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Subject: PAN ALERT: Testing pesticides on people featured in Feb. 6 'Law & Order: Special Victims Unit' episode
This should be a very interesting program for, us to watch. All of us, that have had breast Implants; have the same toxic chemicals in our bodies. Dow, used to experiment on un informed people; they used as guinea pigs to test there highly toxic pesticides on also.  Pass on to, your own contact list. Where all of, us can watch this program, Tuesday Feb. 6 on "Law & Order" 

Tuesday evening, February 6th, NBC will air "Loophole," an episode on the crime drama "Law & Order: Special Victims Unit" that focuses on the controversial EPA rule allowing intentional dosing of human beings in pesticide experiments. Check your local listings for time.


Take Action! Throw a house party to watch the show—invite a few friends over, discuss the episode, and urge everyone to send comments to NBC.

You may write Programming Department NBC, 3000 W. Alameda, Burbank, CA 91523; or click here and we'll submit your comments.

Physicians for Social Responsibility - Los Angeles, with Pesticide Action Network consulted with "Law & Order" executive producer Neal Baer and writer Jonathan Greene in developing this episode. PSR and PAN are calling for the public to contact NBC to support this type of reality-based programming about environmental health and justice.

Click here for materials you can send ahead or hand out to house party guests

In the episode, several children and their families -- including a Honduran immigrant family—are unwittingly tested with a dangerous organophosphate pesticide (a class of acutely toxic chemicals) by a fictional chemical company. In real life, EPA's recent human testing rule contains loopholes that allow chemical corporations to test pesticides on women and children. A 2005 Congressional report by Senator Barbara Boxer's and Congressmember Henry Waxman's staffs revealed human testing studies where pesticide corporations told their subjects they were ingesting vitamins or drugs. No study of the well-documented long-term effects of pesticide exposures were conducted in follow-up on those test subjects.

"Loophole" reminds the public of EPA's all-too-real life "CHEERS" program, where the federal government proposed in 2004 to offer low income families in Florida $970, a camcorder, and some clothes if they would record "routine exposure" of their one and under infants to household pesticides. The script is careful to point out the opposition of EPA staff scientists to the human testing rule crafted by EPA political appointees.

House Party Materials

 


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