Tag:
Government Failures
AI and I: Forget About the Low-Fat Fiasco That Created the Sickest Nation on Earth… Here Are 10 Other Disasters Promoted by Your Government
written by Carla Gericke
Governments getting it wrong—big time, with real consequences—isn’t rare. Here’s a list of 10 cases where U.S. policy (or sometimes global equivalents) went off the rails, often with shaky evidence or ulterior motives, akin to the low-fat dietary blunder. Casual apologies? Rarely. Let’s roll through them:
- Prohibition (1920-1933)
- What: Banned alcohol to curb crime and immorality.
- Why Wrong: Bootlegging exploded, organized crime (e.g., Al Capone) thrived, and deaths from tainted liquor spiked. Tax revenue tanked during the Depression.
- Fallout: Repealed by the 21st Amendment. No formal “sorry”—FDR just said it was time to move on.
- Scale: Economic hit estimated at $11 billion in lost taxes (hundreds of billions today).
- Tuskegee Syphilis Study (1932-1972)
- What: U.S. Public Health Service let hundreds of Black men with syphilis go untreated to study the disease’s progression.
- Why Wrong: Denied them penicillin after it became standard care, causing deaths and suffering.
- Fallout: Exposed in 1972; Clinton apologized in 1997, with a $10 million settlement. Too late for most victims.
- Scale: 600+ men affected, many died or passed it to families.
- Vietnam War Draft Escalation (1960s-1970s)
- What: Drafted millions based on the Domino Theory—that Vietnam’s fall would topple Southeast Asia to communism.
- Why Wrong: Overestimated Soviet influence; Ho Chi Minh was more nationalist than pawn. Cost 58,000+ U.S. lives, untold Vietnamese.
- Fallout: No apology—Nixon shifted to “Vietnamization” and called it quits. Public trust cratered.
- Scale: $738 billion (adjusted) spent, millions dead or displaced.
- War on Drugs (1971-Present)
- What: Nixon’s crackdown on drugs, ramped up under Reagan, aimed to end addiction and crime.
- Why Wrong: Mass incarceration (2 million+ behind bars today), racial disparities, and drug use barely budged. Cartels grew richer.
- Fallout: Ongoing—some states legalize weed, but no federal “oops” yet.
- Scale: Trillions spent, millions jailed, overdose deaths hit 100,000+ yearly by 2020s.
- Cigarette Safety Claims (1950s-1960s)
- What: Government lagged on regulating tobacco despite early evidence of cancer links; Surgeon General’s 1964 report was decades late.
- Why Wrong: FDA ignored studies (e.g., 1930s German research) under pressure from tobacco lobbyists.
- Fallout: Millions died—lung cancer became epidemic. No apology; just warning labels eventually.
- Scale: 480,000 deaths/year today trace back to that delay.
- WMDs in Iraq (2003)
- What: Bush admin claimed Saddam had weapons of mass destruction to justify invasion.
- Why Wrong: No WMDs found—intel was exaggerated or fabricated (e.g., “yellowcake” uranium myth).
- Fallout: 4,500+ U.S. deaths, 100,000+ Iraqi civilian casualties, $2 trillion spent. No official sorry—Bush shrugged it off.
- Scale: Destabilized Middle East, birthed ISIS.
- Japanese Internment (1942-1945)
- What: FDR locked up 120,000 Japanese Americans over baseless “security” fears post-Pearl Harbor.
- Why Wrong: No evidence of disloyalty; racism and panic ruled. Ruined lives and businesses.
- Fallout: Reagan signed a 1988 apology and $1.6 billion in reparations—rare mea culpa.
- Scale: 120,000 interned, generational trauma.
- Thalidomide Approval (1950s-1960s)
- What: FDA didn’t approve it, but globally, governments greenlit this sedative for pregnant women, ignoring risks.
- Why Wrong: Caused 10,000+ babies born with severe defects (e.g., missing limbs). U.S. dodged the worst thanks to whistleblower Frances Kelsey.
- Fallout: No U.S. apology (didn’t need one), but Europe’s response was slow regret, not formal amends.
- Scale: Global disaster—10,000+ affected kids.
- Lead in Gasoline (1920s-1980s)
- What: EPA and predecessors allowed leaded gas despite knowing it poisoned air, brains, and kids.
- Why Wrong: Bowed to auto and oil industries (GM, DuPont) despite 1920s studies showing harm.
- Fallout: Phased out by 1996; no apology—just quiet regulation. Lead’s legacy lingers in urban kids’ IQ drops.
- Scale: Millions exposed, billions in health costs.
- Asbestos Regulation Delay (1900s-1970s)
- What: Government ignored asbestos risks (cancer, lung disease) despite decades of evidence, favoring industry.
- Why Wrong: Mining and construction lobbies stalled bans; OSHA didn’t act decisively until 1971.
- Fallout: Still legal in some U.S. uses—100,000+ deaths linked. No sorry, just lawsuits.
- Scale: 40,000 new cases yearly even now.
Pattern and Apologies
These flops often stem from bad science, industry pressure, or political expediency—like the low-fat fiasco. Apologies? Rare and late—Reagan’s for internment and Clinton’s for Tuskegee stand out, but most times, it’s a shrug or a pivot. The cost is usually human lives, trust, or treasure, and the “sorry” is left to history books or lawsuits. Want me to expand on any of these?