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Episode 28 — Wartime Production, Peacetime Deaths

Episode 28 — Wartime Production, Peacetime Deaths

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Episode 28 — Wartime Production, Peacetime DeathsWhen World War II ended, asbestos production should have declined. Instead, U.S. consumption increased 107% — from 343,000 tons in 1945 to 709,000 tons by 1955. The post-war housing boom put asbestos into 40 million American homes: floor tiles with 40–70% asbestos backing, joint compound at 3–6%, popcorn ceilings, roofing, siding. Meanwhile, the industry voted 6 to 2 against studying whether their product caused cancer because it would “stir up a hornet’s nest.”Episode 28 follows the paper trail from the 1947 Asbestos Textile Institute vote through the Braun–Truan report fraud to the suppression of Richard Doll’s groundbreaking 1955 British study — revealing how corporations expanded their market into suburban America while burying evidence that would take 30 years to surface in courtrooms.Key TakeawaysThe 1947 ATI vote. March 1947. The Asbestos Textile Institute voted 6–2 against commissioning an epidemiological study on lung cancer. The written reason: it would “stir up a hornet’s nest and put the whole industry under suspicion.” This was twelve years after Sumner Simpson’s 1935 letter: “the less said about asbestos, the better off we are.” Same companies. Same strategy.The Braun–Truan fraud. 1957: The Quebec Asbestos Mining Association funds a study through the Industrial Hygiene Foundation. The private report to the Mining Association finds a miner with asbestosis has “a greater likelihood of developing cancer of the lung.” The published version? That finding is deleted. Dr. Rutherford Johnstone’s 1960 textbook cites Braun–Truan as evidence asbestosis does not predispose to lung cancer. A textbook teaching the fraudulent version.Levittown’s 17,447 homes. Built 1947–1951. Every structure came with asbestos siding, asbestos roofing, nine-by-nine floor tiles (99% likely to contain asbestos by the “Rule of Nines”), and joint compound with 3–6% asbestos content. The marketing called it “fireproof.” They just didn’t mention it would kill you thirty years later.The shipyards that never closed. Brooklyn Navy Yard operated until June 30, 1966 — 9,500 workers at closure, 21 years after the war. Charleston Naval Shipyard: April 1, 1996 — 51 years after V-J Day. Workers exposed in the 1980s won’t develop mesothelioma until 2010, 2020, 2030. The clock is still ticking.Why unions stayed silent. 1947’s Taft–Hartley Act outlawed closed shops, banned solidarity strikes, required union officers to sign anti-communist affidavits. The CIO expelled eleven unions — roughly one million members — between 1949 and 1950. The left-led unions that had been most militant on workplace conditions were gone. The “postwar accord” ceded workplace safety to management in exchange for wages and benefits.The perfect crime math. Latency period for mesothelioma: 20 to 60 years. Median: 32 to 38 years. A worker exposed at Brooklyn in 1943 wouldn’t develop symptoms until 1973. The executives who suppressed the 1947 study? Retired. Or dead. Documents buried in corporate archives. No connection visible between the cough and the pipe insulated thirty years earlier.3,000 applications. By 1958, asbestos appeared in approximately 3,000 products. Among them: Kent cigarette filters (30% crocidolite asbestos, 1952–1956, marketed as “greatest health protection in history”) and the fake snow falling on Dorothy in The Wizard of Oz — chrysotile asbestos.Featured at Danziger & De LlanoAnna Jackson, Director of Patient Support at Danziger & De Llano. Nearly fifteen years helping mesothelioma families navigate diagnosis and next steps. She lost her own husband to cancer. She knows what this conversation costs.Paul Danziger, founding partner. Over 30 years of mesothelioma litigation experience. The firm has recovered nearly $2 billion for families affected by asbestos. If you or someone you love is facing a mesothelioma diagnosis, trust funds, VA benefits, and lawsuit settlements may all be available.ResourcesMesothelioma help: dandell.comEpisode notes and sources: mesotheliomalawyersnearme.com/podcast/episode-28-wartime-production-peacetime-deaths/Full transcript: wikimesothelioma.com/Asbestos_Podcast_EP28_TranscriptPrevious episode: EP27 — The Women of the ShipyardsAsbestos: A Conspiracy 4,500 Years in the Making — 52 episodes tracing asbestos from ancient pottery to the 2024 EPA ban. Produced by Danziger & De Llano.Next: Episode 29 — The Shipyard Generation. December 1960. J.C. Wagner publishes in the British Journal of Industrial Medicine. Mesothelioma. A cancer no one knew existed. They knew it existed. Now everyone else would too.Asbestos: A Conspiracy 4,500 Years in the Making is sponsored by Danziger & De Llano Mesothelioma Law Firm, a nationwide practice with over 30 years of experience and nearly $2 billion recovered for asbestos victims. If you or someone you love has been diagnosed with mesothelioma, ...
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