This Poor poor child, for shame Congress! |
For Christmas this year, Congress gave the nation's urban children a gift that will keep on giving -- a 94 percent cut
in funds for lead-poisoning prevention. Once a child is poisoned by
toxic lead, permanent brain damage reduces I.Q., lowers grades in
school, and diminishes self-control. This, in turn, can lead to
frustration, a sense of failure, impulsiveness, aggression, and, for
some, potentially even violence, crime, and prison. (More on lead and
prisons in a moment.)
Lead is a soft, grey metal with many practical uses, from bathroom pipes to bullets. Unfortunately, it is highly toxic to humans. Despite eons of knowledge about
the toxicity of lead, during most of the 20th century Congress allowed
the paint and gasoline industries to lace their products with millions
of tons of the stuff, which of course ended up in the environment where
much of it still remains available to poison unsuspecting children.
Urban neighborhoods are full of lead today, in soil and in paint flaking
off old buildings. Low-income families are hardest hit because they
tend to live in old buildings poorly maintained.
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