As-best-os
They were not persuaded that enough people were dying or suffering an asbestos-related disease to find substitute materials or shut down and walk away. There was always an acceptable level of death.—plaintiff lawyer, Kieran May
A 1994 BBC documentary was titled An Acceptable Level of Death
There are three types in this industry:
Amosite (brown) amphiboles, the straighter
Crocidolite (blue) and Chrysotile (white) serpentine
—for fibre withstanding fire, frost and electricity,
when Scots James Hardie saw opportunity
And the building-boom needed cheap-and-easy.
Fibro-board, cement, paint, brake-linings from Hardie
Workers straight off the boats in a new country
Joining carefree mates in happy-go-lucky
Australia was rising on fibre money
Company-men, hard-working migrants adjusted
Asbestos loosed dust-storm—thick and gusted
Amid “Danger” reports, “stay cool”, unflustered
Until twenty years later, a lifestyle busted
Falling-down, can’t breathe, x-rays clustered
Sorry man, file away, you’ve been “Dusted”
A Very Good Business ’88 reports company
Shareholders note acquisitions and delivery
Managers, workers have good camaraderie
Future investment Cape Town mining city.
Sponsoring Life Be In It, Project Green—healthy
It’s a dirty business:
Wives washing work-clothes of flying asbestos
In Cape Town children, inside bags, stamping amosite
Aussie workers cannot see mates through the dust
Waterside workers lugging bags from Blue Sky Mine
Carpenters sawing Hardiflex becoming short of breath
Managers visiting workers breathe SuperSix in too
And even if you lived near a mine as a child—
it only takes the smallest bit to get into lungs
—Asbestos Kills
A very bad business for worker liability
Company can cover whatever temporarily
Twenty years on, more claimants absolutely
We have to cap it now, with temerity
Our future business lies off-shore, latterly
The blue crocodile has me—by limb and brain
The serpent on my lungs blocks breathing again
X-rays show where the brown snake has lain
A tumour ticket to the chemo nowhere-train
Fingers swelling, won’t bend and won’t drain
I cannot move, have sex, sold a-live-o pain
All I wish now is to breathe easily
Leave money to free-up my family
Dusty floors, fibre wall-to-wall tenancy—
a dream-house nightmare of making money
I trusted the company—please help me!
Now I am wanted by lawyers, doctors entrusted
Mines notorious for dead kids lie closed and rusted
Round-table deal-makers with union flustered
I drag on my ventilator—knocked-up, blustered
Don’t tell me to be patient—re-adjusted
Each breath is a fight, for a life—Dusted
We built without thought of tomorrow’s trustee
Now pull down black shanty-towns built cheaply
Workers, managers, wives dying un-fortunately
Our kids will marry, have kids, without me
How I loved my footloose, lucky-goes country
Throw a figure in the air and catch it blindly
We didn’t see, didn’t want to see
There is no escaping stupidity
After-wards, who goes free, who pays dearly?
Don’t drop your guard. Question authority.
Never gamble your life in dumb company
Hardies say, “We hurt”, “We care”, classly insane
There’s fluid on my lungs—a seeping stain
We trail ventilators—fill-up oxygen plain
There is no cure-all—“dead in a year”—refrain
We spent our lives, taken, for your hard blue vein
A game of Snakes and Ladders to eternity
Dice mesothelioma, asbestosis uncertainty
Centuries past, asbestos was a novelty
Fire-resisting, but lacking popularity
Till re-invented as the new housing in-dust-try
Then we awoke the crocodile lying deeply—
Beneath our land, the serpent bites, fatally
—the blue-collar, white-collar and brown, equally
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