Growing
up in mosquito-laden New Orleans, one of the periodic excitements in the
neighborhood was the arrival of the fogging trucks. They would travel slowly
down the street, spraying a fog of DDT. The truck’s appearance on the street
was the excuse for an impromptu parade – 20 or 20 of us would run for our bikes
and follow the fog in the truck’s wake.
It
was the late 1950s, before Rachel Carson and the environmental movement, before
thalidomide, a time when America believed it itself and in technology. Only
later would we come to understand that technology is a two-edged sword. It can
bring great good; it can also bring unintended and unexpected consequences. The
fire of
Prometheus
brought warmth and light; it also brought destruction. Technology is never
neutral.
Jeannine
Hall Gailey grew up in one of the great centers of technology in America – Oak
Ridge, Tennessee. Like its sister site at Los Alamos, New Mexico, Oak Ridge was
a focus of America’s atomic energy program. Gailey’s father was a professor at
the University of Tennessee, and a consultant at Oak Ridge.
Photograph by Derek Quantrell via Public
Domain Pictures. Used with permission.
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