How many lives have been lost due to increased fires due to the lack of asbestos building materials? Or the deaths that will result due to lower consumption of fresh fruits and vegetables as a result of higher prices due to glyphosate being driven from the market?
I would wager that those deaths outweigh the deaths caused by asbestos and glyphosate exposure.
But, of course, most of those victims may not even realize they've been victimized. They would have to somehow learn about a product that doesn't exist anymore, because it was driven from the market by trial lawyers who prey on the public's economic and scientific illiteracy.
And because most of the victims never even realize they've been victimized, let alone the identity of their attacker, they do nothing to mount a defense against the trial lawyer's predations. Indeed, due to the massive propaganda campaigns the trial lawyer's mount to drum up clients and taint the juries, the average victim may be _grateful_ to the trial lawyers for "protecting" them from the "evil" corporations.
As a result, the trial lawyers can use their ill-gotten gains from previous attacks to mount new attacks on other parts of the economy, and the cycle repeats itself.
I would wager that those deaths outweigh the deaths caused by asbestos and glyphosate exposure.
But, of course, most of those victims may not even realize they've been victimized. They would have to somehow learn about a product that doesn't exist anymore, because it was driven from the market by trial lawyers who prey on the public's economic and scientific illiteracy.
And because most of the victims never even realize they've been victimized, let alone the identity of their attacker, they do nothing to mount a defense against the trial lawyer's predations. Indeed, due to the massive propaganda campaigns the trial lawyer's mount to drum up clients and taint the juries, the average victim may be _grateful_ to the trial lawyers for "protecting" them from the "evil" corporations.
As a result, the trial lawyers can use their ill-gotten gains from previous attacks to mount new attacks on other parts of the economy, and the cycle repeats itself.