SOURCE: Wikipedia, captured 2020-09-22
This page last modified: 2020-10-02 13:42:02 -0700 (PST)
Steven J. Milloy is a notorious, noxious lobbyist (corporate shrill), disinformation troll (second-hand tobacco smoke; tobacco companies including R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, and Philip Morris Companies Inc.; oil companies including ExxonMobil; climate change denialist; ecological and environmental destruction denialist; FOX News; ...), and purveyor of junk science and pseudoscience ...
Steven Milloy's reprehensible activity has been supported through Steven Milloy's close associations with Koch family-funded groups the Cato Institute, and the Competitive Enterprise Institute. From the 1990s until the end of 2005, Steven Milloy was an Adjunct Scholar at the libertarian Cato Institute, which hosted Milloy's JunkScience.com site -- "the best known" example of "a right wing effort in the U.S. to discredit widely accepted science, technology and medical information."
Not mentioned in the Steven Milloy's Wikipedia page (immediately following) is Steven Milloy's association with the Heartland Institute, where he serves as Director. Steven Milloy's role at the Heartland Institute further discredits that disinformation source.
Heartland Institute biography: Steven J. Milloy | local copy (html, captured 2020-09-30)
Steven J. Milloy is a lawyer, lobbyist, author and FOX News commentator. Steven Milloy describes himself as a libertarian and his close financial and organizational ties to tobacco and oil companies have been the subject of criticism, as Milloy has consistently disputed the scientific consensus on climate change and the health risks of second-hand smoke.
Among the topics Milloy has addressed are what he believes are false claims regarding DDT, global warming, Alar, breast implants, second-hand smoke, ozone depletion, and mad cow disease. Milloy runs CSRWatch.com, which monitors and criticizes the corporate social responsibility movement. From the 1990s until the end of 2005, Steven Milloy was an Adjunct Scholar at the libertarian Cato Institute, which hosted the JunkScience.com site. Steven Milloy was an adjunct scholar at the Competitive Enterprise Institute [2005-2009 | screenshot]. Milloy is head of the Congressional Effect Fund (formerly the Free Enterprise Action Fund), a mutual fund Milloy runs with former tobacco executive Tom Borelli.
Steven Milloy also operates The Advancement of Sound Science Center (TASSC), established by Philip Morris Companies Inc. to counter legislation against second-hand smoke (now from Milloy's home in Potomac, Maryland). TASSC was originally known as The Advancement of Sound Science Coalition, which was established by the Philip Morris controlled public relations company APCO, specifically to attack the scientific credentials of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) when they threatened to categorise second-hand smoke as a "known carcinogen." Bonner Cohen who published the EPA Watch newsletter for Philip Morris was a partner with Milloy in both the original TASSC and the revamped operation through the Cato Institute; TASSC was a major lobbyist in attacking EPA science on global warming.
Milloy holds a B.A. in Natural Sciences from Johns Hopkins University, a Master of Health Sciences in Biostatistics from the Johns Hopkins University School of Hygiene and Public Health, a Juris Doctor from the University of Baltimore, and a Master of Laws from the Georgetown University Law Center.
The National Environmental Policy Institute (NEPI) was formed in early 1993 by Congressman Don Ritter (R-PA) and Dennis Hertel. (D-MI). Most of the initial funding for this 'greenwash' lobby group came from Occidental Petroleum, and other oil companies. Milloy styled himself as NEPI's "Director of Science Policy Studies." These companies wanted to oppose aspects of the SuperFund clean-up program. NEPI's publication, "Science-Based Risk Assessment: A Key to the SuperFund Puzzle," says:
"Sound science and more accurate risk assessments can significantly reduce the costs of remediation, while reducing real health risks when they are found. Steven J. Milloy of the NEPI suggests that the costs of cleanups would fall by 60 percent if the program focused more directly on risk when identifying the appropriate remedies."
At the same time, Milloy was working through Philip Morris's specialist-science/PR company APCO & Associates, but he was relegated to working behind the scenes as a contact for the newly formed TASSC, and on developing a new electronic-mail/computer business venture known as "Issues Watch" for APCO. APCO formally established TASSC in October 1, 1993 The budget for the first full year of operation was $365,411.
By 1994, according to his website, Milloy was project leader of the Regulatory Impact Analysis Project, Inc. for the U.S. Department of Energy. The Cato Institute, where Milloy was listed as an adjunct scholar, published his work from 1995 to 2005. Milloy began his criticism of "Junk science" as president of the Environmental Policy Analysis Network in 1996.
Milloy's employment by the EOP Group Inc. (major lobbyists) dates back to before 1995, and it includes a record of lobbying on behalf of the Fort Howard Corporation, the International Food Additives Council, Monsanto Co. and Edison Electrics. The Competitive Enterprise Institute also proposed to Philip Morris that Milloy and his partners Michael Gough and Michael Fumento should be used to attack the FDA through reports to the House and Senate on risk Management reform.
In March 1997, Milloy moved from the backroom to become president of The Advancement of Sound Science Coalition (TASSC) [Established under Gov. Garrey Carruthers of New Mexico by Philip Morris], which later became The Advancement of Sound Science Center. Steven Milloy has links through Philip Morris and FOX News to Rupert Murdoch and News Corporation. Milloy was a correspondent for FOX News between 2002 and 2009, and he became a policy director at Murray Energy and a member of Donald Trump's presidential transition team.
Milloy has used the term "junk science" in public debate, which he defines as "faulty scientific data and analysis used to advance special and, often, hidden agendas." According to Milloy, "the junk science 'mob' includes:
Scientists and science writers have argued the term is used, by Milloy and others, almost exclusively to "denigrate scientists and studies whose findings do not serve the corporate cause," in the words of David Michaels. In an editorial in Chemical & Engineering News, Editor-in-Chief Rudy Baum called Milloy's JunkScience.com website "the best known" example of "a right wing effort in the U.S. to discredit widely accepted science, technology and medical information." Rudy Baum went on to label Milloy "a tireless anti-science polemicist" who applies the term "junk science" to "anything that doesn't match his right-wing concept of reality." Along similar lines, an editorial in the American Journal of Public Health noted that "... attacking the science underlying difficult public policy decisions with the label of 'junk' has become a common ploy for those opposed to regulation ... One need only peruse JunkScience.com to get a sense of the long list of public health issues for which research has been so labeled."
Milloy has criticized research linking second-hand tobacco smoke to cancer, claiming that "the vast majority of studies reported no statistical association." In 1993, Milloy dismissed an Environmental Protection Agency report linking second-hand tobacco smoke to cancer as "a joke." Five years later Milloy claimed vindication after a federal court criticized the E.P.A.'s conclusions. However, the court's finding against the EPA was overturned on appeal. When the British Medical Journal published a meta-analysis confirming a link in 1997, Milloy wrote, "Of the 37 studies, only 7 -- less than 19 percent -- reported statistically significant increases in lung cancer incidence... Meta-analysis of the secondhand smoke studies was a joke when EPA did it in 1993. And it remains a joke today." When another researcher published a study linking second-hand smoke to cancer, Milloy wrote that she "... must have pictures of journal editors in compromising positions with farm animals. How else can you explain her studies seeing the light of day?"
While at FOXNews.com, Milloy has continued to criticize claims that second-hand tobacco smoke causes cancer. However, with the release of confidential tobacco industry documents as part of the Tobacco Master Settlement Agreement, the objectivity of Milloy's stance on second-hand smoke has been questioned. Based on this documentation, journalists Paul D. Thacker and George Monbiot, as well as the Union of Concerned Scientists and others, have contended that Milloy is a paid advocate for the tobacco industry.
Milloy's JunkScience.com website was reviewed and revised by a public relations firm hired by the R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company. Milloy also worked as executive director of The Advancement of Sound Science Coalition (TASSC), which was established in 1993 by Philip Morris and its public relations firm "to expand and assist Philip Morris in its efforts with issues in targeted states." A 1994 Philip Morris memo listed TASSC among its "Tools to Affect Legislative Decisions." According to its 1997 annual report, TASSC "sponsored" JunkScience.com.
The New Republic reported that Milloy, who is presented by Cato Institute as an independent journalist, was under contract to provide consulting services to Philip Morris through the end of 2005. In 2000 and 2001, for example, Milloy received a total of $180,000 in payments from Philip Morris for consulting services. A spokesperson for FOX News stated, "FOX News was unaware of Milloy's connection with Philip Morris. Any affiliation he had should have been disclosed."
Milloy's association with the Cato Institute ended shortly afterwards; however, as of March 2008, he continues to write for FOXNews.com, where he is described as a "junk science expert." Monbiot wrote: "Even after FOX News was told about the money Milloy had been receiving from Philip Morris and ExxonMobil, FOX News continued to employ Milloy -- without informing its readers about his interests." Thacker wrote:
Objective viewers long ago realized that FOX News has a political agenda. But, when a pundit promotes this agenda while on the take from corporations that benefit from it, then FOX News has gone one disturbing step further.
Milloy argues that human activity has little impact on climate change and that regulations to limit greenhouse gas emissions are unwarranted and harmful to business interests. Steven Milloy has recently offered a prize of $500,000 to anyone who can "prove, in a scientific manner, that humans are causing harmful global warming," stating that "JunkScience.com, in its sole discretion, will determine the winner, if any."
In 2004, when the Arctic Climate Impact Assessment was released by the Arctic Council and the International Arctic Science Committee, Milloy wrote that the report "pretty much debunks itself." Milloy based his assertions that the variation was natural on his interpretation of just one graph from the overview of the large study. One of the lead authors of the study, oceanographer James J. McCarthy, commented that those taking Milloy's position would "have to refute what are hundreds of scientific papers that reconstruct various pieces of this climate puzzle." Milloy's assertion was repeated by lobbyists including the Competitive Enterprise Institute.
In 2005, it was reported that non-profit organizations operating out of Milloy's home, and in some cases employing no staff, have received large payments from ExxonMobil during his tenure with FOX News. A FOX News spokesperson stated that Milloy is "... affiliated with several not-for-profit groups that possibly may receive funding from Exxon, but he certainly does not receive funding directly from Exxon."
Milloy is the Executive Director of DemandDebate.com, an organization that seeks to eliminate what it calls "bias" in environmental education. A Competitive Enterprise Institute press release says he "coordinated" the group's activities at the recent Live Earth concert in New York, at which a plane circled the event pulling a banner reading, "DON'T BELIEVE AL GORE -- DEMAND DEBATE.COM."
In 1998, Milloy, writing on behalf of TASSC, co-wrote an article which called for the abolition of the position of United States Surgeon General. "We have not had a surgeon general for three years. Has anyone noticed? Is anyone's health at risk," asked the authors.
Milloy has campaigned against the 1972 ban on non-public-health uses of DDT in the United States and in favour of wider use of DDT against malaria, which he claims could be largely eliminated if DDT were used more aggressively. Steven Milloy has been particularly critical of Rachel Carson who, Milloy wrote, "misrepresented the existing science on bird reproduction and was wrong about DDT causing cancer."
Milloy's JunkScience.com web site features "The Malaria Clock: A Green Eco-Imperialist Legacy of Death," which he claims counts up the approximate number of new malaria cases and deaths in the world, most of which he says could have been prevented by the use of DDT. As of June 2007, Milloy's clock stood at more than 94 million dead, 90% of whom were said to have been expectant mothers and children under five years of age. "Infanticide on this scale appears without parallel in human history," writes Milloy. "This is not ecology. This is not conservation. This is genocide."
Critics have argued that the clock holds Carson "responsible for more deaths than malaria has caused in total," a charge that a footnote at the bottom of the malaria clock webpage seems to acknowledge, stating: "Note that some of these cases would have occurred irrespective of DDT use. Note also that, while enormously influential, the US ban did not immediately terminate global DDT use and that developing world malaria mortality increased over time rather than instantly leaping to the estimated value of 2,700,000 deaths per year. However, certain in the knowledge that even one human sacrificed on the altar of green misanthropy is infinitely too many, I let stand the linear extrapolation of numbers from an instant start on the 1st of the month following this murderous ban."
Milloy's claims about malaria in general are generally held to have been debunked, with many commentators pointing to the close links between Milloy, DDT-advocacy and the tobacco industry as casting suspicion on the motives for his difficult to support claims.
In 2006, following a press release by the World Health Organization recommending more extensive use of indoor residual spraying with DDT and other pesticides, Milloy wrote, "It's a relief that the WHO has finally come to its senses." In 2007, the WHO clarified its position, saying it is "very much concerned with health consequences from use of DDT" and reaffirmed its commitment to phasing out the use of DDT.
On September 14, 2001, three days after terrorist attacks destroyed the World Trade Center, Milloy wrote that the World Trade Center towers might have stood longer, preventing many casualties, had the use of asbestos fire-resistant lagging not been discontinued during the Towers' construction. Milloy's article reported that, "In 1971, New York City banned the use of asbestos in spray fireproofing. At that time, asbestos insulating material had only been sprayed up to the 64th floor of the World Trade Center towers," and cited an expert who questioned the efficacy of the asbestos-free lagging that was used on the steel in the upper floors.
Advocates for banning asbestos were highly critical of the article, questioning his motives and disputing his conclusions. The International Ban Asbestos Secretariat charged him with "insensitivity that is hard to fathom."
Responding to criticism of the safety of the food product Quorn by the Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI), Milloy accused CSPI of having an undisclosed relationship with Quorn's main competitor, Gardenburger. Writing for FOXNews.com, Milloy said that "CSPI appears to have an unsavory relationship with Quorn competitor, Gardenburger" and called the CSPI's complaints "unscrupulous shrieking," noting comments in CSPI newsletters like "Remember the saturated fat and the E.coli bacteria that could be hiding inside a hamburger? You can keep the taste but forget the worries with Gardenburger."
In 1999, David Platt Rall, a prominent environmental scientist, died in a car accident. Steven J. Milloy, at the time a Cato adjunct scholar, commented: "Scratch one junk scientist....". Cato Institute President Edward Crane called Milloy's comments an "inexcusable lapse in judgment and civility," but Milloy refused to apologize, stating "I'm sorry for Rall's family that he's dead. It's not intended as a slight to them. But he had a huge role to play in junk science and that's undeniable."
COMMENTARY (BuriedTruth). I (Victoria A. Stuart) worked for ~7.5 years (2001-2008) at the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) -- which contributes to scientific knowledge of human health and the environment, and to the health and well-being of people everywhere (globally). NIEHS is the home of the authoritative National Toxicology Program. As noted in the following article the main building at NIEHS (etc.) is named after Dr. Rall, the esteemed expert who was maligned by the noxious troll Steven Milloy.
SOURCE: NIEHS | local copy (html, captured 2020-09-23)
David Platt Rall, M.D., Ph.D., (1926-1999) was Director of the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) from 1971 until his retirement in 1990. Dr. Rall served as director of the National Toxicology Program (NTP) from its inception in 1978 through 1990. As a scientist, administrator, and diplomat, Rall pioneered the effort to identify and understand the elements that make up the human environment and their consequences for human health. As an intellectual and aggressive activist, he educated scientists, governments, and the world community to the critical need to address the existence of environmental agents and their consequences for human health. As a leader he marshalled some of the best minds and hearts of his time to the cause of world health through a safe and clean environment. And as a visionary he provided the goals of environmental health science and the direction to guide both current and future generations.
A native of Naperville, Illinois, Rall received his undergraduate degree from that city's North Central College in 1946. He received a Ph.D. in pharmacology and an M.D. from Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois. He began his research career as a scientist at the National Cancer Institute (NCI), where he served in a variety of research and administrative positions until 1971. Rall also served as a surgeon (1955-1959), senior surgeon (1959-1969), medical director (1963-1971) and assistant surgeon general (1971-1990) in the United States Public Health Service (PHS). Rall authored over 100 publications in the areas of comparative pharmacology, cancer chemotherapy, the blood-brain barrier, pesticide toxicology, and drug research and regulation.
In 1961 the PHS Committee on Environmental Health Problems recommended the establishment of a national center to undertake integrated research and other activities related to environmental health. This center became the forerunner of NIEHS. In March of 1971, Rall left the thriving, established world of research and clinical treatment at the National Institutes of Health's (NIH) main campus in Bethesda armed with a desire to reach beyond the treatment of chronic disease to seek its underlying causes and, through research, to learn how to prevent such diseases caused by environmental agents. Rall arrived in the newly established Research Triangle Park in North Carolina, where he set about the work of conceptualizing and then actualizing a state-of- the-art research facility among the pine forest and pastureland of the area, a prescient move that would situate the Institute at the epicenter of what would become an internationally renowned research commons.
The NIEHS was entrusted with the principal responsibility among federal agencies for the support of research and the training of scientists concerned with the effects of chemical, physical, and biological factors on human health. A vigorous intramural research program evolved at the Institute to study the biological effects of environmental agents. In the early 1970s, NIEHS scientists conducted some of the important early studies of aromatic hydrocarbons such as polychlorinated biphenyls, dibenzodioxins, and dibenzofurans, among others. Major studies on heavy metals in the environment were soon conducted, as were studies of specific target organs and how they were affected by environmental contaminants. Rall developed the NIEHS Extramural Program to administer an expanding portfolio of PHS grants and awards in environmental health science to researchers at colleges and universities throughout the United States. The establishment of the NIEHS Environmental Health Science Centers has promoted a multidisciplinary approach to the complicated problems of environmental health science and provides a mechanism for focusing academic resources on the search for solutions. In April 1972, Rall began Environmental Health Perspectives as an experimental journal to provide a forum for the exploration of the perspective of basic research on environmental health.
In 1978, NIEHS was designated as the focal point for the establishment of the NTP, a cooperative effort to coordinate toxicological testing programs within the Department of Health and Human Services, and Rall was appointed its director. The major objectives of the NTP are to increase the depth of knowledge about the toxicology of chemicals, to evaluate the full range of toxic effects of chemicals, to develop and validate more effective assays for toxicity, and to disseminate toxicological information resulting from its studies.
Through the various activities of his career, Rall emerged as an international leader and representative of U.S. science worldwide. Rall served as the U.S. coordinator of cooperative environmental health programs between the United States and the U.S.S.R., the United Kingdom, Egypt, Japan, the People's Republic of China, Taiwan, Italy, Finland, and Spain. As a result of his work in attempting to strengthen international scientific cooperation, in 1975 NIEHS was designated by the World Health Organization (WHO) as a Collaborating Center for Environmental Health Effects. In 1980, Rall played a leading role in an effort to establish the WHO's International Programme on Chemical Safety (IPCS), the goal of which is to provide an internationally evaluated scientific basis for the assessment of the risks to human health and the environment of chemicals.
Rall received many recognitions for his lifetime commitment to public service and scientific research including the PHS's Distinguished Service Medal, which he received in 1975 and again in 1990 for sustained leadership in the development of the field of environmental health science. In 1979 he was accepted as a Member of the National Academy of Sciences' Institute of Medicine (IOM), whose membership consists of the preeminent physicians of the United States. In 1988 the WHO presented Rall with the Health for All 2000 Medal. He was recognized in 1989 by the Institute of Occupational Health in Helsinki, which awarded to him its Distinguished Service Medal. Rall was also honored in 1989 by the Collegium Ramazzini, an international academic society that examines critical issues in occupational and environmental medicine with the goal of preventing disease and promoting health around the world.
In 1990, Rall retired from NIEHS but remained extremely active in the environmental health arena. He chaired the IPCS and held a variety of other positions including foreign secretary of the IOM, board member of the Environmental Defense Fund, chairman of the Scientific Advisory Council of the Hawaii Heptachlor Research and Education Foundation, and member of the Board of Scientific Counselors of the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health. The American Public Health Association established a permanent honor in recognition of Dr. Rall's life and work: the David P. Rall Award for Advocacy. The David P. Rall Building, the main edifice on NIEHS' Research Triangle Park campus, was dedicated to his memory in 2000. [Signage | local copy (html, captured 2020-09-23)]
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The United States Senate Lobby Filing Disclosure Program lists Steven Milloy as a registered lobbyist for the EOP Group for the years 1998-2000. The guidebook "Washington Representatives" also listed him as a lobbyist for the EOP Group in 1996. The EOP Group's clients include the American Crop Protection Association (pesticides), the Chlorine Chemistry Council, Edison Electric Institute (fossil and nuclear energy), Fort Howard Corp. (a paper manufacturer) and the National Mining Association. Milloy himself was personally registered as a lobbyist for Monsanto Company and the International Food Additives Council. Milloy denies ever lobbying, and in a 1998 email response to his registration as a lobbyist under EOP he wrote:
I do not lobby for ANYONE. Before I became executive director of TASSC, I did some technical consulting for a D.C. firm which had the policy of registering all its employees and consultants as lobbyists (whether or not they lobbied) pursuant to a new law passed in 1995. I am aware of the listing and have asked it to be corrected since I no longer work for that firm.
Milloy and former tobacco executive Tom Borelli run a mutual fund called the Free Enterprise Action Fund (FEAF). The fund has criticised companies that voluntarily adopt high environmental standards. Through the platform of the FEAF, Milloy has criticized a number of other corporations for adopting environmental initiatives:
The FEAF criticized Microsoft for abandoning the use of PVC in its packing materials.
Milloy accused the Business Roundtable, a pro-business organization of CEO's, of being "silent about current threats to business," adding, "Last September, we warned 18 member company CEOs participating in the BRT's 'sustainable growth' initiative to stop wasting corporate resources."
Milloy and Borelli argued that General Electric is harming its shareholders by launching a program to curtail greenhouse gas emissions. They also accused G.E. of ignoring the input of global warming skeptic groups such as the Cato Institute and the Competitive Enterprise Institute in forming their environmental policy.
FEAF has been criticised by investment analyst Chuck Jaffe as being "an advocacy group in search of assets." Jaffe concludes "Strip away the rhetoric, and you're getting a very expensive, underperforming index fund, while Milloy and his partner Thomas Borelli get a platform for raising their pet issues."
Similarly, Daniel Gross, in a Slate magazine article, wrote that FEAF "seems to be a lobbying enterprise masquerading as a mutual fund." Gross noted that Milloy and Tom Borelli, the former head of corporate scientific affairs for Philip Morris, lack any money management experience; he also noted that FEAF had badly underperformed the S&P 500 during its first 10 months of existence. Gross concluded that "...in the short term, it looks like Borelli and Milloy are essentially paying the fund for the privilege of using it as a platform to broadcast their views on corporate governance, global warming, and a host of other issues."
Green Hell: How Environmentalists Plan to Control Your Life and What You Can Do to Stop Them, Regnery Publishing, 2009, ISBN 978-1-59698-585-8
Junk Science Judo: Self-defense Against Health Scares and Scams, Cato Institute, 2001, ISBN 1-930865-12-0
Silencing Science, Cato Institute, 1999, ISBN 1-882577-72-8 (with Michael Gough)
Science Without Sense: The Risky Business of Public Health Research, Cato Institute, 1996, ISBN 1-882577-34-5
Science-Based Risk Assessment: A Piece of the SuperFund Puzzle, National Environmental Policy Institute, 1995, ISBN 0-9647463-0-1
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