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Congress is about to appropriate $105 million for malaria control, and the money will be wasted--yet again.
Trying to prevent the spread of disease by combating energy use, as advocated by the World Health Organization, is an extremely uncertain and possibly counterproductive policy.
A recent article by leading malaria scientists should set the record straight that malaria growth has not been caused by climate change.
The UN's push for a "zero DDT world" ignores the millions of lives DDT has saved over the past century with little-to-no adverse environmental impact and no harm to human health.
Members of the World Health Organizationare blamingthe spreadof malaria on global warming when the real culprit was modern transportation.
DDT is a proven effective anti-malaria measure, but the United Nations has abandoned science for the sake of political correctness.
If the US withholds funding to the Global Fund, it could lead to major disruptions in the delivery of life-saving medicines. But tolerating the corruption is arguably worse.
Extending expiration dates is the cheapest remedy for the world's most prevalent epidemic.



