A lesson learned from AMERICAN POISON: A DEADLY INVENTION AND THE WOMAN WHO BATTLED FOR ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE, by Daniel Stone
Science must be believed over the promise of progress and profits. I have no doubt that our current era of technological advancement is very much based on the concept of “can we?,” not “should we?”. Our world is rushing head-long into embracing the concepts that AI and digitizing our existence can be nothing but positive developments that bring great progress for humanity, and the faster we can pull these changes off the better off we’ll be. Suffice to say, I have found the world’s enthusiasm for these ideas to be bizarre and a massive risk, and I have become an old man yelling at the clouds demanding that we slow down and think about what we are doing as a species. Outdated I may be, yet I found Daniel Stone’s excellent new book American Poison to be a gripping and fascinating read, as Stone recounts the story of how the world embraced the revolutionary technology of leaded gasoline, and did so while ignoring the warnings ...