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A recent article by leading malaria scientists should set the record straight that malaria growth has not been caused by climate change.
Members of the European Parliament are against the use of pesticides, but also want to stop the spread of malaria.
In attempting to ban pesticides, policymakers are overlooking the risk of insect-borne diseases.
While environmentalists will be shocked about Ralph Nader's fight to protect DDT, perhaps they should ponder that thousands of Americans were harmed by West Nile virus last year.
Members of the World Health Organizationare blamingthe spreadof malaria on global warming when the real culprit was modern transportation.
Malaria deaths could be significantly reduced if only health agencies would do the politically incorrect--but morally correct--thing and spray DDT and other long-term insecticides.
The great surprise is not that millions took to the streets in Egypt but rather that the United States had for so long predicated its regional security on Mubarak.
Dirty hospitals, unsafe blood, and widespread use of injections make health care dangerous, in both developed and developing countries.



