I think there is a human attribute in play. You don't have to make as many excuses for something proven harmful... when all you have to do is declare a "chemical Hitler" who has been vanquished completely, and direct everyone's attention to it.
The people who claim that it became a “Chemical Hitler” wanted it used excessively in areas like agriculture which would have eliminated its usefulness in reducing malaria and similar disease vectors.
Whatever is in that focal point, gets burned, raised to fame, ridiculed, scrutinized extremely, subject to harassment, etc. While things nearby (but outside that focus) escape such treatment. Who or what is moving that searchlight's direction, is usually more fuzzy.
TV talent shows work like that. Social media do. Memes that go viral may have same effect. An influential book/science paper/movie etc, or a politician's speech may do it.
But the public's attention span is short, and the beam's focus moves on to burn something/someone else.
[0]: https://www.amazon.com/Common-Ground-Joshua-Tickell/dp/B0DSQ...
mikestew•9mo ago