DDT, dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane, is an insecticide that is also toxic to animals and humans that was made illegal in the United States in 1972. This insecticide became more proclaimed in the world after the novel Silent Spring by Rachel Carson was published in 1962. In the first chapter, Carson took it on her own time to survey the research on pesticides that lead her to question in her novel “What has already silenced the voices of spring in countless towns in America?” (Carson 3). She gave the world a fictional image on what will happen if things keep going the way they were. I believe Carson’s novel was a great way to explain to the government her examples of environmental damage and how banning DDT will help our air, land, and water. Silent Spring identified how poisons of recent designs were going up at the rate of five hundred a year and how they were appointed short and long term effects on humans and species. They gave an introduction on what the causes are of the problem of pesticides and other chemical poisons in the states. Carson states in her novel, “We urgently need an end to these false assurances, to the sugar coating of unpalatable facts.”(Carson 13). With this statement she is aiming for a persuasive way to show the information to the reader and prove the dangers of the present course of action and to urge the reader to actually take action and do something about it.











