and great influence in the Republican Congress, the "brownlash" writers Gregg Easterbrook, Dixy L. Ray, Fred Singer, and Ronald Bailey have espoused extreme positions on the imperviousness of the earth and its natural systems to anthropogenic stress. The Ehrlichs use the term "brownlash" to refer to attempts "to minimize the seriousness of environmental problems . . . because they help to
HOME | SUBSCRIBE | SEARCH | CURRENT ISSUE | PAST ISSUES | COLLECTIONS | PRIVACY | HELP | beta.nejm.org Comments and questions? Please contact us. The New England Journal of Medicine is owned, published, and copyrighted © 2008 Massachusetts Medical Society. All rights reserved. |