Willi Nolan re: Forbes "Tampon Terrorism" Article (2024)

Well folks, this one is real. Willi Nolan is a friend of mine who sells
healthy tampons. I thought you would be interested in this story. Follow
the links and check out the original Forbes article to which she is
referring..

Joe: Will you forward it to Debra Learner, i think its up her alley.
Jake: Nicole> ditto

Tampon terrorism(http://www.forbes.com/forbes/99/0517/6310170a.htm),

[NOTE: The following message has been sent to inform women of the many
libellous comments made about my work and myself in a recent Forbes article
entitled "Tampon Terrorism." I am concerned about this blatantly abusive
media manipulation and attack on my (and U.S. Congresswoman Carolyn
Maloney's) personal integrity, and seek to inform those who have indicated
their interest in this work. I hope that this initiative will result in
women taking action on my behalf where I have little power to do so. If
this subject does not interest you, please delete it, and accept my
apologies for any inconvenience. Willi Nolan]

May 13, 1999

Hi,

It was interesting to me to learn about the Forbes article. I especially
noted the fact that the writer pointed only at one little company, i.e,
person, and not the growing plethora of sites (and the other natural tampon
companies) that provide information about tampon health risks.

WHY ME? I guess we must be getting a little too effective at getting the
truth out. No one's come around to launch a lawsuit against US, so I guess
that we're still on track. Should I also note that, of these others, I am
the only one with brown skin?

FYI, the "journalist," Michael Fumento, works full time for the Hudson
Institute, which apparently gets hired out to "produce" articles for
companies in national publications. He has a website too:
http://www.fumento.com. I wonder which company hired him to write that
"Tampon Terrorism" article?

Fumento's also apparently been known to write articles that spell out why
dioxin is not harmful, that no veterans are really sick from Agent Orange,
and that second-hand smoke is not dangerous. His web site, "Mythbusters 'R
Us," notes his expertise in dispelling "myths" including An "epidemic" of
racially-driven black church arsons swept the South, and well-known hazards
such as airbags; breast implants; pesticides; pollution; Gulf War Syndrome
- he actually says that these being health hazards are myths! The site
reads "Mr. Fumento has built a solid reputation for busting icons, striking
fear into the hearts of scare-mongers, and distinguishing the risks we
grossly exaggerate from those we ignore at great peril."

Guess I'm becoming an icon :-) Or I wonder, maybe he chose me because I
also work full time with Dr. Rosalie Bertell (www.
globaleduc.org/iicph.htm), an internationally recognized champion of
communities at risk from exposure to hazardous substances, including the
people of Chernobyl, Bhopa,l India, Love Canal and yes, the victims of GULF
WAR SYMDROME (who were exposed to depleted uranium and never tested for
it!)!

He called our office identifying himself as a freelance writer, and accused
us of spreading the "EMAIL" (written by a biology student) that's been
going around for about three years and encouraging women to become
hysterical about tampons. HYSTERICAL? - isn't that just so patriarchal to
say something like that, as if women have no minds of their own. He writes
in the longer version of the article, "Nolan and Maloney also invoke the
horror of toxic shock syndrome." INVOKE? Is he calling us witches too? Get
a life, Mikey! I hear that a lot of women have been calling "those" tampon
companies, asking questions that aren't answered accurately or completely.
Fumenta writes that Proctor & Gamble (Tampax) is getting over 500 calls a
month, and that a Kimberly-Clark spokeswoman calls my approach "guerilla
tactics." We've nicknamed him "Pimento."

All kidding aside, this seems to be a classic example of industry
manipulation of the media that results in denying information and leaving
women at unnecessary risk. I wonder why they placed it in Forbes? Maybe the
shareholders have [finally] begun to ask questions about tampons. I hope
that they also begin to demand that these products are made to be safer for
women and the Earth.

I'm also hoping that women will help us out, and spread the word about this
personal attack. Just this morning, I got an encouraging message this
morning from an OB/GYN Nurse practitioner, who's been researching cervical
dysplasia/cancer. I humbly and gratefully provide her comments: >"It seems
that you are one of our Women's health pioneers and we thank you for your
interest > and leadership."

I did not set out to be a pioneer, just to provide the best alternative I
could find to toxic products. We do not, as even "Pimento" acknowledges,
make much money for a company that's been around for 7 years. I'm told that
we should sue, but wouldn't that take our time away from what's always been
important - doing business with compassion, addressing the human and
environmental costs first? We are proud to know that we are making a
difference in the way that people look at the products and companies that
they give money to.

Maybe responsible journalists could investigate and expose the practices of
Michael Fumento, organizations like the Hudson Institute and those that
hire them.

I hope and pray that you will take the information in this message and use
your wisdom to expose the corruption that's around. This small brown woman
could also use some positive thoughts of protection from destructive
influences, such as the ones behind the article. I do feel somewhat
vulnerable, except to know that there are people out there who appreciate
and support our work.

Thanks for listening.

Sisterly,

Willi Nolan

Messages from senders:

Brenda wrote:

This story, >has been sent to you by Brenda <snip>.

---------------------------------------------------------
Interesting....

Ruth wrote:

I thought that you might be interested in this link. Not sure if you have
seen the article in Forbes magazine yet (May 17,1999 issue; Tampon
Terrorism)..... But I found it online......

http://www.fumento.com

WISN News is mentioned in the longer version of the story that did not get
printed in the Forbes articles.

--------------------------
here's the Forbes/Fumento article found at "www.fumento.com" on May 13,
1999:
--------------------------

Tampon Terrorism

New Technique in Marketing: Using the Web to Spread Lies about Your
Competition

Forbes Magazine, May 17, 1999
Copyright 1999 by Forbes Magazine

Terra Femme's site encourages women to spread a terrifying message that
competitors' tampons may be horribly dangerous.

Fear is just a sales pitch that has been used for decades to flog
everything from alarm systems to underarm deodorant. But just think how it
can be used on the Internet to whip up paranoia -- and get people to open
their wallets.

The Net myth is the computer age's version of the urban legend, like the
one about alligators prowling the sewers of Manhattan. Sent out as e-mail,
posted in newsgroups or on Web pages, Net myths can reach thousands of
people a day and multiply like viruses.

As stock touts and shorts have managed to both lure and spook investors on
the Web, a little Toronto-based outfit called Bio Business International
has already become quite adept at spreading myths through its Web site. Bio
Business markets only one product -- 100% cotton, nonchlorine bleached
tampons under the brand name Terra Femme. Among other things, the site
encourages women to spread a terrifying message that tampons made by U.S.
competitors may be horribly dangerous.

Specifically, the site warns that tampons made with rayon or that contain
dioxin -- a by-product of some bleaching processes -- can be harmful.
"Dioxin is now PROVEN to cause many kinds of cancer in women and men along
with with birth defects, and to disrupt the natural hormones in our
bodies," the Terra Femme site says.

[Image] A little bit of terror built into every tampon

Bio Business also invokes repeatedly the horror of toxic shock syndrome, a
potentially fatal bacterial infection. The claim: 100% cotton tampons are
safer than rayon or rayon blends when it comes to protecting women from
toxic shock.

Wilhelmina (Willi) Nolan, a 40-ish, longtime environmental and social
activist, is Bio Business' founder and president. She has an ally in
Representative Carolyn B. Maloney (D-N.Y.). Maloney has introduced
legislation that would, require the federal government to test menstrual
pads and tampons, even though it is common practice for companies to test
their own products,whether they be drugs, medical devices or cars.

[Image] Rep. Carolyn B. Maloney, D-N.Y.

Maloney, in her press releases and on her own Web site, asks if tampons are
"the equivalent of a ticking time bomb, capable of increasing women's risks
for several life-threatening or fertility-threatening diseases." She had
Nolan at one of her press conferences announcing the bill.

The problem is that very little of this bleating is accurate. Animal
testing of dioxin has shown an incredible range of toxicity. For example,
it knocks over guinea pigs like tenpins, but it takes 500 times as much to
have the same effect on hamsters. No dramatic health effects have been
shown in human studies including those of Vietnam vets who sprayed Agent
Orange, a dioxin-containing defoliant. A continuing study of these men
finds them as healthy as the general population.

"Every year the case becomes weaker and weaker that dioxin causes cancer in
human beings," says Michael Gough, a scientist with the Competitive
Enterprise Institute in Washington, D.C. who has studied dioxin for
decades. He adds that evidence dioxin causes other noncancerous problems in
humans (other than a form of acne) ranges from speculative to nonexistent.

Never mind that, according to the Food & Drug Administration, no U.S.
tamponmaker uses a bleaching method that creates dioxin as a by-product. No
matter either that in tests ordered up by Kimberly-Clark, a leading
tamponmaker, even Nolan's tampons were found to have trace amounts of
dioxin. In a survey of contamination rates, Terra Femme came out somewhere
in the middle of a range from 0.2 parts per trillion to 10 parts per
trillion.

Explanation? Dioxin is a combustion by-product of many materials. It goes
into the air and lands on everything. Accurate-enough testing will find it
on everything.

What about the toxic shock scare? According to the March-April 1999 issue
of FDA Consumer: "There is no evidence [that] rayon fibers in tampons cause
toxic shock syndrome."

Nolan wants to hear none of this. She told Forbes that a Swedish firm has
done dioxin testing on Terra Femme tampons. Bio Business' marketing head,
Roni Bregman, said the results can't be released because they are
"proprietary information." Yet earlier Nolan had promised to deliver them.

Of course, the Terra Femme Net myths continue, enabling Bio Business to
sell a box of 20 tampons for $5.49, $2 more than Kimberly's Kotex or
Procter & Gamble's Tampax. The Terra Femme brand is hard to find in stores,
but you can order it directly from the company if you are willing to pay
shipping and handling.

Given the distribution problems for its product, Bio Business probably
isn't about to siphon away a large part of P&G's and Kimberly's market, but
it can do a fair amount of damage to their reputations. P&G spokeswoman
Elaine Plummer says her company has been getting up to 550 complaints a
month through letters, e-mails and phone calls. "I am horrified to learn
via e-mail that the tampons I have been using for 33 years contain dioxin,"
reads one message.

Still, if the Internet provides weapons to people like the Terra Femme
tampon terrorists, it can help expose them as well. The ability of anybody
to read messages posted in a newsgroup allowed this author to discover
that Roni Bregman provided aid to feminists preparing a petition to form a
boycott of Terra Femme's U.S. competitors. One was signed, "In health,
Roni, who believes more and more that the best way to deal with
environmental problems is to directly attack the products that create
them." Especially when the attacks are good for her business?

------------ end of Forbes/Fumento article --------------

But my daughter, when I told her of our topic [cancer] and my difficulty
with it, said "Tell them about how you're
never really a whole person if you remain
silent, because there's always that one
little piece inside of you that wants to be
spoken out, and if you keep ignoring it, it
gets madder and madder, and hotter and
hotter, and if you don't speak out, one day
it will just up and punch you in the mouth."
Audre Lorde, Cancer Journals

==================================================================
Terra Femme web site favorites:
"The Politics of Tampons" <http://www.biobiz.com/terrafemme/uspoltam.htm>
Health Info & References: <http://www.biobiz.com/terrafemme/health.htm>
Ordering: <http://www.biobiz.com/terrafemme/ordering.htm>

**SUPPORT WOMEN-RUN ETHICAL BUSINESS NOW! **

------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Willi Nolan re: Forbes "Tampon Terrorism" Article (2024)
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