Toxin Toxout: Getting Harmful Chemicals Out of Our Bodies
Bruce Lourie & Rick Smith
University of Queensland Press, 2013
289 pages
The intrepid, and possibly just a little mad, environmental advocates Bruce Lourie and Rick Smith, are up to their old chemical tricks again in Toxin Toxout.
Whereas in Slow Death by Rubber Duck they deliberately exposed themselves, in the spirit of scientific investigation, to toxic chemicals to measure the poisoning dangers that lurk in hundreds of common household products, now they are self-testing various detoxification treatments.
After over-loading with phthalates, parabens, bishphenol A (BPA), triclosan, flame retardants, formaldehyde, toluene, xylene and dozens of other known or potentially toxic synthetic chemicals, the authors (or their volunteer subjects) ran the detox gamut from the benign (eating organic food) to the dramatic (passing out from too-intense sauna sessions).
They drew the line, however, at such horrors as colonic irrigation.
So, what works? Apart from specialised medical interventions (chelation), it is the sensible means of drinking lots of water (preferably filtered) and eating well (preferably dark-coloured organic fruits and vegetables high in anti-oxidants and low in agricultural chemicals) that assist the body鈥檚 natural detoxification systems.
Saunas (for sweating out toxins) and exercise (for reducing the body鈥檚 storage capacity for fat-loving, synthetic chemicals) also help.
On the other hand, the fad diets, foot baths and other pseudo-scientific contenders from the multi-billion-dollar detox industry succeed only in extracting money from your purse, not poisons from your body.
The authors acknowledge, however, that such an individual survival guide is not enough. The industrial-scale chemical tide is too persistent.
They ambitiously call for 鈥渂roader social, cultural and economic change鈥. Less boldly, however, they pin their hopes on the useful but only partial strategies of stricter government regulation, 鈥済reen chemistry鈥 and 鈥済reen consumerism鈥.
Their plugging of 鈥渁ctivist campaigners turned corporate players鈥 in the chemical 鈥済reening鈥 of business betrays a pessimistic 鈥渋f you can鈥檛 beat 鈥榚m, join 鈥榚m鈥 philosophy.
Eliminating the political and economic toxin 鈥 the profit motive 鈥 that poisons capitalist society, however, will require radical, socialist, transformation, not cosmetic refurbishment.
The authors鈥 profound commitment to 鈥減utting public health ahead of large corporate profits鈥 sadly runs up against the very villains 鈥 corporate power and its political protectors 鈥攖hey indicted in Slow Death by Rubber Duck.
Like many film sequels, Lourie and Smith haven鈥檛 quite matched their initial achievement, though there is still much to learn from in their useful, and enjoyable, second outing.