Rachel Carson — "It is not my intention to create hysteria, but to awaken people to the dangers t…"
It is not my intention to create hysteria, but to awaken people to the dangers that exist.
It is not my intention to create hysteria, but to awaken people to the dangers that exist.
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"The public must decide whether it wishes to continue on the present road, and it can do so only when in full possession of the facts."
"The most serious threat to mankind comes from within, from our own arrogance and ignorance."
"I am haunted by the thought of what we are doing to the earth."
"I hope that my book will awaken a sense of responsibility in all who read it."
"The sea, once it casts its spell, holds one in its net of wonder forever."
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The speaker distinguishes between alarming people needlessly and informing them of real, documented risks. The goal is not panic but informed awareness — the difference between fear-mongering and responsible truth-telling. When genuine dangers exist, silence is complicity. Waking people up to evidence-based threats is a civic and moral duty, even when the message is uncomfortable or unwelcome by those with vested interests in denial.
Carson, a marine biologist and science writer, published Silent Spring in 1962 documenting how DDT and pesticides were decimating bird populations and ecosystems. The chemical industry attacked her as alarmist and hysterical — partly exploiting sexist tropes against a woman scientist. She died of breast cancer in 1964 before seeing her full impact. This quote is her direct rebuttal: she was a rigorous researcher sharing documented evidence, not a fear-monger.
The early 1960s were defined by post-WWII faith in industrial chemistry — DDT was a celebrated breakthrough, and questioning corporate science was treated as anti-progress. The Cold War amplified pressure to appear rational; women raising environmental concerns were easily dismissed as emotional. Carson wrote as a lone scientific voice before any EPA existed. Her work directly triggered the modern environmental movement, the EPA's founding in 1970, and DDT's US ban in 1972.
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