In 1921, General Motors discovered that adding lead to gasoline eliminated engine knock and boosted performance. For the next 50 years, every car in America spewed lead particles into the air with every mile driven. Leaded gasoline poisoned an entire generation of children, lowering IQs, increasing violent crime, and causing mental illness on a scale that reshaped society—and the people who made it knew it was deadly from day one.
Lead is a neurotoxin that permanently damages developing brains. Children who breathe lead-contaminated air suffer irreversible cognitive damage, reduced impulse control, and increased aggression. There's no safe level of lead exposure for children. Even tiny amounts cause measurable harm.
Thomas Midgley Jr., the chemist who invented leaded gasoline, knew it was dangerous. Workers at the production plant were dying and going insane from lead poisoning within months of the factory opening. Midgley himself took a leave of absence due to lead poisoning. But the industry called it "tetraethyl lead" instead of leaded gasoline to downplay the danger, and General Motors pushed it anyway because the profits were massive.
By the 1950s, lead from car exhaust was everywhere. Urban children had blood lead levels 10-100 times higher than children living before the automobile era. The highest concentrations were in inner cities near highways and high-traffic areas. Poor neighborhoods, which were often built near highways due to racist housing policies, got the worst exposure.
The damage was invisible but catastrophic. Studies now show that children exposed to leaded gasoline had IQs 5-7 points lower on average than they would have without lead exposure. That might not sound like much, but across millions of children, it represents a massive loss of cognitive potential. Some heavily exposed children lost 10-15 IQ points.
Lead exposure doesn't just lower intelligence—it damages impulse control and increases aggression. Researchers discovered a direct correlation between childhood lead exposure and violent crime rates 20 years later. When lead levels in the air peaked in the 1970s, violent crime exploded in the 1990s. When lead was finally removed from gasoline, crime rates plummeted two decades later.
The data is stunning. States that removed lead from gasoline earliest saw crime drop first. Cities with the highest lead exposure in the 1970s had the highest murder rates in the 1990s. The correlation holds across countries—nations that banned leaded gasoline saw violent crime drop 20 years later, matching the timeline for lead-exposed children to reach peak crime-committing age.
Environmental economist Jessica Wolpaw Reyes found that lead exposure accounts for roughly 90% of the variation in violent crime between 1990 and 2010. NOT poverty, NOT policing strategies, NOT incarceration rates—lead poisoning. The massive crime wave that terrified America in the 1980s and 90s was largely a consequence of poisoning children's brains decades earlier.
The oil and automotive industries fought regulations for decades despite knowing the harm. Internal documents show that Standard Oil and General Motors had research proving lead's neurotoxic effects as early as the 1920s. They buried the studies and funded bogus research claiming lead was safe. Sound familiar? It's the exact playbook tobacco companies used.
It wasn't until the 1970s that the EPA finally began phasing out leaded gasoline, and it wasn't fully banned until 1996. For 75 years, the industry knowingly poisoned children to increase profits. No one went to jail. The companies paid no significant penalties.
The effects are still measurable today. Anyone born between 1950 and 1980 was exposed to lead from gasoline during critical developmental years. Studies estimate that half of Americans alive today have reduced cognitive ability due to childhood lead exposure from gasoline. If you were born before 1980 and grew up near a highway, you almost certainly have lead in your bones.
The damage extends beyond IQ and crime. Lead exposure increases rates of ADHD, impulsivity, mental illness, and addiction. It may have contributed to the mental health crisis that began emerging in the 1980s and 90s. We poisoned the brains of millions of children, and we're still dealing with the consequences.
Lead from gasoline is still in the soil near highways. Children playing in yards along old highways are still being exposed decades after leaded gasoline was banned. The lead doesn't disappear—it accumulates in soil and dust, where it can be inhaled or ingested for generations.
The story gets worse: Thomas Midgley Jr. also invented CFCs, the refrigerant that created the ozone hole. One man is responsible for TWO of the most environmentally catastrophic inventions in history. He eventually died when a pulley system he invented to help him move while disabled from polio strangled him in his sleep—a grimly fitting end for someone whose inventions harmed so many.
Leaded gasoline wasn't a mistake or an accident. It was a choice. Companies chose profits over children's brains. Regulators chose industry lobbying over public health. And an entire generation paid the price with reduced intelligence, increased violence, and lifelong cognitive damage.