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The Baby Formula Shortage Reveals Our Terrible Attitude Toward Science
It’s killing us.
It’s here.
SARS. Avian flu. Monkeypox. Fascism. Shortages. Climate disasters. I guess we thought it would never get this bad.
Some of us are still out there pretending everything’s okay. They’re even minimizing the baby formula shortage, completely ignoring how common it was for infants to starve before its invention. True, children died all the time before the scientific miracles of the 20th century. Child mortality hovered somewhere between 20 and 30 percent during the middle ages. It stayed near 15 percent all the way through the Victorian era.
Parents used to treat their children with a cold indifference that would stun most of us. They barely spoke to them. They almost never hugged or kissed them. Kids started working at the age of four, often in dangerous jobs. So when older generations mock and ridicule “experts” and “scientists,” it strikes me as spoiled and entitled. They grew up and raised kids right as these miracle inventions were hitting the markets.
They think they know what it was like.
They don’t.
As Carla Cevasco writes in The Atlantic, baby formula is a true miracle that society has taken for granted, even disparaged recently as…