『Asbestos: A Conspiracy 4,500 Years in the Making』のカバーアート

Asbestos: A Conspiracy 4,500 Years in the Making

Asbestos: A Conspiracy 4,500 Years in the Making

著者: AsbestosPodcast.com
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今ならプレミアムプランが3カ月 月額99円

2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

They knew. They always knew.


Nearly 2,000 years ago, Roman historian Pliny the Elder documented asbestos workers dying from "sickness of the lungs"—watching slaves fashion crude respirators from animal bladders while weaving what he called "funeral dress for kings." The people closest to the dust understood the danger. The people farthest away admired the spectacle, collected the profits, and buried the evidence. That pattern never changed.


Asbestos: A Conspiracy 4,500 Years in the Making traces humanity's 4,500-year relationship with the mineral the ancient Greeks named "asbestos"—meaning indestructible. From Stone Age Finnish pottery (2500 BCE) to the $70+ billion in legal damages paid by modern corporations, we uncover how a material praised for safety became a source of sickness, litigation, and grief.


Each episode explores:


  • Ancient origins: The salamander myth that persisted for 2,000 years, the Roman tablecloths that cleaned themselves in fire, the sacred flames kept burning with asbestos wicks


  • The industrial cover-up: Internal documents proving companies knew asbestos caused cancer since the 1930s—and suppressed the evidence for 40 years


  • Modern consequences: Why mesothelioma claims 3,000 American lives annually, and why $30+ billion sits in asbestos trust funds waiting for victims who never file


  • The science of denial: How manufactured doubt delayed regulation for decades, using the same tactics as the tobacco industry—sometimes with the same scientists


Whether you're a history enthusiast, legal professional, medical researcher, or someone seeking answers after asbestos exposure, this podcast reveals the uncomfortable truth: the longest-running industrial cover-up in human history isn't ancient history. It's still happening.


The History of Asbestos Podcast is sponsored by Danziger & De Llano, a nationwide mesothelioma law firm with over 30 years of experience and nearly $2 billion recovered for asbestos victims.


If you or a loved one has mesothelioma, visit Dandell.com for a free consultation.

© 2026 Asbestos: A Conspiracy 4,500 Years in the Making
世界 博物学 科学 自然・生態学
エピソード
  • Episode 22: The Saranac Coverup
    2026/04/20

    Episode 22: The Saranac Coverup

    In 1936, nine asbestos companies funded research at Saranac Laboratory with a contract clause making all results their "property" — publication only "if deemed desirable." When Dr. LeRoy Upson Gardner discovered an 81.8% tumor rate in asbestos-exposed mice, he couldn't publish. His own scientific integrity — recommending the cancer data be omitted until controlled experiments could confirm it — gave the industry exactly the cover it needed. Gardner applied for independent funding to escape the trap. The NCI rejected him. Six months after writing "I hope, before I die, the opportunity may be afforded us," he was dead at 57. The companies met, voted to delete all cancer references, and buried the findings for 52 years.

    Key Takeaways

    • November 20, 1936: Nine companies — Johns-Manville, Raybestos-Manhattan, Keasbey & Mattison, U.S. Gypsum, and five others — signed a contract owning Gardner's research before he conducted it.
    • February 1943: Gardner documented 8/11 mice with lung tumors, 9/11 total with cancer (81.8%) — 16x higher than controls. He also found 11 human lung cancer cases in Quebec miners, including 2 mesotheliomas.
    • Gardner himself recommended omitting cancer from the report pending controlled experiments. After his death, his own words became the industry's "permission slip" for permanent suppression.
    • January 1947: Sponsor companies voted that publications "would not include any objectionable material" — defined as "any relation between asbestos and cancer."
    • 1995: Dr. Gerrit Schepers finally published the suppressed findings — 52 years after Gardner's discovery (PMID: 7793430).

    Expert Source

    Anna Jackson — Director of Patient Support, Danziger & De Llano. Lost her husband to cancer. Walked away from advertising to join the fight for mesothelioma families.
    dandell.com/about/anna-jackson/

    Resources

    • Asbestos Exposure: dandell.com/asbestos-exposure/
    • Mesothelioma Compensation: dandell.com/mesothelioma-compensation/
    • Free Consultation: dandell.com/contact-us/

    Next: Episode 23 — The Human Experiments.

    Asbestos: A Conspiracy 4,500 Years in the Making is sponsored by Danziger & De Llano Mesothelioma Law Firm, a nationwide practice with over 30 years of experience and nearly $2 billion recovered for asbestos victims. If you or someone you love has been diagnosed with mesothelioma, the exposure happened somewhere—and Paul Danziger and Rod De Llano know how to trace it back. For a free consultation, visit https://dandell.com.

    Resources:

    → Mesothelioma legal rights: https://dandell.com/mesothelioma/

    → Asbestos exposure sources: https://dandell.com/asbestos-exposure/

    → Asbestos trust funds ($30B+ available): https://dandell.com/asbestos-trust-funds/

    → Free case evaluation: https://dandell.com/contact/

    Sister Podcast - MESO: The Mesothelioma Podcast:

    http://mesotheliomapodcast.com/

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    21 分
  • Episode 21: The Asbestos Textile Institute
    2026/04/13

    On March 7, 1957, the Asbestos Textile Institute's Air Hygiene subcommittee voted NOT to fund cancer research. Their minutes recorded three reasons: someone else was studying it, it would "stir up a hornet's nest," and they didn't believe there was enough evidence. Six companies. One vote. And the president of the trade association didn't even need to be in the room. Episode 21 reveals how the asbestos conspiracy moved from personal letters between executives to institutional infrastructure—formal committees, voting procedures, and trade associations designed to suppress what the industry already knew.

    In this episode:

    • How conspiracy evolved from private correspondence (Episode 20) to institutional machinery with bylaws and subcommittees
    • The Asbestos Textile Institute (founded 1944): a trade association with formal committees and voting procedures that made suppression routine
    • Francis J. Wakem—Johns-Manville VP who ran THREE asbestos trade associations simultaneously, centralizing industry control
    • The March 7, 1957 vote: six companies declined to fund cancer research for three documented reasons preserved in their own minutes
    • The Industrial Hygiene Foundation—created in 1935 in response to the Hawks Nest tunnel disaster (764 workers dead, mostly Black)—then hired by the asbestos industry
    • W.C.L. Hemeon's 1947 report questioning the safety standard the industry relied on

    Who this episode is for: Anyone researching how industries institutionalized the suppression of health evidence. Families investigating occupational exposure at asbestos textile plants. Legal professionals tracing the organizational structure behind industry-wide conspiracies. History enthusiasts studying how trade associations coordinated corporate misconduct.

    Expert perspective: "The industry built systems so no one person had to say no. This firm exists because families deserve someone who says yes." — Dave Foster, Executive Director of Patient Advocacy at Danziger & De Llano, whose father mixed asbestos into mortar and died in 1999—before Dave's children ever got to meet their grandfather.

    Resources:
    → Mesothelioma compensation options: https://dandell.com/mesothelioma-compensation/
    → Dave Foster, Executive Director of Patient Advocacy: https://dandell.com/david-foster/
    → Understanding asbestos exposure: https://dandell.com/asbestos-exposure/
    → Free consultation: https://dandell.com/contact-us/

    Asbestos: A Conspiracy 4,500 Years in the Making is sponsored by Danziger & De Llano Mesothelioma Law Firm, a nationwide practice with over 30 years of experience and nearly $2 billion recovered for asbestos victims. If you or someone you love has been diagnosed with mesothelioma, the exposure happened somewhere—and Paul Danziger and Rod De Llano know how to trace it back. For a free consultation, visit https://dandell.com.

    Resources:

    → Mesothelioma legal rights: https://dandell.com/mesothelioma/

    → Asbestos exposure sources: https://dandell.com/asbestos-exposure/

    → Asbestos trust funds ($30B+ available): https://dandell.com/asbestos-trust-funds/

    → Free case evaluation: https://dandell.com/contact/

    Sister Podcast - MESO: The Mesothelioma Podcast:

    http://mesotheliomapodcast.com/

    続きを読む 一部表示
    19 分
  • Episode 20: The Less Said About Asbestos, the Better
    2026/04/06

    "I think the less said about asbestos, the better off we are." On October 1, 1935, Sumner Simpson—president of Raybestos-Manhattan—wrote those thirteen words to the general counsel of Johns-Manville. This letter, hidden in a vault for 42 years, would eventually appear in thousands of lawsuits and cost the asbestos industry billions. Episode 20 reveals how the first American asbestos lawsuit (1929) didn't end with a verdict—it ended with a $30,000 settlement, a silenced attorney, and a template for decades of corporate suppression.

    In this episode:

    • The 1929 Pirskowski lawsuit: 11 workers sued Johns-Manville and split $30,000—roughly $2,727 each (about $68,000 today)
    • How attorney Samuel Greenstone was forced to agree he would never "directly or indirectly participate in the bringing of new actions against the Corporation"
    • The editor of Asbestos magazine who agreed to publish nothing about asbestosis for "certain obvious reasons"
    • Dr. Anthony Lanza's 1935 study showing 87% of long-term workers had lung fibrosis—and the sentence the companies deleted before publication
    • Johns-Manville executive Vandiver Brown's admission: "Yes. We save a lot of money that way"
    • 6,000 documents discovered in 1977 that proved industry-wide coordination

    Who this episode is for: Anyone researching how corporations suppressed asbestos health information. Families investigating occupational exposure at Johns-Manville plants. Legal professionals studying the origins of asbestos litigation. History enthusiasts tracing the roots of modern corporate accountability.

    Expert perspective: "The industry said 'the less said, the better.' This firm has spent three decades saying more." — Larry Gates, Senior Client Advocate at Danziger & De Llano, whose father died of mesothelioma after working at the Shell refinery in Pasadena, Texas.

    Resources:
    → Mesothelioma compensation options: https://dandell.com/mesothelioma-compensation/
    → Larry Gates, Senior Client Advocate: https://dandell.com/larry-gates/
    → Understanding asbestos exposure: https://dandell.com/asbestos-exposure/
    → Free consultation: https://dandell.com/contact-us/


    Asbestos: A Conspiracy 4,500 Years in the Making is sponsored by Danziger & De Llano Mesothelioma Law Firm, a nationwide practice with over 30 years of experience and nearly $2 billion recovered for asbestos victims. If you or someone you love has been diagnosed with mesothelioma, the exposure happened somewhere—and Paul Danziger and Rod De Llano know how to trace it back. For a free consultation, visit https://dandell.com.

    Resources:

    → Mesothelioma legal rights: https://dandell.com/mesothelioma/

    → Asbestos exposure sources: https://dandell.com/asbestos-exposure/

    → Asbestos trust funds ($30B+ available): https://dandell.com/asbestos-trust-funds/

    → Free case evaluation: https://dandell.com/contact/

    Sister Podcast - MESO: The Mesothelioma Podcast:

    http://mesotheliomapodcast.com/

    続きを読む 一部表示
    18 分
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