Tuesday PSA: Your United Nations at Work!

Your United Nations at Work! Click for the full page.A common theme of DC Comic’s public service ads in the 1950s and ’60s was support for the United Nations. This was from an era when the relationship between the US and the UN was much less contentious than it is now. I thought this was an appropriate ad because it features both Iran and the UN, which have been in the news frequently lately, albeit for vastly different reasons.

Click on the image for the full ad

The four planes representing Iran’s “United Nations Friends” are labeled US, USSR, India, and Pakistan.

Based on when this PSA was written, I suspect the planes are spraying DDT, which — depending on your view of Rachel Carson and Silent Spring — may very well have caused more problems than it solved.

This PSA scores a hat trick and is found in DC comics from December 1950, March 1955, and November 1963. This particular ad was scanned in from Adventure Comics #202 (March 1955) This PSA was written by Jack Schiff with Win Mortimer on art.

More PSAsMore PSAs

8 Responses to “ Tuesday PSA: Your United Nations at Work! ”

  1. We need to believe in a world where the “united nations” (be it the international organization or just the concept of the community of nation-states that went united) do help people all over.

    I need to believe that that is our future.

  2. I like that a) The US got a prop plane full of DDT to Iran in “a few days”, and that b) Nobody bothered to tell the Iranians that they would be spraying that day, probably causing almost as many deaths from direct contact with DDT as the famine would have caused.

  3. Actually, as best I understand, DDT isn’t that harmful to humans in incidental exposure like that. It’s sustained exposure that causes problems. The issue with DDT usage was more the fact that it was used as a broad-spectrum cure without regard to the problems that could cause. In some ways, it’s similar to what we’re facing with antibiotics use, or any other medicine that people regard as “harmless.” We have met the enemy and they are us.

  4. When we realized there were problems with the way we were using antibiotics, we didn’t ban antibiotics — just started trying to use them more wisely. Properly used, DDT also saved lives, not only from famine but also and especially from malaria carried by mosquitos. The DDT ban costs more lives than it saves. The enemy is us, indeed.

  5. Political rightist Henry I. Miller writes about DDT here – http://www.nationalreview.com/comment/miller200509090843.asp – I will take him on faith that he is accurate.

    Another rightist – http://network.nationalpost.com/np/blogs/fpcomment/archive/2009/06/18/junk-science-week-ddt-banned-lifesaver.aspx

    If these people are wrong then we (in the loosest sense as I had nothing to do with it) have done immense harm….

  6. The tone of the post-DDT-ban campaigns referred to in these links reminds me strongly of the abstinence-based campaigns against teenage pregnancy and sexually transmitted diseases (’Mosquitoes: just say No’). Unfortunately many green campaigns have now taken on the same shrill note of moral outrage.

  7. The UN is, on balance, not a force for good in the modern world. DDT is extremely safe for people and the environment if used properly and could save many lives and improve health in the developing world. With it, terrible diseases could be wiped out. We will regret it when tropical diseases get a foothold in the US. (I’m sure Scott can tell us about dengue fever, for example.) It is a sin that DDT is still banned.

    P.S. In 60s and 70s comics didn’t Superman have his own flag at the UN?

  8. Just about anything that could be safe is dangerous if used improperly. Examples include firearms, forks, shovels, automobiles, airplanes, and a free press.

    If I kill someone with aspirin only a dope would go after the pain-killer people and not me…. yet DDT is off the market and politically dead.

    When were green campaigns not shrill? My curriculum in the fifth grade 16 (or so) years ago included stuff about the dangers of overpopulatin nad that we should literally prevent pregnancies or the diaper-crappers will grow up to absorb my share of nature’s resources. Captain Planet tried to teach me that if Tony Stark or Henry Ford accidentally dumped a bin of trash in a yard while creating force fields and automobiles that it was an intentional act.

Leave a Reply