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== '''<big>Michael H. Brown</big>''' ==
== '''<big>Michael H. Brown</big>''' ==
Michael Harold Brown is a Catholic author/journalist/speaker/and website owner in the United States. As a secular journalist, Mr. Brown exposed the [[Love Canal]] environmental toxic waste crisis in his hometown of Niagara Falls, writing dozens of articles, for which he was nominated for three [[Pulitzer Prize|Pulitzer prizes.]] The Love Canal crisis created many controversies. His work appeared in publications such as [[The Atlantic Monthly]], [[The New York Times Magazine]],<ref>{{Cite news |last=Brown |first=Michael H. |date=1979-01-21 |title=LOVE CANAL, U.S.A. |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1979/01/21/archives/love-canal-usa-love-canal-usa.html |access-date=2024-05-06 |work=The New York Times |language=en-US |issn=0362-4331}}</ref> [[Reader's Digest]], [[Science Digest|Science Digest,]] [[Discovery, Inc.|Discover]], [[New York (magazine)|New York]], [[Saturday Review (U.S. magazine)|Saturday Review]], [[Rolling Stone]], Family Weekly, and others. His college lecture circuit tour on toxic contamination spurred the creation of many local activist groups in the 1980s. A cover story in the [[Atlantic]] won him the [[The Sidney Hillman Foundation#:~:text=The Sidney Award is a monthly journalism award,winner on the 10th day of each month.|Sidney Hillman Award]].
Michael Harold Brown is a Catholic author/journalist/speaker/and website owner in the United States. As a secular journalist, Mr. Brown exposed the [[Love Canal]] environmental toxic waste crisis in his hometown of [[Niagara Falls, New York|Niagara Falls]], New York, writing dozens of articles, for which he was nominated for three [[Pulitzer Prize|Pulitzer prizes.]] The Love Canal crisis created many controversies. His work appeared in publications such as [[The Atlantic Monthly]], [[The New York Times Magazine]],<ref>{{Cite news |last=Brown |first=Michael H. |date=1979-01-21 |title=LOVE CANAL, U.S.A. |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1979/01/21/archives/love-canal-usa-love-canal-usa.html |access-date=2024-05-06 |work=The New York Times |language=en-US |issn=0362-4331}}</ref> [[Reader's Digest]], [[Science Digest|Science Digest,]] [[Discovery, Inc.|Discover]], [[New York (magazine)|New York]], [[Saturday Review (U.S. magazine)|Saturday Review]], [[Rolling Stone]], Family Weekly, and others. His college lecture circuit tour on toxic contamination spurred the creation of many local activist groups in the 1980s. A cover story in the [[Atlantic]] won him the [[The Sidney Hillman Foundation#:~:text=The Sidney Award is a monthly journalism award,winner on the 10th day of each month.|Sidney Hillman Award]].


== EARLY LIFE ==
== EARLY LIFE ==
Brown was born March 5, 1952, in [[Niagara Falls]], and attended [[Fordham University]] in the [[The Bronx|Bronx, New York]], where he worked on the school newspaper, ''[[Fordham University#Media|The Ram]]'' and graduated in 1975 with a major in print journalism.
Brown was born March 5, 1952, in Niagara Falls, New York, and attended [[Fordham University]] in the [[The Bronx|Bronx, New York]], where he worked on the school newspaper, ''[[Fordham University#Media|The Ram]]'' and graduated in 1975 with a major in print journalism.


== CAREER ==
== CAREER ==
Brown started as a general assignment reporter for the [[Press & Sun-Bulletin|Press & Sun-Bulletin Sun-Bulletin]]'','' where, on April 7, 1975, he published the longest article in that newspaper's 153-year history, ''He Turns Tables on Physics''<ref>{{Cite news |last=Brown |first=Michael H. |date=April 7, 1975 |title=He Turns Tables on Physics |work=Binghamton Sun-Bulletin}}</ref>, focusing on a teacher named Phil Jordan who was forced from the school (in Spencer, New York) because of his "psychic" demonstrations.
Brown started as a general assignment reporter for the Binghamton [[Press & Sun-Bulletin]] '','' where, on April 7, 1975, he published the longest article in that newspaper's 153-year history, ''He Turns Tables on Physics''<ref>{{Cite news |last=Brown |first=Michael H. |date=April 7, 1975 |title=He Turns Tables on Physics |work=Binghamton Sun-Bulletin}}</ref>, focusing on a teacher named Phil Jordan who was forced from the school (in Spencer, New York) because of his "psychic" demonstrations.


Two years later, Brown returned to the [[Niagara Gazette]] as a reporter covering the towns of [[Lewiston, New York|Lewiston]] and [[Porter, New York|Porter]], where he became intrigued with the issue of toxic chemical waste disposal. This arose due to the existence in those towns of a company called Chem-Trol (later SCA) that was bringing in the most toxic compounds from around the nation and burying them in "secure landfills" at a wooded area near [[Lake Ontario]], sparking the toxic-waste awareness in Western New York.
Two years later, Brown returned to the [[Niagara Gazette]] as a reporter covering the towns of [[Lewiston, New York|Lewiston]] and [[Porter, New York|Porter]], where he became intrigued with the issue of toxic chemical waste disposal. This arose due to the existence in those towns of a company called Chem-Trol (later SCA) that was bringing in the most toxic compounds from around the nation and burying them in "secure landfills" at a wooded area near [[Lake Ontario]], sparking the toxic-waste awareness in Western New York.
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== LOVE CANAL ==
== LOVE CANAL ==
[[File:Love Canal protest.jpg|thumb|Love Canal Protest]]
[[File:Love Canal protest.jpg|thumb|Love Canal Protest]]
Assured by the county health department and its commissioner that Love Canal was not a health risk,<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Brown |first=Michael H. |date=December 1979 |title=Love Canal and What It Says About the Poisoning of America |url=https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/1979/12/love-canal-and-the-poisoning-of-america/376297/ |journal=Atlantic}}</ref> Brown nevertheless began making regular phone calls after hearing an engineer say that someone would have to "dig in there and take a good look." At the time, the Hooker Company (now owned by Occidental Petroleum) was the largest employer in the area, with thousands of employees in more than a dozen countries.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Brown |first=Michael H. |date=February 5, 1978 |title=Red Tape Stalls Dump Solution |work=Niagara Gazette}}</ref>
Assured by the county health department and its commissioner that Love Canal was not a health risk,<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Brown |first=Michael H. |date=December 1979 |title=Love Canal and What It Says About the Poisoning of America |url=https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/1979/12/love-canal-and-the-poisoning-of-america/376297/ |journal=Atlantic}}</ref> Brown nevertheless began making regular phone calls after hearing an engineer say that someone would have to "dig in there and take a good look." At the time, the Hooker Company (now owned by [[Occidental Petroleum]]) was the largest employer in the area, with thousands of employees in more than a dozen countries.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Brown |first=Michael H. |date=February 5, 1978 |title=Red Tape Stalls Dump Solution |work=Niagara Gazette}}</ref>


Soon, Brown learned of unusual and severe skin problems and other ailments -- symptoms that Brown soon found were identical to those caused by tetra dioxin, known by some as the most poisonous chemical ever synthesized and the cause of a myriad of illnesses, including a serious skin disorder, [[Chloracne|"chloracne]]", that involved more than just the skin.
Soon, Brown learned of unusual and severe skin problems and other ailments -- symptoms that he soon found were identical to those caused by [[tetradioxin]], known by some as the most poisonous chemical ever synthesized and the cause of a myriad of illnesses, including a serious skin disorder, [[Chloracne|"chloracne]]", that involved more than just the skin.


In May, Brown reviewed a memo from [[United States Environmental Protection Agency|Environmental Protection Agency]] office in [[Rochester, New York|Rochester]] which stated that tests already conducted by the state suggested "a serious threat to health and welfare." <ref>{{Cite news |last=Brown |first=Michael H. |date=July 15, 1978 |title=Love Canal Research Hints at Birth Defects |work=Niagara Gazette}}</ref> In the canal, the effluents went beyond solvents like benzene and trichlorethylene and included dozens of highly toxic chlorinated hydrocarbons used for pesticides, herbicides, and plastics, including C-56 (a building block for the now-banned pesticide Mirex) and TCP, or 2,4,6-trichlorophenol, which Brown learned virtually always carried, as an unwanted byproduct, tetra-chloro-dibenzo-para-dioxin, TCDD or "dioxin" for short. The burial of trichlorophenol at Love Canal was proven later in 1978 when a source from a remedial chemical company called Brown to inform him and Hooker confirmed it. Soon, dioxin itself was detected. The resultant news stunned officials and the nation.
In May of 1978, Brown reviewed a memo from [[United States Environmental Protection Agency|Environmental Protection Agency]] office in [[Rochester, New York|Rochester]] which stated that tests already conducted by the state suggested "a serious threat to health and welfare." <ref>{{Cite news |last=Brown |first=Michael H. |date=July 15, 1978 |title=Love Canal Research Hints at Birth Defects |work=Niagara Gazette}}</ref> In the canal, the effluents went beyond solvents like benzene and trichlorethylene and included dozens of highly toxic chlorinated hydrocarbons used for pesticides, herbicides, and plastics, including C-56 (a building block for the now-banned pesticide [[Mirex]]) and TCP, or [[2,4,6-Trichlorophenol|2,4,6-trichlorophenol]], which Brown learned virtually always carried, as an unwanted byproduct, [[2,3,7,8-Tetrachlorodibenzodioxin|tetrachlorodibenzoparadioxin]], TCDD or "dioxin" for short. The burial of trichlorophenol at Love Canal was proven later in 1978 when a source from a remedial chemical company called Brown to inform him and Hooker confirmed it. Soon, dioxin itself was detected. The resultant news stunned officials and the nation.


With confirmation from the NY State Health Department, there indeed seemed to be an abnormal prevalence of miscarriages and birth defects alongside Love Canal. The state health commissioner, Dr. Joseph Whalen, declared an unprecedented health emergency, the first such emergency in American history. Brown collected sump-pump samples from a neighborhood a mile from the worst-hit section and had them analyzed, along with logging state air sample results.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Brown |first=Michael H. |date=May 20, 1978 |title=Love Canal Residents' Evacuation Mulled |work=Niagara Gazette}}</ref>
With confirmation from the NY State Health Department, there indeed seemed to be an abnormal prevalence of miscarriages and birth defects alongside Love Canal. The state health commissioner, Dr. Joseph Whalen, declared an unprecedented health emergency, the first such emergency in American history. Brown collected sump-pump samples from a neighborhood a mile from the worst-hit section and had them analyzed, along with logging state air sample results.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Brown |first=Michael H. |date=May 20, 1978 |title=Love Canal Residents' Evacuation Mulled |work=Niagara Gazette}}</ref>


The declaration was made on August 2, 1978, and led to massive national publicity, including on ''[[The New York Times]]'' front page<ref>{{Cite news |last=McNeil |first=Donald G. |date=August 2, 1978 |title=Upstate Waste Site May Endanger Lives |work=The New York Times}}</ref> and all three news networks ([[NBC]], [[CBS]], and [[ABC News|ABC]]). Angry residents filled the streets, demanding evacuation, which soon was to come for 237 households. [[Jimmy Carter|President Jimmy Carter]] also declared an emergency. ''The Times'' had the reporter[[Donald G. McNeil Jr.|, Donald G. McNeil]], in Niagara Falls. [[Lois Gibbs|Lois Gibbs,]] who lived several blocks from the canal but was very concerned about what she was reading formed a formal homeowners association and worked full-time and tirelessly helped keep the matter before the local media. Brown learned, through private testing, that the chemicals were in areas away from the official zone of evacuation and also that other dumps threatened a tributary of the Niagara River and the city's water treatment plant.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Brown |first=Michael H. |date=August 9, 1978 |title=Canal Chemicals Fan Out |work=Niagara Gazette}}</ref>
The declaration of a health emergency was made on August 2, 1978, and led to massive national publicity, including on ''[[The New York Times]]'' front page<ref>{{Cite news |last=McNeil |first=Donald G. |date=August 2, 1978 |title=Upstate Waste Site May Endanger Lives |work=The New York Times}}</ref> and all three news networks ([[NBC]], [[CBS]], and [[ABC News|ABC]]). Angry residents filled the streets, demanding evacuation, which soon was to come for 237 households. [[Jimmy Carter|President Jimmy Carter]] also declared a federal health emergency. ''The Times'' had the reporter[[Donald G. McNeil Jr.|, Donald G. McNeil]], in Niagara Falls. [[Lois Gibbs|Lois Gibbs,]] who lived several blocks from the canal but was very concerned about what she was reading formed a formal homeowners association and worked full-time and tirelessly helped keep the matter before the local media. Brown learned, through private testing, that the chemicals were in areas away from the official zone of evacuation and also that other dumps threatened a tributary of the Niagara River and the city's water treatment plant.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Brown |first=Michael H. |date=August 9, 1978 |title=Canal Chemicals Fan Out |work=Niagara Gazette}}</ref>
[[File:Love Canal - Danger Hazardous Area sign.jpg|thumb|love canal 2|252x252px]]
[[File:Love Canal - Danger Hazardous Area sign.jpg|thumb|love canal 2|252x252px]]
Brown's investigation continued through 1978 and early 1979. He expanded his investigation nationwide in a book released at the end of 1979 called [https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/abs/10.1086/412517 ''<nowiki/>'Laying Waste: The Poisoning of America by Toxic Chemicals'''],<ref>{{Cite book |last=Brown |first=Michael H. |title=Laying Waste: The Poisoning of America by Toxic Chemicals |date=January 1, 1983 |publisher=Pantheon |year=1983 |isbn=978-0394508085 |publication-date=January 1, 1983 |language=English}}</ref> which was published by the [[Pantheon Books|Pantheon]] division of [[Random House]] and drew extensive publicity around the nation including [[Today (American TV program)|Today]], [[Nightline]], and [[McNeil-Lehrer NewsHour|McNeil-Lehrer]]. The book was excerpted or adapted in the ''[[Atlantic Monthly]]'' (cover story) ], ''[[The New York Times Magazine]]'' (three times <ref>{{Cite news |title=NEW JERSEY CLEANS UP ITS POLLUTION ACT |url=http://timesmachine.nytimes.comhttp//timesmachine.nyt-archives.us-east-1-01.prd.dvsp.nyt.net/timesmachine/1980/11/23/114152607.html?pageNumber=422 |access-date=2024-05-06 |work=The New York Times |language=en}}</ref>, ''[[Reader's Digest]]'' <ref>{{Cite journal |last=Brown |first=Michael H. |date=1979 |title="Stop the Poisoning of America" |journal=Reader's Digest |issue=May, 1979}}</ref>, ''New York'', <ref>{{Cite journal |last=Brown |first=Michael H. |date=1980 |title="The Price of LIfe" |journal=New York Magazine |issue=March 10, 1980}}</ref> ''[[Family Weekly]]'', and other national publications. <ref>{{Cite journal |last=Brown |first=Michael H. |date=1981 |title=Killer Towns: Special Report: What the Government Can't Say About Death in America" |journal=Rolling Stone Magazine |issue=November 26, 1981}}</ref>. The issue of toxic chemical wastes had been established. Released in 2024, the [[PBS]] documentary, [https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/films/poisoned-ground-tragedy-love-canal/ Poisoned Ground: The Tragedy at Love Canal], continues to call forth a reminder of the fight for the health and safety of our families. Brown also authored books on the Mafia <ref>{{Cite book |last=Brown |first=Michael H. |title=Marked to Die |date=1984 |publisher=Simon & Schuster |year=1984 |isbn=978-0671450908 |location=New York |publication-date=1984}}</ref>, Greenpeace, toxic air pollution, and paleoanthropology (''The Search for Eve'') and an article for ''Science Digest'' on pollution of the entire Mississippi and another article exposing fast-food frying techniques, causing the major ones to shift practices away from use of beef tallow <ref>{{Cite news |date=1986-04-04 |title=Opinion {{!}} WHAT'S THE BEEF? |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1986/04/04/opinion/what-s-the-beef.html |access-date=2024-05-06 |work=The New York Times |language=en-US |issn=0362-4331}}</ref>. Along with other national articles <ref>{{Cite news |last=Brown |first=Michael H. |date=1978-10-01 |title=Getting Serious About the Occult |url=https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/1978/10/getting-serious-about-the-occult/664236/ |access-date=2024-05-06 |work=The Atlantic |language=en |issn=2151-9463}}</ref> he spoke for ten years on the college lecture circuit for the Royce-Carlton Agency.
Brown's investigation continued through 1978 and early 1979. He expanded his investigation nationwide in a book released at the end of 1979 called [https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/abs/10.1086/412517 ''<nowiki/>'Laying Waste: The Poisoning of America by Toxic Chemicals'''],<ref>{{Cite book |last=Brown |first=Michael H. |title=Laying Waste: The Poisoning of America by Toxic Chemicals |date=January 1, 1983 |publisher=Pantheon |year=1983 |isbn=978-0394508085 |publication-date=January 1, 1983 |language=English}}</ref> which was published by the [[Pantheon Books|Pantheon]] division of [[Random House]] and drew extensive publicity around the nation including [[Today (American TV program)|Today]], [[Nightline]], and [[McNeil-Lehrer NewsHour|McNeil-Lehrer]]. The book was excerpted or adapted in the ''[[Atlantic Monthly]]'' (cover story) ], ''[[The New York Times Magazine]]'' (three times <ref>{{Cite news |title=NEW JERSEY CLEANS UP ITS POLLUTION ACT |url=http://timesmachine.nytimes.comhttp//timesmachine.nyt-archives.us-east-1-01.prd.dvsp.nyt.net/timesmachine/1980/11/23/114152607.html?pageNumber=422 |access-date=2024-05-06 |work=The New York Times |language=en}}</ref>, ''[[Reader's Digest]]'' <ref>{{Cite journal |last=Brown |first=Michael H. |date=1979 |title="Stop the Poisoning of America" |journal=Reader's Digest |issue=May, 1979}}</ref>, ''New York'', <ref>{{Cite journal |last=Brown |first=Michael H. |date=1980 |title="The Price of LIfe" |journal=New York Magazine |issue=March 10, 1980}}</ref> ''[[Family Weekly]]'', and other national publications. <ref>{{Cite journal |last=Brown |first=Michael H. |date=1981 |title=Killer Towns: Special Report: What the Government Can't Say About Death in America" |journal=Rolling Stone Magazine |issue=November 26, 1981}}</ref>. The issue of toxic chemical wastes had been established. Released in 2024, the [[PBS]] documentary, [https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/films/poisoned-ground-tragedy-love-canal/ Poisoned Ground: The Tragedy at Love Canal], continues to call forth a reminder of the fight for the health and safety of our families.


== PUBLISHING CAREER ==
== PUBLISHING CAREER ==
Brown, beginning in 1984, also authored books on the Mafia <ref>{{Cite book |last=Brown |first=Michael H. |title=Marked to Die |date=1984 |publisher=Simon & Schuster |year=1984 |isbn=978-0671450908 |location=New York |publication-date=1984}}</ref>, Greenpeace, toxic air pollution, and paleoanthropology (''The Search for Eve'') and an article for ''[[Science Digest]]'' on pollution of the entire Mississippi and another article exposing fast-food frying techniques, causing the major ones to shift practices away from use of beef tallow <ref>{{Cite news |date=1986-04-04 |title=Opinion {{!}} WHAT'S THE BEEF? |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1986/04/04/opinion/what-s-the-beef.html |access-date=2024-05-06 |work=The New York Times |language=en-US |issn=0362-4331}}</ref>. Along with other national articles <ref>{{Cite news |last=Brown |first=Michael H. |date=1978-10-01 |title=Getting Serious About the Occult |url=https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/1978/10/getting-serious-about-the-occult/664236/ |access-date=2024-05-06 |work=The Atlantic |language=en |issn=2151-9463}}</ref> he spoke for ten years on the college lecture circuit for the Royce-Carlton Agency.
In later years, Brown pursued spiritual writing full time with appearances on [[Joan Rivers]], [[Sally Jessy Raphael|Sally Jesse Raphael]], [[Mother Angelica]], [[TBN (TV channel)|TBN,]] and "[[Ancient Prophecies]]." He wrote his first Catholic book, ''Witness'' on a Ukrainian martyr-mystic named [https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/61319.Josyp_Terelya Josyp Terelya], and a second, on apparitions of the Virgin Mary since 1830, called ''<nowiki/>'The Final Hour''<nowiki/>', a huge Catholic bestseller, followed by many books on the afterlife, spiritual warfare, devotion, healing, prophecy, and other spiritual topics, including the Catholic bestsellers ''After Life, The Other Side'', and ''What You Take To Heaven''. He also penned a supernatural Christian novel and an article on psychokinesis for ''The Atlantic [28]'' He has visited more than thirty alleged apparition sites in various parts of the world and has spoken in more than a hundred cities, including at many churches, on Catholic mysticism. In 2000, Brown and wife Lisa launched a Christian-Catholic news/commentary/and aggregate website, ''[https://spiritdaily.com/ Spirit Daily.com],'' which continues today.

In later years, Brown pursued spiritual writing full time with appearances on [[Joan Rivers|The Joan Rivers Show]], [[Sally Jessy Raphael|Sally Jesse Raphael]], [[Mother Angelica]], [[TBN (TV channel)|TBN,]] and "[[Ancient Prophecies]]." He wrote his first Catholic book, ''Witness,'' on a Ukrainian martyr-mystic named [https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/61319.Josyp_Terelya Josyp Terelya], and a second, on apparitions of the Virgin Mary since 1830, called ''<nowiki/>'The Final Hour''<nowiki/>', a Catholic bestseller, followed by many books on the afterlife, spiritual warfare, devotion, healing, prophecy, and other spiritual topics, including the Catholic bestsellers ''After Life, The Other Side'', and ''What You Take To Heaven''. He also penned a supernatural Christian novel and an article on psychokinesis for ''The Atlantic.'' He has visited more than thirty alleged apparition sites in various parts of the world and has spoken in more than a hundred cities, including at many churches, on Catholic mysticism. In 2000, Brown and wife Lisa launched a Christian-Catholic news/commentary/and aggregate website, ''[https://spiritdaily.com/ Spirit Daily.com]''.


== PERSONAL LIFE ==
== PERSONAL LIFE ==
Line 63: Line 65:
* Where the Cross Stands (Spirit Daily Publishing, 2017)
* Where the Cross Stands (Spirit Daily Publishing, 2017)
* Lying Wonders, Strangest Things(Spirit Daily Publishing, 2019)
* Lying Wonders, Strangest Things(Spirit Daily Publishing, 2019)
* The New York Prophecy (Spirit Daily Publishing, 2023)
* The New York Prophecy (Spirit Daily Publishing, 2023)<br />


FOOTNOTES

1. The Best of People: The First Decade, Ballantine Books, 1984

2. He Turns Tables On Physics, Binghamton Sun-Bulletin, April 7, 1975

3. "Love Canal and What It Says About the Poisoning of America," by Michael H. Brown, the Atlantic Monthly, December 1979
22.

4. "Red Tape Stalls Dump Solution," The Niagara Gazette, by Mike Brown, February 5, 1978
5. "Dump Neighbors Wondering," The Niagara Gazette, by Mike Brown, June 25, 1978; "State To Study Love Canal Health 'Ills,'" by Mike Brown, the Niagara Gazette, May 21, 1978; "Toxic Exposure at Love Canal Called Chronic," by Mike Brown, May 25, 1978; "State To Study Love Canal Health 'Ills,'" by Mike Brown, the Niagara Gazette, May 21, 1978

5. "Love Canal research hints at birth defects," by Mike Brown, the Niagara Gazette, July 15, 1978;

6. "Love Canal residents' evacuation mulled," by Mike Brown, the Niagara Gazette, May 20, 1978

7. "Upstate Waste Site May Endanger Lives," by Donald G. McNeil, The New York Times, August 2, 1978

8.  "Canal Chemicals Fan Out," by Mike Brown, the Niagara Gazette, August 9, 1978;  "State, private studies at odds on canal drain illness pockets," by Mike Brown, the Niagara Gazette, October 4, 1978; "Worry over toxins extends to Buffalo Avenue residents," by Mike Brown, the Niagara Gazette, August 18, 1978; "Chemicals surround Falls water plant," by Mike Brown, the Niagara Gazette, October 5, 1978; "High PCB levels found in Gill Creek," by Mike Brown, the Niagara Gazette, September 8, 1978

9.  Laying Waste: The Poisoning of America By Toxic Chemicals (Pantheon, 1979)

10.  "Love Canal, USA," by Michael H. Brown, The New York Times Magazine, January 21, 1978;  "New Jersey Cleans Up Its Pollution Act," by Michael H. Brown, The New York Times Magazine, November 23, 1980; "Is Hemlock Being Slowly Poisoned?" by Michael H. Brown, The New York Times Magazine, July 15, 1979

11.  "Stop the Poisoning of America," by Michael H. Brown, Reader's Digest, May 1979; Toxic Waste: Organized Crime Moves In, by Michael H. Brown, July 1984

12.  "The Price of Life," by Michael H. Brown, New York Magazine, March 10, 1980

13.  "Killer Towns: Special Report: What the government can't say about death in America," by Michael H. Brown, Rolling Stone, November 26, 1981;  "The National Swill: Poisoning the Mississippi," by Michael H. Brown, Science Digest, June 1986

14.  "Here's the Beef: Fast Foods Are Hazardous To Your Health," by Michael H. Brown, Science Digest, April, 1986; Marked To Die (Simon & Schuster, 1984)
28. The Toxic Cloud (HarperCollins, 1989);

15. "Getting Serious About the Occult," by Michael H. Brown, The Atlantic Monthly, October 1978; Love Canal Revisited, Michael H. Brown, Amicus Journal, Summer 1988
He Told the Stories Behind the Fence, the Niagara Gazette, by Don Glynn, July 26, 1998
A Wasted National Resource: Millions of Barrels of Engine Oil, by Michael H. Brown, The New York Times, May 4, 1980
A Toxic Ghost Town, by Michael H. Brown, The Atlantic Monthly, July 1989
Contaminating the Countryside, by Kai Erikson, The New York Times Book Review, May 18, 1980
A Shocker, The New York Times, April 25, 1980, page C-24
State Health Formula Weighs Value of Life Against Project Costs, by Peter Kihss, The New York Times, March 3, 1989, B3
Toxic Wind: Coming Soon to the Air Near You, by Michael H. Brown, Discover Magazine, November 1987
Dumping the Responsibility for Toxic Sites, by Michael H. Brown, Newsday, May 28, 1980]

== REFERENCES ==
== REFERENCES ==

Revision as of 16:06, 6 May 2024

Michael H. Brown

Michael Harold Brown is a Catholic author/journalist/speaker/and website owner in the United States. As a secular journalist, Mr. Brown exposed the Love Canal environmental toxic waste crisis in his hometown of Niagara Falls, New York, writing dozens of articles, for which he was nominated for three Pulitzer prizes. The Love Canal crisis created many controversies. His work appeared in publications such as The Atlantic Monthly, The New York Times Magazine,[1] Reader's Digest, Science Digest, Discover, New York, Saturday Review, Rolling Stone, Family Weekly, and others. His college lecture circuit tour on toxic contamination spurred the creation of many local activist groups in the 1980s. A cover story in the Atlantic won him the Sidney Hillman Award.

EARLY LIFE

Brown was born March 5, 1952, in Niagara Falls, New York, and attended Fordham University in the Bronx, New York, where he worked on the school newspaper, The Ram and graduated in 1975 with a major in print journalism.

CAREER

Brown started as a general assignment reporter for the Binghamton Press & Sun-Bulletin , where, on April 7, 1975, he published the longest article in that newspaper's 153-year history, He Turns Tables on Physics[2], focusing on a teacher named Phil Jordan who was forced from the school (in Spencer, New York) because of his "psychic" demonstrations.

Two years later, Brown returned to the Niagara Gazette as a reporter covering the towns of Lewiston and Porter, where he became intrigued with the issue of toxic chemical waste disposal. This arose due to the existence in those towns of a company called Chem-Trol (later SCA) that was bringing in the most toxic compounds from around the nation and burying them in "secure landfills" at a wooded area near Lake Ontario, sparking the toxic-waste awareness in Western New York.

LOVE CANAL

Love Canal Protest

Assured by the county health department and its commissioner that Love Canal was not a health risk,[3] Brown nevertheless began making regular phone calls after hearing an engineer say that someone would have to "dig in there and take a good look." At the time, the Hooker Company (now owned by Occidental Petroleum) was the largest employer in the area, with thousands of employees in more than a dozen countries.[4]

Soon, Brown learned of unusual and severe skin problems and other ailments -- symptoms that he soon found were identical to those caused by tetradioxin, known by some as the most poisonous chemical ever synthesized and the cause of a myriad of illnesses, including a serious skin disorder, "chloracne", that involved more than just the skin.

In May of 1978, Brown reviewed a memo from Environmental Protection Agency office in Rochester which stated that tests already conducted by the state suggested "a serious threat to health and welfare." [5] In the canal, the effluents went beyond solvents like benzene and trichlorethylene and included dozens of highly toxic chlorinated hydrocarbons used for pesticides, herbicides, and plastics, including C-56 (a building block for the now-banned pesticide Mirex) and TCP, or 2,4,6-trichlorophenol, which Brown learned virtually always carried, as an unwanted byproduct, tetrachlorodibenzoparadioxin, TCDD or "dioxin" for short. The burial of trichlorophenol at Love Canal was proven later in 1978 when a source from a remedial chemical company called Brown to inform him and Hooker confirmed it. Soon, dioxin itself was detected. The resultant news stunned officials and the nation.

With confirmation from the NY State Health Department, there indeed seemed to be an abnormal prevalence of miscarriages and birth defects alongside Love Canal. The state health commissioner, Dr. Joseph Whalen, declared an unprecedented health emergency, the first such emergency in American history. Brown collected sump-pump samples from a neighborhood a mile from the worst-hit section and had them analyzed, along with logging state air sample results.[6]

The declaration of a health emergency was made on August 2, 1978, and led to massive national publicity, including on The New York Times front page[7] and all three news networks (NBC, CBS, and ABC). Angry residents filled the streets, demanding evacuation, which soon was to come for 237 households. President Jimmy Carter also declared a federal health emergency. The Times had the reporter, Donald G. McNeil, in Niagara Falls. Lois Gibbs, who lived several blocks from the canal but was very concerned about what she was reading formed a formal homeowners association and worked full-time and tirelessly helped keep the matter before the local media. Brown learned, through private testing, that the chemicals were in areas away from the official zone of evacuation and also that other dumps threatened a tributary of the Niagara River and the city's water treatment plant.[8]

love canal 2

Brown's investigation continued through 1978 and early 1979. He expanded his investigation nationwide in a book released at the end of 1979 called 'Laying Waste: The Poisoning of America by Toxic Chemicals',[9] which was published by the Pantheon division of Random House and drew extensive publicity around the nation including Today, Nightline, and McNeil-Lehrer. The book was excerpted or adapted in the Atlantic Monthly (cover story) ], The New York Times Magazine (three times [10], Reader's Digest [11], New York, [12] Family Weekly, and other national publications. [13]. The issue of toxic chemical wastes had been established. Released in 2024, the PBS documentary, Poisoned Ground: The Tragedy at Love Canal, continues to call forth a reminder of the fight for the health and safety of our families.

PUBLISHING CAREER

Brown, beginning in 1984, also authored books on the Mafia [14], Greenpeace, toxic air pollution, and paleoanthropology (The Search for Eve) and an article for Science Digest on pollution of the entire Mississippi and another article exposing fast-food frying techniques, causing the major ones to shift practices away from use of beef tallow [15]. Along with other national articles [16] he spoke for ten years on the college lecture circuit for the Royce-Carlton Agency.

In later years, Brown pursued spiritual writing full time with appearances on The Joan Rivers Show, Sally Jesse Raphael, Mother Angelica, TBN, and "Ancient Prophecies." He wrote his first Catholic book, Witness, on a Ukrainian martyr-mystic named Josyp Terelya, and a second, on apparitions of the Virgin Mary since 1830, called 'The Final Hour', a Catholic bestseller, followed by many books on the afterlife, spiritual warfare, devotion, healing, prophecy, and other spiritual topics, including the Catholic bestsellers After Life, The Other Side, and What You Take To Heaven. He also penned a supernatural Christian novel and an article on psychokinesis for The Atlantic. He has visited more than thirty alleged apparition sites in various parts of the world and has spoken in more than a hundred cities, including at many churches, on Catholic mysticism. In 2000, Brown and wife Lisa launched a Christian-Catholic news/commentary/and aggregate website, Spirit Daily.com.

PERSONAL LIFE

On October 30, 1993, Brown married Lisa Bassani, 33, in Albany, New York, where she was employed as a legislative assistant and researcher for New York State Senator Roy Goodman of Manhattan. They have three children, Elizabeth, Joseph, and Mary Rose. He and wife Lisa now live near St. Augustine, Florida.

PUBLICATIONS

  • PK: A Report on Psychokinesis (Steinberbooks, 1977)
  • Laying Waste: The Poisoning of America By Toxic Chemicals (Pantheon, 1979)
  • Marked To Die (Simon & Schuster, 1984)
  • The Toxic Cloud (HarperCollins, 1989)
  • The Greenpeace Story (Dorling Kindersley, 1989)
  • The Search For Eve  (HarperCollins, 1990)
  • Witness (Faith Publishing, 1991)
  • The Final Hour (Faith Publishing, 1992)
  • Prayer of the Warrior (Faith Publishing, 1993)
  • The Bridge To Heaven (Marian Communications, 1993)
  • The Trumpet of Gabriel (Faith Publishing, 1994)
  • Secrets of the Eucharist (Faith Publishing, 1996)
  • The Day Will Come (Servant Publication, 1996)
  • After Life (Faith Publishing, 1997)
  • The Last Secret (Servant Publication, 1998)
  • Seven Days With Mary (Faith Publication, 1998)
  • Sent To Earth (Queenship, 2000)
  • The Best of Spirit Daily (Queenship, 2002)
  • The God of Miracles (Queenship, 2005)
  • Tower of Light (Spirit Daily Publishing, 2007)
  • The Other Side (Spirit Daily Publishing, 2008)
  • The Seven (Spirit Daily Publishing, 2009)
  • The Spirits Around Us (Spirit Daily Publishing, 2010)
  • A Life of Blessings (Spirit Daily Publishing, 2012)
  • Fear of Fire (Spirit Daily Publishing, 2013)
  • What You Take To Heaven (Spirit Daily Publishing, 2014)
  • The God of Healing (Spirit Daily Publishing, 2015)
  • Where the Cross Stands (Spirit Daily Publishing, 2017)
  • Lying Wonders, Strangest Things(Spirit Daily Publishing, 2019)
  • The New York Prophecy (Spirit Daily Publishing, 2023)

REFERENCES

  1. ^ Brown, Michael H. (1979-01-21). "LOVE CANAL, U.S.A." The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2024-05-06.
  2. ^ Brown, Michael H. (April 7, 1975). "He Turns Tables on Physics". Binghamton Sun-Bulletin.
  3. ^ Brown, Michael H. (December 1979). "Love Canal and What It Says About the Poisoning of America". Atlantic.
  4. ^ Brown, Michael H. (February 5, 1978). "Red Tape Stalls Dump Solution". Niagara Gazette.
  5. ^ Brown, Michael H. (July 15, 1978). "Love Canal Research Hints at Birth Defects". Niagara Gazette.
  6. ^ Brown, Michael H. (May 20, 1978). "Love Canal Residents' Evacuation Mulled". Niagara Gazette.
  7. ^ McNeil, Donald G. (August 2, 1978). "Upstate Waste Site May Endanger Lives". The New York Times.
  8. ^ Brown, Michael H. (August 9, 1978). "Canal Chemicals Fan Out". Niagara Gazette.
  9. ^ Brown, Michael H. (January 1, 1983). Laying Waste: The Poisoning of America by Toxic Chemicals. Pantheon. ISBN 978-0394508085.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  10. ^ "NEW JERSEY CLEANS UP ITS POLLUTION ACT". The New York Times. Retrieved 2024-05-06.
  11. ^ Brown, Michael H. (1979). ""Stop the Poisoning of America"". Reader's Digest (May, 1979).
  12. ^ Brown, Michael H. (1980). ""The Price of LIfe"". New York Magazine (March 10, 1980).
  13. ^ Brown, Michael H. (1981). "Killer Towns: Special Report: What the Government Can't Say About Death in America"". Rolling Stone Magazine (November 26, 1981).
  14. ^ Brown, Michael H. (1984). Marked to Die. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0671450908.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  15. ^ "Opinion | WHAT'S THE BEEF?". The New York Times. 1986-04-04. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2024-05-06.
  16. ^ Brown, Michael H. (1978-10-01). "Getting Serious About the Occult". The Atlantic. ISSN 2151-9463. Retrieved 2024-05-06.