Remembering Rachel Carson who died fifty years ago, April 14, 1964.  In her book Silent Spring (1962) she wrote, "It would be unrealistic to
 suppose that all chemical carcinogens can or will be eliminated from 
the modern world. But a very large 
proportion are by no means necessities of life. By their elimination the
 total load of carcinogens would be enormously lightened, and the threat
 that one in every four will develop cancer would at least be greatly 
mitigated. The most determined effort should be made to eliminate those 
carcinogens that now contaminate our food, our water supplies, and our 
atmosphere, because these provide the most dangerous type of contact -- 
minute exposures, repeated over and over throughout the years.
 
 
... For those in whom cancer is already a hidden or a visible presence, 
efforts to find cures must of course continue. But for those not yet 
touched by the disease and certainly for the generations as yet unborn, 
prevention is the imperative need. (Silent Spring, Chapter 14, One in 
Four)
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