"Ignore Dire Warnings," the New York Post reviews The End of Doom
Remember the great penis scare of the 1990s?

As a convenience to Reason readers I am posting various reviews of my new book, The End of Doom: Environmental Renewal in the Twenty-first Century. Below is the review from the New York Post:
Ignore the dire warnings about our lives because it's just hysteria
By Kyle Smith
August 15, 2015 | 4:05pm
Remember the great penis scare of the 1990s?
Due to environmental toxins, sperm counts were in free fall, and the world was doomed.
Scandinavian researchers discovered that a nearly 50% decline in sperm counts had taken place over the last 50 years, probably because of "endocrine disruptors" that are everywhere in our poisonous, chemical-infested modern world, and Greenpeace used the study for fundraising under the slogan, "You're not half the man your father was."
Moreover, the penis was suddenly at increased risk of deformity: It was reported that there had been an explosion in instances of hypospadias, a common birth defect in which the urethral opening is in the wrong place on the penis.
Since we have to be terrified of something at all times, new fears have sprung up to replace the old ones.
Except none of the above was happening. Scary sperm-count studies have gone limp. A meta-review of 35 sperm-quality studies conducted in 2013 found that eight studies encompassing a total of 18,109 men found a decline in sperm quality, whereas 21 studies involving 112,386 men showed either no change or an increase in sperm quality.
Newspaper editors and TV producers quietly let the issue fade away without apology. Oh, and a 2009 report on the hypospadias data concluded, "the bulk of evidence refutes claims for an increase in hypospadias rates."
So much for the great dong doom dirge.

The penis scare took its place alongside the DDT scare (banned in 1972, it was later found to be as carcinogenic as coffee by the International Agency for Research on Cancer), the overpopulation scare (in fact, the population is leveling out and will actually start to decline in about 50 years), the famine scare (despite a doubling of the world population since 1968, world food production has tripled, and today both Pakistan and India have so much grain that they export some).
But since we have to be terrified of something at all times, new fears have sprung up to replace the old ones: Now we're worried about global warming, genetically modified food, vaccines and that old standby, cancer. (Cancer rates have fallen precipitously, while survival rates are way up.)
Meanwhile, as science journalist Ronald Bailey writes in "The End of Doom: Environmental Renewal in the Twenty-first Century" (Thomas Dunne Books), massive improvements in virtually all areas of human endeavor have simply gone ignored.
If there were a musical theme to what's actually been happening to the world in the last 50 years, it wouldn't be "A hard rain's a gonna fall" but "Getting so much better all the time."
Bailey has been trying to talk humanity off the ledge for more than two decades, and people won't forgive him for it. When, in 1992, he brought to his editor an idea for a sober, evidence-based book about how humanity copes with environmental challenges, the editor replied regretfully, "Ron, we'll publish your book and we'll both make some money. But I want to tell you that if you had brought me a book predicting the end of the world, I could have made you a rich man."
Environmentalist groups are, of course, in the same business as the folks who brought you the "Saw" movies. Their fundraising depends on it, and the media rarely go back to fact-check past predictions, instead blustering ahead with the next dire warning.
Bailey doesn't claim that global challenges simply resolve themselves — although, as we have seen, some scares were fictitious, based on junk science to begin with.
The doomsayers simply never account for the role of human cooperation and ingenuity in confronting challenges. Remember the hole in the ozone layer? Chlorofluorocarbon refrigerants apparently floated up to the atmosphere and were eroding the protective ozone layer over Antarctica.
Some scares were fictitious, based on junk science to begin with.
Bailey believes apocalyptic forecasts were off-base, but after an international treaty phased out the CFCs, French researchers reported in 2013 that the ozone layer is recovering.
So will global warming, a much more complicated issue than CFCs, be resolved by cooperation or ingenuity? Ask yourself which science has seen more breakthroughs in the last few decades — political science or technology.
Politicians issue fatuous warnings about the dangers of global warming, which they vow to combat with even more absurd fantasies about immediately de-carbonizing the economy.
Back in 2008, Al Gore urged America to "commit to producing 100% of our electricity" from renewables within 10 years. It's seven years later, and solar, geothermal and wind energy are providing 5% of our power.
Renewables will start to take over when their costs fall below the price of fossil-fuel based energy. It's as simple as that. Solar energy, on current trends, could be as cheap as $24 per megawatt hour in a decade. That is far cheaper than the forecasts for fossil fuel costs.
Stanford tech guru and entrepreneur Vivek Wadhwa said last year that "there is little doubt that we are heading into an era of unlimited and almost free clean energy" thanks largely to the coming breakthroughs in solar.
For climate-change hysteria, that would be catastrophically good news. Bailey doesn't wholly share Wadhwa's optimism. But he adds, "Wagering against human ingenuity has always been a bad bet."
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PEAK DOOM REACHED
WE MUST CLOSE THE DOOM GAP
BUT WHERE ARE THE ALTERNATIVE SOURCES OF DOOM?
*hyperventilates*
Fear not. JackandAce will be along shortly to quench your DOOM! thirst.
Back to the mud hut, horse transport and candle based lighting for you!
Here.
Doom on my mac? Don't mind if I do(om)!
Mexican immigrants, duh.
(That's a joke!)
THAT'S NO JOKE!! #MAKEMURCAGREATAGAIN!! #TRUMP2016
/^^THAT'S a joke
DEY TUK ER JERBS!!111!!!!!!
*busts in like the Kool-Aid Man*
You rang?
Excellent. Hop in the harness and we'll get the pumps attached.
THIS IS MY NEW FETISH!
We should have Ron Bailey discuss penises more often.
Meanwhile at Salon... 10 things you always wanted to know about penises but were too afraid to ask.
+1 Oh Yeah!
This could mean doomageddon.
We're all......DOOMED
Remember the great penis scare of the 1990s?
Heh. I wonder if any reviews of any of Rick Steves travel books start off with a reference to penis scares.
This book, I might just have to buy it.
"The penis mightier, Alex."
+1 Anal bum cover
+1 Jap / Anus Relations
I'll take WhoRe ads for $200, Alex.
"The Rapists" was my favorite.
Only massive government action can stop the rising seas! Repent now ye sinners and kneel before the power of the state!
Scandinavian researchers discovered that a nearly 50% decline in sperm counts had taken place over the last 50 years, probably because of "endocrine disruptors" that are everywhere in our poisonous, chemical-infested modern world, and Greenpeace used the study for fundraising under the slogan, "You're not half the man your father was."
50% of young Brits 'not completely heterosexual' ? study
In other words, kids who were gestating from 1990 to 1996.
CORRELATION'D!
The "traditional boundaries of sexuality" in British culture mostly concern how deep upperclassmen can thrust when breaking-in new boarding school plebes.
Hey! I trying to do junk science here! [bangs hand on HM's car hood]
Junk Science is to be conducted on Mondays in the space designated! Move along, now!
*blows whistle, gestures*
I guess research into penis disorders could be referred to as 'junk science'.
How did this post go uncommended?
Everyone's a little gay.
I was told that accepting a blowjob from a man was not gay.
Especially the English.
The Royal Navy is all sodomy, rum, and the lash for reason, you know.
And I suppose a breakdown by sex isn't provided because that's "fluid" too? Or maybe just no dudes took part.
Well, its easy (and, crucially, fashionable these days) to claim to be bi or gay or fluid or whatever.
The real question isn't "Do you want people to think you're all transgressive and shit". Its "have you ever engaged in sexual activity with someone who wasn't a member of the opposite sex, and if so, how often and how good was it for you?"
Ron - reading the book now! I am quite enjoying the fresh air!
Say Hi to Charlottesville for me - I miss the Hook now that I am living the Calgary.
How is 100% 'green energy' going to power all cars ,heavy trucks ,farm tractors and ships at sea? Let's see those battery powered container ships,plans and John Deer tractors.
Go long on extension cords!
*adds geen dye to gasoline*
Welp - my John Deere's all set, anyway.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GEStsLJZhzo
the great dong doom dirge
An new Warty Hugeman and the Doomcock of Doom adventure?
I'm picturing that being illustrated in the same style as "Dora the Exporer".
Warty: Hola, Doomcock horde! *waves*
Doomcock Horde: HOLA, Warty!! *waves back*
Can you say "prolapse?"
?Puedes decir "prolapso?"
the great dong doom dirge
An new Warty Hugeman and the Doomcock of Doom adventure?
You'd rip open your stitches and die, dude.
I had assumed there's always some tearing involved.
...if not outright rending asunder. Frightening, it is.
the great dong doom dirge
What, the Vietnamese are devaluing their currency?
Kyle seems to think juvenile, lowbrow....
(looks at NY POST masthead)
oh.
1992. That was close to the peak of the "By the year 2000 (insert forecast of doom)."
I got the free book. Very interesting and enjoyable to read so far. Nice work, Ron.
Ahem. Free?
Oh, shit, did I give away the secret?
I think because I gave some money to the Reason foundation I got a post card in the mail telling me how to get the book for free. Sometimes it pays to inspect your junk mail.
Actually, I don't - but I guess that finally explains the multiple episodes of Seinfeld revolving around the theme of sperm count and/or knocking up a female.
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I also remember that the Y-Chromosome was rotting. I recall people stating things like "Within 10-100 generations, we won't have men!" in shock. Of course, when you point out that 10-100 generations means anything from a couple hundred to a couple thousand years, they get less shocked.
Ironically, they've also been flummoxed by an unexplained pause.
Well, all I can say is, do NOT do a GIS for "great penis scare".
Dude looks like an old Harry Potter!
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