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Corporate greed and government acquiescence have created one of the great environmental crises of our lifetime.


This week on Green Street, Patti and Doug talk about the lawsuit that could bankrupt Greenpeace, the new study linking PFAS in drinking water with increased rates of cancer, and what’s really in that gum you’re chewing. Then author and investigative reporter Sharon Udasin talks about the new book she has co-authored, “Poisoning the Well - How Forever Chemicals Contaminated America,” which details the corporate greed and government acquiescence that has led to one of our greatest environmental and public health crises of our time. 


The Poisoning of America with Sharon Udasin


Links from the Interview

Link to Sharon's book "Poisoning the Well" https://islandpress.org/events/sharon-udasin-poisoning-well


Exposure to "forever chemicals" in drinking water linked to cancer: https://factor.niehs.nih.gov/2025/2/science-highlights/pfas-water-cancer


 
 
 

Delivering fluoride through public water supplies was never a good idea. Now we find out, it lowers IQ in children.


This week on Green Street, Patti and Doug talk about Trump’s environmental agenda, the alarming national drought, how AI is creating mountains of e-waste, and the fact that it's raining PFAS chemicals in Miami (and everywhere else!) Then Dr. Paul Connett, founder of the Fluoride Action Network, talks about the dangers of adding fluoride to public drinking water, new U.S. government studies showing that exposure to fluoride lowers IQ in children, and the recent court decision ordering the EPA to regulate the toxic substance. 


Green Street - Paul Connett - Podcast


Links from the Interview

Link to the Fluoride Action Network: https://fluoridealert.org/



More information about fluoride: https://www.grassrootsinfo.org/flouride

Links from the News



 
 
 

Updated: Jul 13, 2022


On this edition of Green Street, Patti and Doug speak with Vito Buonsante of IPEN (International Pollutants Elimination Network) about his work representing people who are often hit hardest by pollution but lack the resources to fight back against big corporations and Western countries who are causing the problem.




 
 
 
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