Silent Spring

Silent Spring

1962 • 378 pages

Ratings30

Average rating3.9

15

This author on the verge of death decided to leave the most impactful legacy she could. She went against the chemical industry when only it got the funding and ecology was barely a thing. With her efforts a lot of concepts could flourish and gain more support. She is now my role model and I can't wait to read her literary works. Why haven't I heard of her in school?

This book is about how we as a species can't sit back and observe before acting. The methods with which we controlled insect populations were worse than now, very dangerous chemicals were just sprayed over everything in large doses with aeroplanes. We have not observed what removing certain insects meant and how it affected the ecology. We ended up with removing insects that helped to control certain pests or used chemicals which remove anything but the target insect. These chemicals got into the water which means they go into everything, the soil, the rain, the plants, the animals. The further the animal food chain you go the more these animals get contaminated chemicals. These caused seizures, cancers, killed pets and put human babies in comas. They were considered harmless insecticides despite being literal poison to everything. A lot of this has come from the world wars and because we have developed poisons during them.

We have gone so far wanting to poison everything that we developed solutions which made the blood of pets toxic to insects. Sounds safe and reasonable! These poisons were comparable to radiation and reduced fertility (this is a hidden benefit because we do not need more environment wreckers in the world).

The author goes into specific examples of which animals were infected like salmon, robins, countless birds, all sorts of animals which weren't the target to begin with, the specific damages, the possible alternatives which used science and facts. I have no doubt we have developed way more sophisticated technologies since this book was released, but we still have a lot of trouble relocating the funding towards the environment for some reason. Oh, it must be money, but only for a specific part of the population because what horrors would happen if they lost the power.

Reading this book reminded me of how odd people are and maybe that it's better to stay away from most of them. I want to be like Rachel and go against whatever I am supposed to do because I know it's not working. She clearly was not liked, hated, or despised for her hard work, but the alternative seems to go along humanity's “I give up” plan. Life's about choosing for who you want to suffer, but suffer we all do.

February 27, 2024Report this review