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Anti-GMO Activists Win Victory On Hawaiian Island

biobricks writes "New York Times reports on how the county council on the Big Island of Hawaii banned GMOs. 'Urged on by Margaret Wille, the ban’s sponsor, who spoke passionately of the need to “act before it’s too late,” the Council declined to form a task force to look into such questions before its November vote. But Mr. Ilagan, 27, sought answers on his own. In the process, he found himself, like so many public and business leaders worldwide, wrestling with a subject in which popular beliefs often do not reflect scientific evidence. At stake is how to grow healthful food most efficiently, at a time when a warming world and a growing population make that goal all the more urgent.'"

510 comments

  1. Re:victory against science by LikwidCirkel · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I wouldn't equate pseudoscience-believing hippies with Republicans.

  2. going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by smoothnorman · · Score: 4, Insightful
    screwdrivers can/will be used to make hideous things (bombs, kill-droids, ...) but since everyone can understand screwdrivers no one would think to ban, or even restrict, them. GMO is complicated, really requiring an advanced to degree to appreciate. GMO can be used like screwdrivers to do evil (typically in the hands of some eeevil profit driven corporation (e.g. Monsanto in concert with Roundup) or it can be used to work towards really noble goals like improving the nutrition and disease resistance of crops in developing countries (e.g. search for "Golden rice").

    in other words, going after GMO-the-technique is anti-progressive. one should instead go for (federal) regulation of GMO products. even indiscriminate labeling campaigns just naively suppress the technique, both good and bad usages.

    ok, (having spoken my peace); on with the pitchforks and burning-brands!

    1. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by sandytaru · · Score: 1

      Most people who would shit-talk their employer would be doing so as an AC, I assume.

      --
      Occasionally living proof of the Ballmer peak.
    2. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cheap, baseless ad hominem. GP has a point (see +5, Insightful mod for reference).

    3. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by PopeRatzo · · Score: 5, Insightful

      GMO can be used like screwdrivers to do evil (typically in the hands of some eeevil profit driven corporation (e.g. Monsanto in concert with Roundup) or it can be used to work towards really noble goals like improving the nutrition and disease resistance of crops in developing countries (e.g. search for "Golden rice").

      Do you think it's more likely the GMO foods being sold to Hawaiians is of the "really noble" variety or the "eeevil profit driven corporation" variety?

      Here's a protip for you: If there is transparency in the way GMO is used in food, it's likely in the former. If there's an effort to fight the simple labeling of such foods as being GMOs, then it's almost certainly the latter. People with noble goals don't usually try their best to hide what they're doing.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    4. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      since everyone can understand screwdrivers no one would think to ban, or even restrict, them

      Tell that to the TSA.

    5. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by ganjadude · · Score: 1

      I would have gone with guns because it is a closer analogy I believe. Guns can be used for good an evil yet the same group who are against GMOs generally are also generally against guns

      --
      have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
    6. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by smoothnorman · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Every last thing you eat could be credibly labeled as GMO. even that tomato you grew yourself in your yard has been genetically modified (there was a genetically modified fugal resistant strain produced in the late 1980s which has been cross-pollinated to most others, so most seed stock carries the advantage) Therefore, please, slap a GMO label on everything you eat, before you eat it. but it would be far more informative, for example, to stick an "M" for Monsanto on just their products.

    7. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      GMO is a really tricky thing. It's one of those things that once released into the environment will continue to replicate and mutate. This is why GMO should be heavily regulated because we don't want to screw ourselves by something we currently think would be harmless but turns out to have been really really bad. Kind of like Monsanto's genes spreading through neighboring crops contaminating everything.

      I personally have a problem with fabricated genes or genes from other entities being grafted onto crop genes and then planted in uncontrolled environments (i.e. farms) I do not have a problem with mixing varieties of same crop genes together in the lab, and letting those out - they're variations that would occur naturally sooner or later. So if we know soybean type A deals better in drought and type B grows bigger fruit - great, identify and merge those genes and test it out. Adding shark genes... not so much.

    8. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by jedidiah · · Score: 0

      The collateral damage done by evil GMO corporations far outweigh the advantages of something like "Golden rice" that's redundant anyways.

      Only an idiot that knows nothing about farming or vegetables would get excited about something as silly as "Golden rice".

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    9. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Mashiki · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      I have to ask, how much longer are you going to be alive? Going by your post, you don't eat anything. Not even common "green" varieties of foods which have been genetically modified by crossbreeding various strains to make them resistant or immune to particular types of fungi or insects.

      Well then again I suppose you could be surviving on a diet of seaweed, and personally I do like seaweed and kelp flavored food...but to survive on it? Not sure if that's possible...

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    10. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      screwdrivers can/will be used to make hideous things (bombs, kill-droids, ...) but since everyone can understand screwdrivers no one would think to ban, or even restrict, them.

      I don't think this is an accurate analogy, since you can only do so much harm with a screwdriver. A mistake in GMO development could potentially kill millions of people due to unintended consequences. Sure, it has not happened yet, but do you really trust the agri-giants to put your health and safety above their profits?

      "Genetic power is the most awesome force the planet's ever seen, but you wield it like a kid that's found his dad's gun." - Ian Malcolm, Jurassic Park

    11. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by istartedi · · Score: 1

      Going after GMO is like attempting to halt an experiment with no control being run on all of us. There. FTFY.

      --
      For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
    12. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That's horseshit. GMO is a very specific term, despite what some people would have you believe. It stands for Genetically Modified Organism. As in the product of taking genes from one organism and placing them directly into another organism. This is different from hybridization where you have to be able to create viable offspring by mating two organisms together selecting the ones that express what you're interested in.

      Prior to about the '80s, they didn't exist at all. Conflating hybridization that takes many generations and may or may not yield a specific product with one where you can put completely unrelated and unpredictable genes in is completely wrong.

      The problem here is that there's a massive conflict of interest with the scientists don't the research and the people responsible for safe guarding things. They still haven't introduced any way of keeping the genes from jumping species even though they still lack the ability to predict what the consequences of that are long term. I have no particular problem eating GMOs, I have a huge problem with them being permitted to propagate in an unchecked fashion.

    13. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      GMOs aren't good though. They're mostly there to solve problems that aren't problems. Golden rice was invented as a work around for making leafy greens unaffordable to people in rice producing regions. We have more than enough food globablly without GMOs, the insecticide resistance is rendered moot by the genes jumping species.

      Until the scientists doing the research can control where the genes wind up, they have no business conducting this research outside of secured facilities. Let alone having farmers using these genes on a widespread basis. This is a genie that can't be put back into the bottle, so they should be careful about what they loose upon the world.

    14. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      GMO is patented.

    15. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by hazem · · Score: 5, Insightful

      A better analogy comes from the artificial "trans fat" fiasco. Here's this new kind of fat created by "scientific processes" that is touted by many authorities to be superior to the natural fats that people had been consuming for centuries. In the 1960s, it was pushed heavily as a way to prevent heart disease. A few decades later, it was discovered to actually increase the incidence of heart disease and we're in the process of slowly removing it from our food supplies.

      GMO is even less tested than artificial trans fats were (they were around for nearly half a century before being heavily pushed by government and industry). Maybe some of them will turn out to be just fine, and possibly repleat with benefits, but others may be harmful to both the environment as well as the people and animals who consume them. There just hasn't been enough testing to demonstrate that mixing genes from here with genes from over there, as well as creating new sequences out of whole-cloth, has no unintended consequences.

      I don't think it's too much to allow people to have labeling to then be able to make informed choices about whether they want to be a part of this huge un-controlled human trial.

    16. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by smoothnorman · · Score: 0

      i wasn't conflating hybridization with genetic modification. that tomato strain was genetically modified, by plasmid insertion, -then- cross-pollinated with most other major strains. or... are you willing to say generation 1 of GMO is GMO whereas generation 3 isn't? what if the wind blows a GMO crop's pollen to a non-GMO? (as has been provably happened) does everywhere the GMO crop touches become GMO... and forever-after in all germ lines? it's complicated. there is no single definition of GMO, legal (as opposed to scientifically based), or otherwise, even in Europe where most folks think the matter is somehow perfectly resolved. as for "unchecked fashion" you're already too late, you're alive in a sea of GMO and you'll never be able to point to where it is and where it isn't. and it's by *nature* an expanding influence - such is evolution.

    17. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by ganjadude · · Score: 1

      My issues with GMOs are not the fact that they are genetically engineered, but that they are patented. Anyone can make GMO crops simply by cross breeding different strains. that has been going on since the beginning of agriculture, thats how we get variety. but when a company wants to claim that you dont own your own seeds, and if you save seeds from year one and plant them on year 2 you somehow owe a company for it, that is where my issue is with GMO

      --
      have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
    18. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by hazem · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Do you really see no difference between the cross-breeding of closely-related plant species that would naturally cross-breed, selecting for positive traits vs. the direct genetic manipulation of the genome of a plant that could only happen in a laboratory, combining genes of organisms that could never otherwise cross-breed?

      I'd love to see the natural way that potatoes would breed with jellyfish to get the genes to glow when they need to be watered.

    19. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've seen someone post a comment that was not supportive of our new hero Mr. Snowden (I know, heresy, and he should rightfully be tarred and feathered for not thinking like us right-minded Slashdot folk), and one of the anonymous replies to this was "Fuck you Stasist", which got modded up pretty high. I'm not sure I would necessarily hold up as evidence a +5 moderation as supportive of a good point.

    20. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by smoothnorman · · Score: 1, Insightful
      how about cows bearing the genetic material of a snake? pretty scifi, eh? almost certainly the product of an eeevil mad scientist? nope: http://phenomena.nationalgeographic.com/2013/01/01/how-a-quarter-of-the-cow-genome-came-from-snakes/ http://www.abc.net.au/news/2013-01-03/snake-genes-27hitchhike27-into-cow-dna/4451308

      the first category error in this whole imbroglio is presuming that the word "natural" has any clear meaning.

    21. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by sl149q · · Score: 2

      New plant varieties can be and are patented REGARDLESS of how they are developed. If you develop a new strain of something with unique characteristics you get a patent on it. This is nothing new for GMO versions.

    22. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 2

      Initially, it was believed that transgenic processes did not occur in nature and were a purely human, hence 'new' technology. This has now changed: http://davesgarden.com/guides/articles/view/1900/#b

    23. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by squiggleslash · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Do you think it's more likely the GMO foods being sold to Hawaiians is of the "really noble" variety or the "eeevil profit driven corporation" variety?

      Yes.

      What, you think the two are incompatible? Here's a thought: maybe companies monetize products that have, or are perceived to have, value. For example, a company might see a market for a strain of cereal that is resistant to a particular herbicide, making it easier to attack weeds on land used to grow that cereal. The business selling the seeds for the cereal can charge lots of money for the cereal - and even the herbicide! - and farmers gratefully buy the seed in question because it'll make their practices more efficient and reduce the amount of food they have to throw away due to weeks.

      But I know, that's probably not the type of GMO application anyone's thinking of.

      Except it is.

      And no, labeling does nothing other than give GM foods a stigma. It's inherently anti-consumer to label GM products that have no likely health or nutritional differences from their non-GM equivalents, because it adds noise to the consumer warning labels, and that makes the labels less easy to interpret. You shouldn't have to look up every warning label on Wikipedia before buying something just to find out whether there's a legitimate issue there, or some anti-corporatists getting power and using it to push an agenda.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    24. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by EngnrFrmrlyKnownAsAC · · Score: 3, Insightful

      ...That's kind of the point for most people advocating GMO labeling requirements. It's still possible to find non-GMO foods but without labels, it's much harder to find them.

      --
      Howdy howdy howdy
    25. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by EngnrFrmrlyKnownAsAC · · Score: 1

      Cross-breeding is very different from shot-gun insertion of genes from entirely separate species. Go educate yourself.

      And what the hell does seaweed have go do with anything?

      --
      Howdy howdy howdy
    26. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      I'd love to see the natural way that potatoes would breed with jellyfish to get the genes to glow when they need to be watered.

      Right, and can you tell me where they're in the food chain, and where we consume them? I'll wait, I wouldn't want you to look like more of a ass then you've already made of yourself.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    27. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      Cross-breeding is very different from shot-gun insertion of genes from entirely separate species. Go educate yourself.

      Funny, I thought science was all about experimentation and finding out "how things worked" and much like I said above, can you tell me where said "entirely separate species" are spliced in and included in the food chain. Such as oh...let's go with jellyfish and potatoes?

      Perhaps the only person that needs to go out and educate themselves is you.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    28. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by hazem · · Score: 5, Insightful

      However, the next category error is assuming that just because a changed organism doesn't kill people outright that it's actually safe for long-term consumption and safe for other organisms in the environment.

    29. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by smoothnorman · · Score: 2
      you have that backwards. cross-breeding is more "shot-gun" than selectively inserting genes (which many here would equate with GMO'ing). when Lord Snagglebottom wanted to cross-breed his sheep to get a longer coat, he didn't let any of the offspring breed that didn't have the desired trait. and he had to do a helluva lot of that until -and *if*- he ever got something like he wanted. whereas if he could isolate the gene for long coat he'd get a much more immediate and direct result *if* it's possible (with a single gene product).

      in terms of cross-breeding the most direct approach was to -wait- until nature fortuitously produced the variant and then breed that "true". like the Dachshund dog or the "Golden delicious" apple. but you see, we humans, we don't like to wait, and that's why we're on top of the "gene pool". technology is neither good or evil, but impatience is part of its motivator.

    30. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by ganjadude · · Score: 1

      thats kind of my point, any new strain is technically GMO, if we cross breed 2 strains to make 1 new stable strain, then we have created a GMO of sorts.

      I am against patenting plants and genes period

      --
      have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
    31. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by smoothnorman · · Score: 1

      that wouldn't be a category error (as it's typically defined) and no one here are assuming that not "killing outright" is a sign of harmlessness. sometimes all that requires is a persistent form of ignorance. ("..the boy as Ignorance and the girl as Want. The spirit warns Scrooge, "Beware them both, and all of their degree, but most of all beware this boy, for on his brow I see that written which is Doom, unless the writing be erased")

    32. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      The law accomplishes nothing and makes every food item more expensive. That alone is reason to oppose it.

      You know your TV? It has this thing in it called a "V-chip". It blanks out the channel if the content rating is too high for the parental controls. This functionality is required by law, and as a result, every TV is slightly more expensive. Have you ever seen someone (intentionally) turn the V-chip on? Ever? In your entire life?

      No. It made TVs more expensive and accomplished nothing else. Same with this GMO labeling law.

    33. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It was already suggested to mandate labeling of non-GMO products where at least 50% of packaging would be devoted to "WARNING - DOES NOT CONTAIN GMO" label. There, it will be really easy for you to find such a product. You wouldn't have a problem with that, would you?

    34. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by dasunt · · Score: 1

      Here's a protip for you: If there is transparency in the way GMO is used in food, it's likely in the former. If there's an effort to fight the simple labeling of such foods as being GMOs, then it's almost certainly the latter. People with noble goals don't usually try their best to hide what they're doing.

      Although with things people fear, it's not uncommon to hide the process or technique. Look at how little it's publicized that mutagens were commonly used to make new strains of food in the 20th century. From Wikipedia:

      Mutation breeding is the process of exposing seeds to chemicals or radiation in order to generate mutants with desirable traits to be bred with other cultivars. Plants created using mutagenesis are sometimes called mutagenic plants or mutagenic seeds. From 1930-2007 more than 2540 mutagenic plant varietals have been released[1] that have been derived either as direct mutants (70%) or from their progeny (30%).[2] Crop plants account for 75% of released mutagenic species with the remaining 25% ornamentals or decorative plants.[3] However, it is unclear how many of these varieties are currently used in agriculture or horticulture around the world, as these seeds are not always identified or labeled as being mutagenic or having a mutagenic provenance.

      Another, non-food example would be MRIs - which dropped the "nuclear" part of the name (it's technically " nuclear magnetic resonance imaging") due to fears that the public would misunderstand the word "nuclear".

    35. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Kohath · · Score: 1

      Do you think it's more likely the GMO foods being sold to Hawaiians is of the "really noble" variety or the "eeevil profit driven corporation" variety?

      Do you think Hawaii is a cartoon world full of "eeevil" villains and "really noble" heroes? I thought it was a real place.

    36. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Znork · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately I think the system is a bit to susceptible to regulatory capture. And considering the nature of Monsanto as a corporation that, given a choice between developing a product that was vastly profitable and one less profitable but would also give the consumers inheritable cancer, would chose the cancer one I'm not convinced that regulation can become trustworthy enough.

      I have nothing against GMO per-se, but unless companies like Monsanto can be permanently dispatched to history, and for as long as glaring misapplications of GMO tech seem to be the most common uses (ie, doomed short term applications whose use will soon be negated by resistance buildup in weeds or pests) I'd rather see bans than no bans.

      Ultimately, it's not that GMO is that hard to appreciate. I think you'd find that if 90% of screwdrivers were used to build bombs there'd be a lot of interest in banning screwdrivers.

    37. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by VortexCortex · · Score: 3, Informative

      I have no problem with people choosing to eat GMO crops. I would personally rather set the seeds in the sun and let UV light cause faster differentiation for my crop selective breeding program than have patented seeds, and thus have far better diversity than the pesticide resistant monoculture of GMO. The strive for absolute maximum yield is as horrid as the strive for absolute maximum security or absolute maximum progress. These moronic absolutist drives marginalize proper cautions and acceptable risk and lead to bad and/or uninformed decisions about the food we'll eat, what protections are actually needed, and the lifestyles we live.

      I would rather eat food that wasn't grown with pesticides or herbicides sprayed on them even if it is more expensive and the ecosystem reclaims a bit of the crop -- I consider it the cost of doing business with nature, renting her land. The "cheaper" poisoned crop is just hiding the cost elsewhere in the environment and my body. No one should get to dictate what my acceptable risk is worth in either extreme -- They do not have my best interest in mind. I need information to make informed decisions. All of my food I get from my local farmers market or grow myself; I have been to the farms whence my food comes. I can make two pizzas with all organic ingredients: yeast from the air, vegetables from my garden, oils from local olives, salt from the sea, cheeses made locally, and flour I ground myself -- all in the same amount of time it takes for you to get pizza delivered. The fresh taste is phenomenal, and better for you (less fats, salts and preservatives).

      I would love to be able to maintain my food preference while shopping at a supermarket, but thanks to the GMO lobby I can't. The GMO lobbyists prevent me from making an informed choice by lobbying against labeling of GMO food -- Or even preventing those that label their products as non-GMO. This is as terrible as the state telling me I don't need to know what the NSA is doing because it's good for me. Fuck that shit. I want choice. GMO companies are actively anti-choice. I'm anti-GMO company, being anti-GMO food is an unfortunate but necessary outgrowth of their anti-informed consumer stance.

      I also don't take any drugs that haven't been on the market for more than 10 years because I've seen that longer term testing is frequently needed. I buy the latest computing technology because I don't put that buggy crap in my body. If it were a medical device going inside me, I'd want the source code, and I'd want years of testing to work out the bugs, some assurances that the shit doesn't have a trivial exploit vector. I fight against all this "it's good for you just trust us" information disparity bullshit in our current culture, not just with GMO crops.

      GMO isn't the only way to do business. If it didn't exist and neither did pesticides, guess what? The economy would adjust the cost and price of food. Hey, here's a thought: Competition is good. GMO companies are anti-competitive. Yes you can pay engineers to invent things and call that progress, but you also miss out on the natural progresses achieved through good old mutation and selection if you seek to exclude the natural methods of crop growing -- Which GMO companies and lobbies do. Anti-competition is bad for crops for the same reason normalizing the methods of production is bad for business: Mono-cultures are "anti-progressive", you idiot. Get this through your fool head: They don't want what's best for us, they want what's best for them at any cost to us; They'll deffer as much of that cost to us and the environment as they can get away with. You shouldn't trust them by default. Where's your scientific skepticism? My standard of proof is higher and you call me anti-progressive? THAT's anti-progressive, moron.

    38. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by EngnrFrmrlyKnownAsAC · · Score: 1

      You didn't take me literally enough.

      --
      Howdy howdy howdy
    39. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by EngnrFrmrlyKnownAsAC · · Score: 1

      Don't drop context: "genes from entirely separate species"

      Jellyfish & potatoes: "A full-length cDNA corresponding to the RNA genome of Potato leafroll virus (PLRV) was modified by inserting cDNA that encoded the jellyfish green fluorescent protein (GFP) into the P5 gene near its 3 end." I'd say jellyfish and potato are separate species...

      Or soil bacteria & potatoes: "Colorado potato beetle (CPB) resistance has been achieved through the incorporation of a gene for the Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) protein into potatoes." Again, two separate species which wouldn't normally have any mechanism to transfer genes. Oh, and this example is in our food chain.

      You were saying?

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      Howdy howdy howdy
    40. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by BradleyUffner · · Score: 1

      I'd love to see the natural way that potatoes would breed with jellyfish to get the genes to glow when they need to be watered.

      You sound like a creationist who believes evolution isn't true because a dog has never given birth to a cat.

    41. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 4, Interesting

      "that tomato strain was genetically modified, by plasmid insertion, -then- cross-pollinated with most other major strains. or... are you willing to say generation 1 of GMO is GMO whereas generation 3 isn't?"

      Since there are no genetically modified tomatoes available commercially, GP is correct.

      Further, even when the "Flavr-Savr" tomato was being produced experimentally, the claim that it used fish genes was actually a confusion between that and other research. So: no, your tomato is not GMO in the sense being discussed here, which is the insertion of foreign genes from other organisms.

      Hawaii is a special case, and it is particularly sensitive to invasive organisms. It is perfectly reasonable for them to be extra-cautious at this time. They are in a particularly strong place from which to say, "If there is even a small chance it is bad, let's not do it."

    42. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is nothing beneficial nor noble about what Monsanto et. al. are doing in India with their golden rice, try searching Indian farmer suicides or just read anything written by Dr. Vanadana Shiva, e.g. http://online.sfsu.edu/rone/GEessays/goldenricehoax.html.

    43. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      Initially, it was believed that transgenic processes did not occur in nature and were a purely human, hence 'new' technology. This has now changed:

      Yes, but if you're trying to use that to justify GMO, it's a giant straw-man argument.

      Natural processes that likely occurred over millions of years are hardly comparable to inserting genes from one organism into another in a lab to get the effect you desire. You see the first precisely because it worked, and the organism survived over long periods of time. You aren't seeing the likely millions or even billions of combinations that, for one reason or another, did not work. Because they simply did not survive over time.

      It's apples and oranges.

    44. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by hazem · · Score: 1

      Because somehow potatoes naturally breed with jellyfish and I just haven't seen it happen personally? You couldn't hit further from the mark.

      It's sad that when I say, "We've made mistakes before with assuming things are safe and even beneficial (like Trans-fats), let's do more controlled testing of GMO before replacing our food supply with them" the only reponses are insults (the literary one above was clever, but still an insult - though I do like Dickens).

      Is your (collective "you" of pro-GMO) so weak that that's all you have? Weak insults?

      We were using artificial trans-fats for decades before they were being heavily pushed by scientists and authorities as a superior food-stuff. It was nearly a century after they were introduced that we have realized that they're actually quite harmful. How much controlled testing has been done on GMO to determine its long-term safety for human health and the environment? Is it so outrageous to want to see long-term testing done by people not in a position to make a fortune based on the results of that testing? And in lieu of that, is it so outrageous to want labeling so people have the choice about whether they will participate in this vast uncontrolled experiment or not?

      And if you're going to say, "there's no difference" then please explain why corporations like Monsanto are paying billions of dollars to research and litigate in the domain of GMO. Clearly there is a difference.

      I'm just asking for more science rather than blindly accepting what Monsanto et. al., tell me is safe. Do you have anything more than insults? Or is that what you call science?

    45. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When 'contains GMO food' is the equivalent of 'EVIL POISON IN YER BABIES' to many ignorant potential customers, do you blame them?

    46. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by hazem · · Score: 1

      And frankly, if you are trying to assert that jellyfish and potatoes do indeed cross-breed naturally, I would like to see some evidence of that before I accept it. Such a claim requires evidence.

      Nobody who is a proponent of evolution claims that dogs give birth to cats, so it would be ridiculous and non-germain to ask for evidence of that. If there was evidence like that, it would actually do more to challenge evolution than support it.

    47. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gay marriage is a really tricky thing. It's one of those things that once unleashed on the public will continue to replicate and mutate (polygamy, bestiality, etc.). This is why gay marriage should be heavily regulated because we don't want to screw ourselves by something we currently think would be harmless but turns out to have been really really bad. Kind of like gayness spreading through neighbors contaminating everything.

      OK, that's about as much of that as I can stomach. The so called "precautionary principle" is just a rationalization for ignorant faith-based policies.

    48. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not even common "green" varieties of foods which have been genetically modified by crossbreeding various strains

      Stop rating this kind of bullshit as Insightful, it's the exact opposite. We use the term "genetic modification" to specifically mean a direct tampering with the genetics of the organism AS OPPOSED TO breeding it through natural processes.

    49. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      GMO is even less tested than artificial trans fats were

      Incorrect. Just because a talking point has been repeated ad naseuam, doesn't make it true.
      http://www.biofortified.org/genera/studies-for-genera/independent-funding/

    50. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by BradleyUffner · · Score: 1

      Because somehow potatoes naturally breed with jellyfish and I just haven't seen it happen personally? You couldn't hit further from the mark.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horizontal_gene_transfer

    51. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by BradleyUffner · · Score: 1
    52. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1

      The point here is that because natural transgenic processes exist, human engineering of genes is no more alien in comparison to natural processes than Mendelian genetic selection by humans is distinct from natural selection.

    53. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you read the article you linked to? Those are still organisms that are closely related and it still doesn't result in the kind of changes that GMO can cause. Just because you failed to understand the article, does not make you correct. It means that you're probably working for Monsanto as an astro turfer.

      If you bothered to read your link, it's far from certain that this is in any way common, nor is there any evidence that the genes are going between widely differing organisms.

    54. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, it's not. GMO refers to when you take genes out of another organism and put them into the genetic material of another. Not by taking two related species and mating them together. With hybridization you have to have similar genetic material or you wind up with nothing for the effort. And ideally the offspring should be fertile otherwise you have to do the crossing every time.

      GMOs are not so restricted, they can also do in one generation what it might have taken a dozen generations of hybridization to accomplish previously.

      It does a disservice to the debate to conflate hybridization with GMO as GMO is really only about 30 or so years old and hybridization happens on its own in a controlled fashion.

    55. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by the+plant+doctor · · Score: 1

      Errm, Monsanto has nothing to do with Golden Rice and Dr. Shiva is a physicist, hardly an expert on biological organisms. Oh and RTFA linked from /. There's a bit in there about the supposed "suicicide-GMO" link.

    56. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by ewieling · · Score: 1

      People have been genetically modifying organisms since the 1930s using the scattershot approaches of http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mutation_breeding and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atomic_gardening. My only concern with "GMO" is because they tend to be licensed and have strict terms of use.

      --
      I really shouldn't have used someone else's email address for this account.
    57. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by sjames · · Score: 2

      You're pointlessly playing with semantics. GMO is well understood to mean transgenic rather than crossbreeding techniques.

      There are legitimate questions about the probability of GMO producing a harmful crop vs. traditional techniques.

      I would support a scarlet M for Monsanto since they seem to be one of the bigger offenders.

    58. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can't wait for Certified Organic GMO produce to mess with everyone's heads :-)

    59. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by sjames · · Score: 1

      MONSANTO would claim ownership of the hybrids so I guess they would support once GMO, always GMO.

      OTOH, I believe that few generations of breeding would address the concerns about unstable plants not breeding true. However, I would not support doing that irreversibly in the biosphere until the result is shown to be stable and beneficial.

      On the legal side, I would like to see the patent issues resolved such that the hybrid of an owned variety and another is considered novel and not infringing, just like naturally bred plants.

    60. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by sjames · · Score: 1

      Monsanto is.

    61. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by sjames · · Score: 2

      Are you actually arguing for "ignorance is strength"? That less information in the market is better?

    62. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      "People have been genetically modifying organisms since the 1930s using the scattershot approaches ..."

      Those are still VERY DIFFERENT from the kind of methods used to create the GMO crops we are discussing here.

      You can choose to be as alarmed or not as you please, but those are simply different subjects, and scarcely relevant.

    63. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      "The point here is that because natural transgenic processes exist, human engineering of genes is no more alien in comparison to natural processes than Mendelian genetic selection by humans is distinct from natural selection."

      Not necessarily more alien. Although even that argument is weak. It is unlikely that cat genes would every be naturally combined with jellyfish genes in the way that has been done in the lab, for example.

      But regardless, I am not saying it's necessarily "alien", just untested by time, and for that matter far too untested by science. It is a potentially very dangerous thing to do to a food supply. (And not without unintended consequences, either. For example, "Roundup Ready" products were supposed to reduce pesticide use, but use is now higher than ever before.)

    64. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by sjames · · Score: 1

      There are actually people (whole countries even) that actually want to know if GMO ingredients are used. Unlike the V-chip, those interested in knowing about GMOs in their food will be able to use the label.

    65. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Part of the problem with that solutions is that going for federal regulation is equivalent to going to Monsanto for regulation. Many of those in charge are Monsanto people.

    66. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      GMO is patented.

      Bingo.

      Forget any possible safety concerns. Owning organisms is a bad idea. Think about the way the copyright and patent maximalists have distorted other areas.

      Hell, a guy singing "Silent Night" in a YouTube video got a takedown notice and had his video removed. A song written in the mid-1800s. Farmers have been forced to destroy their crop if a handful of patented plants showed up in his field.

      Think about how badly fucked up things could get if we start getting massive IP battles over basic foodstuffs. GMO food will be the greatest (and maybe last) transfer of wealth from the bottom to the top. And there's no way the patent holders will be able to act rationally or humanely because as corporations they don't have any choice.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    67. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by terryk29 · · Score: 1

      ...GMO is complicated, really requiring an advanced to degree to appreciate.

      Insertion of genes? An advanced degree?

    68. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by ozydingo · · Score: 1

      Maybe I'm missing something but, but you appear to be asking what currently available GMO crops contain "entirely separate species". Ignore this if I misread.

      There are only a few currently on-the-market GM crops, where GM refers to transgenic modification, not hybridization. Probably the most commonly known is the Roundup ready line of crops, including soy and corn, but I'm a little sketchy on the details. It appears to have something to do with the bacterium Agrobacterium tumefaciens . Almost as commonly known are crops such as Bt corn and potatoes, which have a gene from the bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis , The SunUp papaya has a gene fragment from the papaya ringspot virus. Liberty Link corn, soy, etc., has a gene isolated from Streptomyces bacteria. Golden rice has been produced different ways, including genes from daffodil, bacteria, and corn.

      Anyway, that's a partial list, in case you're interested. I don't suppose you are actually claiming that there is no practical difference between cross-breeding and transgenics.

    69. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by ozydingo · · Score: 1

      I thought trans fat was only about texture and stability / shelf life (while being cheaper than animal fats). Do you have more info on the claim that trans fats were thought to help prevent heart disease?

      Additionally, there are some natural trans fats too, but they do not have the same effect on heart disease as currently manufactured trans fats

    70. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by bcboy · · Score: 1

      You have no idea what you are talking about.

    71. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by ChromeAeonium · · Score: 0

      GMO is even less tested

      Wrong. As the AC above points out, there are hundreds of studies on GE crops, and no plausible mechanism as to why they would be inherently dangerous. Quit spreading misinformation.

      I don't think it's too much to allow people to have labeling to then be able to make informed choices about whether they want to be a part of this huge un-controlled human trial.

      See above. Labeling is at this point about as justified as mandatory labels for religious dietary choices. It singles out one particular aspect of agriculture without justification (ever heard anyone demand any other crop improvement method be labeled? That's because the organic industry isn't selling alternatives to them) and ignores just how easily those who care can avoid GE crops with a little bit of educations. What you are proposing would be like demanding mandatory labels on WiFi routers saying 'emits radiation.' It's not wrong, but it is damned misleading to those without basic knowledge of WiFi, and unnecessary to those who do.

    72. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by ewieling · · Score: 1

      The GMO method of inserting a specific gene to accomplish a specific goal seems much safer than to me than Mutation breeding.

      --
      I really shouldn't have used someone else's email address for this account.
    73. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      That's complete bullshit.

      Labeling is an attempt to stigmatize, that's all it is. They couldn't find the science to prove GMOs dangerous, so they think they can make reasonable sounding arguments like "Well, then why are you afraid to label it hmmmmm???".

      Only it's not reasonable sounding. It's silly and transparent. They should label nothing.

      Imagine some redneck who thinks if gay people touch his food he'll catch teh ghey. You know what his argument would be? "Sure, yer fancy schmancy scientists say I'm an idiot, but what are they afraid of? I demand all food picked or prepared by gays be labeled! Why are you scared to label it?"

      I believe that makes you a science redneck.

    74. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by ChromeAeonium · · Score: 1

      That's an asinine way to put it. I'm sure if someone lobbied to require that organic food be labeled as 'grown in feces' the organic industry would fight against that, and rightfully so. Maybe if the anti-GE movement hadn't spent the past two decades lying about GMOs things would be different, but now defending yourself against fearmongers is evidence that something nefarious is going on? Way to victim blame. Damned if you do and damned if you don't. Furthermore, the fight was over mandatory labeling, not voluntary. That's a very big detail you chose to conveniently ignore. In addition, this law also hit the University of Hawai'i's Rainbow papaya, so chew on that. Also, even if Monsanto were so evil, that doesn't justify hurting the farmers. You probably used gasoline produced by a fairly nasty company today, maybe you should be shackled for their crimes. Of course, that makes no sense, but you support punishing the farmers by the same logic?

    75. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      im sure starving peasants in thailand agree completely, fuck that golden rice. and how helpful for the well-fed anti-GMO thais to burn it for them.

    76. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You seem to think horizontal gene transfer is purely artificial. I assure you that the vast majority occurs in nature spontaneously. In hospitals this manifests as drug resistance jumping from one species of bacteria to a completely different one, and happens much like it does in the lab. It's been a while since college when I used to splice and transfer genes, but I can't think of anything done in the lab that doesn't happen in nature as well. Not that being "natural" matters, most of nature is actively trying to kill you.

    77. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by ChromeAeonium · · Score: 1

      that actually want to know if GMO ingredients are used

      Corn (field & sweet corns, not popping corns), soy, canola, cotton, sugar beet, alfalfa, summer squash (fresh only), papaya (Hawaiian only). If it does not specifically say otherwise or is not labeled organic, and it is an item in the above list, it is GE. In just a few seconds, you have learned how to tell if you are eating a GE crop. If it is about the 'right to know' why are they trying to slap a label on things instead of simply trying to educate people? Rhetorical question, the answer is because the organic industry is trying to legislate marketing and scare people into buying their products. If people can't be bothered learn just eight species, they clearly don't care that much do they? And you don't get to write a law just because you're too lazy to educate yourself.

    78. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by ChromeAeonium · · Score: 1

      it is particularly sensitive to invasive organisms

      Which has what, exactly, to do with new varieties. Adding a new gene into a species doesn't make it a new species. Hell, in the case of the Rainbow papaya, the PRSV-CP gene inserted isn't even expressed in the mature tissues of the plant.

      "If there is even a small chance it is bad, let's not do it."

      That's a rather terrible risk assessment method for all sorts of reasons. There's always a small chance that something could go wrong, with anything. That philosophy lets you do nothing. There would no longer be a papaya industry on the Big Island if they listened to that nonsense.

    79. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by ChromeAeonium · · Score: 2

      Ignorance is not strength, but a fact taken out of context can be deceitful.

    80. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hawaii is a special case, but not because of the risk of invasive organisms. That particular ship sailed long ago, and Hawaii is now filled with non-native plants. It's a special case because the year-round growing season makes it a very good seed laboratory.

    81. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by ChromeAeonium · · Score: 1

      Of course they are different, but when people are sitting there complaining that genes are being changed, it is still something worth saying, especially when the changes made via breeding work with thousands of genes while genetic engineering works with only single genes. There's nuance to both, differences, but there are many similarities.

      I'd love to see the natural way that potatoes would breed with jellyfish to get the genes to glow when they need to be watered.

      An irrelevant appeal to nature.

    82. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What, you think the two are incompatible? Here's a thought: maybe companies monetize products that have, or are perceived to have, value. For example, a company might see a market for a strain of cereal that is resistant to a particular herbicide, making it easier to attack weeds on land used to grow that cereal. The business selling the seeds for the cereal can charge lots of money for the cereal - and even the herbicide! - and farmers gratefully buy the seed in question because it'll make their practices more efficient and reduce the amount of food they have to throw away due to weeks.

      But I know, that's probably not the type of GMO application anyone's thinking of.

      Except it is.

      And what happens when the gene to resist the herbicide jumps from the cereal into the weeds? Or if the heavy dependence on a particular herbicide gives rise to the weed equivalent of super-bugs? What about if one of the unknown side-effects of the genes inserted is to create trace amounts of a bio-accumulative poison?

      Paper on round up resistant weeds
      http://arsserv0.tamu.edu/SP2UserFiles/Place/64022000/Publications/Reddy/Nandula-GRW12.pdf - Search google for roundup resistant weeds if you don't want to view the pdf

      Article on toxins remaining in harvested crops from crops modified to resist pests (I know the Daily Mail isn't the best source for this kind of thing but the problem is there and I cba finding the best search terms to find the actual papers)
      http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2266143/Uncovered-toxic-gene-hiding-GM-crops-Revelation-throws-new-doubt-safety-foods.html

      We really do not know the full consequences of using foreign genes in our food sources as yet to be using them on a large scale like we are.

    83. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by sjames · · Score: 1

      Then provide the context.

    84. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by sjames · · Score: 1

      Funny, GMOs aren't allowed in many countries yet they have all of those.

    85. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by bingoUV · · Score: 1

      Labeling is an attempt to stigmatize, that's all it is

      Not if only factual information is labeled, and not insults. GMO is a fact. Gay is an insult for homosexual people. GMO can be determined by experiments (DNA analysis, if all else fails). Touched by gays cannot be determined by any experiments.

      If factual information, possibly to experimentally verify, stigmatizes", the product cannot be any good, can it?

      --
      Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
    86. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by ChromeAeonium · · Score: 1

      You know exactly what I mean. I'm talking about items in and from countries like the US, Canada, Brazil, Argentina, China, ect., where GE crops are more common. Of course, not all of the any crop is genetically engineered, as I clearly indicated in my previous comment.

    87. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by bingoUV · · Score: 2

      Wrong. As the AC above points out, there are hundreds of studies on GE crops, and no plausible mechanism as to why they would be inherently dangerous. Quit spreading misinformation.

      Exactly. Which is why there shouldn't be any issue in labelling GMO.

      Labeling is at this point about as justified as mandatory labels for religious dietary choices

      And companies happily label meat as "halal" meat. I don't see an issue there. My country even has "vegetarian" labels, mandatory by law. Vegetarian has many definitions,but the one used in my country is the relevant one for the popular religions. Labeling is information, not poison. No one minds these labels - producers, retailers, consumers. Only people who want to suppress information would resist labels.

      It singles out one particular aspect of agriculture without justification (ever heard anyone demand any other crop improvement method be labeled? That's because the organic industry isn't selling alternatives to them

      No. Harvest of drip irrigated crops are not necessarily distinguishable by any experiments. GMO and other known species/varieties can be distinguished. No reason why exact species/variety cannot be labelled.

      ignores just how easily those who care can avoid GE crops with a little bit of educations

      And one could calculate calories, nutritional information etc. of canned food with even less information. But labelling nutritional information is mandatory by law in many countries.

      What you are proposing would be like demanding mandatory labels on WiFi routers saying 'emits radiation.

      Well, every material above 0 kelvin temperature emits radiation. Amount is proportional to 4th power of temperature, and wavelength of maximum intensity is proportional to temperature. The label 'emits radiation' itself emits radiations, so would the label 'radiation free'. So it would be idiotic.

      --
      Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
    88. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by ChromeAeonium · · Score: 1

      Well, lets see here. First off, there are a wide variety of things done to improve crops, each along a gradient of genetic changes, including selective breeding, inbreeding, hybridization, interspecific wide crosses, intergeneric wide crosses, wild relative genetic introgression, radiation and chemical induced mutagenesis, somaclonal variation, bud sport selection, induced polyploidy, and various combinations of them that result in some only recently possible crop alterations. Was your cucumber produced via a doubled haploid hybrid? Does your tomato have any S. pimpinellifolium it it? Was your pluot developed using embryo rescue to overcome reproductive barriers? Did your pear grow on quince roots? Each of these changes the plants in different ways, and alters all sorts of aspects of the plant, including altering the levels of potential allergens, like PR proteins, as well as toying with the production of all sorts of secondary metabolites, some of which can be harmful, like the conventionally bred celary that was phototoxic or the conventionally bred potato that had dangerous levels of solanine. Now, you could say that they are just manipulating already natural forces (like crossing two wild peanut species, altering the ploidy level, and backcrossing it into a commercial line would just happen in nature) but so is genetic engineering...it is just a manipulation of horizontal gene transfer, which by the way is why you have viral DNA in your genome right now, and all sorts of other fun things that, in all likelihood, has already resulted in every organism on earth having foreign DNA.

      So, we completely ignore all that, and focus on just one aspect of crop improvement. But do we tell consumers what it means? Hell no. Does a thing have a cpsB, or a Cry1ab, or bar, or a PRSV-CP gene, and what does that all mean? Nope, no information. And even if you did tell that information, it ignores the genes that might be changed in other crop improvement methods, like does your raspberry have the A1 gene, or tomato have the Ph-3 gene, or rice have the SD-1 gene? Who knows, but better not tell the consumer that genetic engineering is only one aspect of the whole picture, because information!

      So, here we have this wide world of crop improvement, and you want to single out one thing, provide no information about that thing, do nothing to let people know that virtually every relevant expert on the planet agrees is beneficial, a thing that ideologues have been fearmongering for years about, and then call it informative? Bullshit, that's a weasel worded lie by omission. Even ignoring all this, there's still no reason to enforce mandatory labeling. Every other group that wants specific labels that are not provably essential has to rely on free market demand for specially labeled products and rely on their own education to know what to avoid...Jews, Muslims, Hindus, vegans, ect. Naturalism is no more deserving of being legally catered to than any other religion.

      By the way, did you know that GE corn has lower levels of carcinogenic mycotoxins. Hmm, where is the push to force organic corn products to carry that information, I wonder? If Monsanto lobbied for that, would you support it? Hey, more information is always better, right?

    89. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by PopeRatzo · · Score: 0

      Furthermore, the fight was over mandatory labeling, not voluntary.

      Of course. Why would there be a fight over "voluntary" labeling? We have always had voluntary labeling.

      If you're trying to hide what's in what you're selling, you're probably up to no good.

      I find it surprising that there is a dedicated contingent of people who support keeping consumers in the dark about what they are buying. Those same people would probably also tell you they support the "free market".

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    90. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by cgfsd · · Score: 1

      "I'd love to see the natural way that potatoes would breed with jellyfish to get the genes to glow when they need to be watered."
      Sounds like a great plot line for a B horror movie, mind if I use it?

    91. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "If there is even a small chance it is bad, let's not do it."

      That's a rather terrible risk assessment method for all sorts of reasons.

      Actually, you can't assess something you can't foresee. Introducing GMOs into the wild, carelessly or intentionally, is playing with fire.

    92. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      "The GMO method of inserting a specific gene to accomplish a specific goal seems much safer than to me than Mutation breeding."

      That's nice. But (1) "seems" is hardly science, and (2) who said the "mutation breeding" process was anywhere near safe?

    93. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by fatphil · · Score: 1

      I'm not so sure. However, right now I'm imagining the GMO method being performed by drunk blind dyslexic microbiologists.

      I wonder if the mutation-breeding researchers nuke their bollocks every night, just on the offchance it gives them healthier offspring? If they were real scientists, they would volunteer in an instant!

      --
      Also FatPhil on SoylentNews, id 863
    94. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by gx5000 · · Score: 1

      Don't confuse GMO's with cross pollination or cross breading, NOT THE SAME ! GMO force an unwelcomed dna strand into the mix that Nature itself would accomplish.

      --
      End of Line.
    95. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      'And no, labeling does nothing other than give GM foods a stigma. It's inherently anti-consumer to label GM products that have no likely health or nutritional differences from their non-GM equivalents, because it adds noise to the consumer warning labels, and that makes the labels less easy to interpret.'

      It's interesting how you tell us how safe GM products are then assume correct labelling is a warning. And thanks for being so sure for me what is and isn't healthy. If I want to delegate this responsibility to others that is one thing, for a company to decide that it'll take this responsibility from me is another entirely

    96. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by fatphil · · Score: 1

      "it is a mind-blowing example of a natural transgenic process in the so-called higher life forms."

      But we've known about such things in what might be called lower life forms for a long time. Isn't large chunks of our own DNA supposed to be inactive bits of stuff that viruses spliced into us? I notice that some have made reference to there possibly being the involvement of a virus in the mechanics this seaslug splicing.

      Don't get me wrong, it's fascinating stuff, but deep down the Burj Khalifa is just another building.

      --
      Also FatPhil on SoylentNews, id 863
    97. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by TangoMargarine · · Score: 1

      Saying that there is a gray area between good and evil is a far cry from saying good can = evil.

      --
      Unity? Screw that: XFCE. Slashdot Beta? Screw that: SoylentNews. Australis? Screw that: Pale Moon. UX developers DIAF
    98. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by LifesABeach · · Score: 1

      I find it very telling that the creators of this stuff, won't publicly consume it themselves, or show their family members consuming it either.

    99. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think its a hell of a presumtion on your part that I should not be informed of what is and is not in my food. You can go eating from unlabeled cans if you like and Iactually care what I eat

    100. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As he didn't ask for a warning but mearly correct labelling you've rather set up a straw man

    101. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by SleazyRidr · · Score: 1

      Every can of corn now comes with a degree in bioengineering? That's going to push your prices up a little.

    102. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by SleazyRidr · · Score: 1

      We can't keep the world completely safe, but we do try to not go around fucking up the world. We've studied GMO quite a lot, and everything we have says that they're safe. Sure, in 50 years it might be discovered that there is something about them that is really bad, but that's not really a convincing enough argument to keep them locked up. A lot of issues will only be found when they are deployed wide-scale, and when we find them we'll work out what to do about them.

    103. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And then add unto this, the inbreeding that has brought some major problems for many dog/turkey/duck/chicken/etc breeds out there. I know there are many examples out there of where trying to selectively breed things can lead to bad or even horrible issues!

    104. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lol, you're completely full of shit. And you are a caricature of yourself. "If factual information...the product cannot be any good, can it?" is exactly the laughable attempt at sophistry I am mocking, you couldn't have made a more hilarious comment.

      No, Gay is not an insult for homosexual people. It's a description. You are a complete idiot, please stop posting on the Internet.

    105. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's complete bullshit and you know it. Jesus christ, does Monsanto pay you to post this stuff?

    106. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It takes a special kind of ignorance or malice to suggest that a less-informed consumer is better off.

      People like you also suggest education should only be for those who can afford it.

    107. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by sjames · · Score: 1

      Since you just said the opposite, yes I do know what you mean: "Just shut the fuck and eat whatever garbage I give you. Here, liock my jackboot".

    108. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sugar is all natural, so is salt. Should I go to a natural sugar and salt diet?

      Are they healthier than GMO chicken?

    109. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by ChromeAeonium · · Score: 1

      Reading comprehension is a hell of a drug.

    110. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by sjames · · Score: 1

      I meant to the consumers that you fear would be confused, but you knew that.

      If Monsanto wants to provide their perspective as context as well, that's just fine.

      Free markets can only work when the buyer can know what he is getting.

      Personally, I don't categorically object to GMO, I just object to the lack of oversight in the process, the general carelessness that has surrounded commercial efforts, and the patenting of staple crops.

    111. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by ChromeAeonium · · Score: 1

      If you're trying to hide what's in what you're selling, you're probably up to no good.

      Hiding? No one is hiding anything. There is a world of difference between hiding something and not singling out something and making it look special. You are using the same tactic that creationists use when they want evolution labeled as 'just a theory'. Sure, it's true, but it is also misleading as hell. But I suppose that because I oppose that I'm just trying to push my evil evolutionist ways by keeping kids in the dark about what they're learning, right? OR how about this...organic food is grown in manure, but I don't see that labeled on the food. Why not? What more or less justification is there for labeling that? This labeling thing is a bullshit tacit designed to single out one aspect of food, make it look bad, then call it information. It's stupid. And yes, not labeling is the free market. If people want labeled food, they will pay extra for it, just like they do with kosher, halal, and vegan labeling. If not, then they won't. Pro-mandatory labelers want to use the government to enforce marketing. That's not a free market at all.

    112. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by sjames · · Score: 1

      In that case, I guess the corporations will just have to behave above board long enough to restore the trust of the population that they have spent the last couple decades burning.

      Meanwhile, I would presume that the presentation wouldn't be printed on every can. Certainly they have never shied away from spending on advertising and lobbying before.

    113. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by sjames · · Score: 1

      I should slip some into your coffee unlabeled.

    114. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by ChromeAeonium · · Score: 1

      Exactly. Which is why there shouldn't be any issue in labelling GMO.

      So, the old 'If you have nothing to hide you have nothing to fear' argument. Well, there is no problem with GMO, so they don't need labeled.

      And companies happily label meat as "halal" meat.

      But is there a legal mandate for haraam?

      My country even has "vegetarian" labels, mandatory by law.

      Really, which country do you live in?

      Only people who want to suppress information would resist labels.

      Or people who want to take information out of context. You can lie with a fact you know. It's like those who want textbooks labeled as saying 'Evolution is only a theory.' Is it true? Yes. Is it also a deception? Yes. Same here, for many reasons.

      GMO and other known species/varieties can be distinguished. No reason why exact species/variety cannot be labelled.

      That same logic could apply to a large number of things. Do you see every plant improvement technique and variety labeled on every crop? No. Does anyone want them labeled? Also no, there is no controversy over that.

      But labelling nutritional information is mandatory by law in many countries.

      But we're not taking about nutritional information. This is variety information. Not even that, it is a label for a particular crop improvement method, which is even less informative. What does a label saying GMO even tell you? Absolutely nothing of relevance.

    115. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who there mustn't be a strawman left in the store by now

    116. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It would take a LOT of shifting to get from jellyfish to potatoes as their enviroments are so different and any genes transfered via intermediatries would have to result in viable organisms

    117. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's probably a fetish site for it already...

    118. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well if Monsanto's there they definitely have the evil villain bit covered

    119. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Reziac · · Score: 1

      It also assumes that even if the 'natural' and 'GMO' plants are biochemically identical, one has evil magical properties that the other does not.

      [My background is biochem/microbiology, so I kinda have a clue.]

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    120. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually you shouldn't use manure straight on your crops which is one reason you don't see it. But if 'organic' food (I hate the term btw) did use manure straight on the crops you would know this from the label organic.
      The equivalent in labeling GM food would be to require the exact techniques used. If the exact phrase upsets you perhaps Artificially Modified food would do? As long as I am properly informed what I'm eating.

    121. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Additionally, by cherrypicking the desired gene, he won't have to give up, or struggle to retain, other traits that are 'pushed out' by the crossbreeding, which will supplant 50% of the genes in the first-generation cross.

      Going after GMO is more like banning filters than screwdrivers.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    122. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And no, labeling does nothing other than give GM foods a stigma. It's inherently anti-consumer to label GM products that have no likely health or nutritional differences from their non-GM equivalents, because it adds noise to the consumer warning labels, and that makes the labels less easy to interpret. You shouldn't have to look up every warning label on Wikipedia before buying something just to find out whether there's a legitimate issue there, or some anti-corporatists getting power and using it to push an agenda.

      Unfortunately, most GMO crops have been shown to be SIGNIFICANTLY DEFICIENT in basic nutrients. It is simply something that is not tested for. They are only interested in: Does it survive? Does it create cheaper crops? Can we make a larger profit?

      I WANT GMO labeling for the clear and above reasoning.

    123. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, the old 'If you have nothing to hide you have nothing to fear' argument. Well, there is no problem with GMO, so they don't need labeled."

      Companies are not individuals and indeed have no feelings so its fine to require this of them. People working for or owning them may have feelings but unless its actually an unlimited company they definitly can't be said to be 'the company' otherwise they'd be liable for the company

      But we're not taking about nutritional information. This is variety information. Not even that, it is a label for a particular crop improvement method, which is even less informative. What does a label saying GMO even tell you? Absolutely nothing of relevance.

      That if you buy this product some scum company that thinks it OK to patent genes will be making money. That alone would make it worthwhile. Also, no matter how much the shrills may deny it, there have been some issue with GM foods. There's tons of quotes already so wont bother with more, especially as the shrills would then start with libeling scientists again.

      But we're not taking about nutritional information. This is variety information. Not even that, it is a label for a particular crop improvement method, which is even less informative. What does a label saying GMO even tell you? Absolutely nothing of relevance.

      If there was absolutely no difference they wouldn't be modified. How, exactly, do you know that these differences are not relevant to me?

    124. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The beauty of this post is it's exactly the kind of 'noble' that these corporations think of: not once have you actually mentioned the effects on the end user (be it man or animal, environment, or ecosystem).

      Introducing GMO plants to increase profitability in a wanton and forward fashion is about as smart as introducing rabbits to Australia for food and as a living plant trimmer. Sounds harmless doesn't it, until you realize it was responsible for the extinction of dozens of species of animal, plant and for massive erosion problems. Add to that the fact that these GMO's will be transmitted via wind and all it takes is one strain with a bad effect and you have an epidemic, plus cross pollination, that is literally impossible to expunge.

      See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rabbits_in_Australia

    125. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure, in 50 years it might be discovered that there is something about them that is really bad, but that's not really a convincing enough argument to keep them locked up.

      Sure it is. We only have one planet after all. Also I don't think "we've studied GMO quite a lot" and not everything we have says they're safe. Added to that is the fact we need to test each modified organism not just one and hope the rest work out ok.

      A lot of issues will only be found when they are deployed wide-scale, and when we find them we'll work out what to do about them.

      Oh, you are just hoping. As I've already indicated we have 1 planet & I'd rather people didn't fuck the ecosystem playing with things they don't understand

    126. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the UK carrying a screwdriver can get you arrested for having a weapon. Pretty much negates your point

    127. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by bingoUV · · Score: 1

      What is so special in nutritional information that it needs to be labeled? You are not telling me that all nutritional science is completely settled with no controversies ? And why shouldn't variety information be labeled?

      There is no legal mandate against haraam, but I'm not advocating any legal mandate against GMO either. So I'm not sure why you would twist the context so.

      --
      Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
    128. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by bingoUV · · Score: 1

      So, the old 'If you have nothing to hide you have nothing to fear' argument. Well, there is no problem with GMO, so they don't need label

      There is no problem with protein, why does that need to be labeled? Carbohydrates? Fats? I don't see any problem with most nutrients. Why do we insist they be labeled, then?

      That same logic could apply to a large number of things. Do you see every plant improvement technique and variety labeled on every crop? No. Does anyone want them labeled? Also no, there is no controversy over that.

      Drip irrigation? Can you read the full post before replying?

      Labelling exact variety is what I'm talking about - there could be multiple kinds of GMO for the same species so for the consumer to judge which one he deems safe/good to consume would need this information. Why do you insist on not reading my whole post?

      --
      Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
    129. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by bingoUV · · Score: 1

      Says the AC. Without any counter-argument at all.

      --
      Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
    130. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by fatphil · · Score: 1

      > > What you are proposing would be like demanding mandatory labels on WiFi routers saying 'emits radiation.

      > Well, every material above 0 kelvin temperature emits radiation.

      Yeah, but not everything above 0 kelvin requires an FCC approval. And a label indicating that it's got said approval. Oh, maybe we do demand such mandatory labels for routers after all.

      --
      Also FatPhil on SoylentNews, id 863
    131. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by bingoUV · · Score: 1

      I just bought some radiating apples without any radiation labels! Call the feds!

      --
      Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
    132. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It also assumes that even if the 'natural' and 'GMO' plants are biochemically identical, one has evil magical properties that the other does not.

      No it means the 'natural' plant have centuries of testing behind them. GMO introduces a large number of elements quickly that are not so well tested.

      [My background is biochem/microbiology, so I kinda have a clue.]

      Is this deliberate deception then or had you just not thought of the point above?

    133. Re:going after GMO is like banning screwdrivers by Reziac · · Score: 1

      An AC says, "No it means the 'natural' plant have centuries of testing behind them. GMO introduces a large number of elements quickly that are not so well tested."

      Well, not exactly. It means the 'natural' version is GRAS (Generally Regarded As Safe) because of long usage, but that doesn't mean it's been *tested*. And in fact we eat a lot of 'natural' things that would never pass ordinary FDA testing, were they developed as a new food product today. Honey (full of random contaminants) and spinach leap to mind (you could probably poison a baby with a diet too heavy in dark green leafy vegetables). Avocados would probably be banned as unsafe for people with undiagnosed heart disease.

      Lots of plant products have to be extensively processed to make them safe to eat at all, because of alkaloids or other toxins. If you don't believe me, go forth and consume unblanched acorn meal for a few years. Or raw taro root.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taro#Toxicity
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calcium_oxalate#Occurrence

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  3. Re:victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    I wouldn't equate pseudoscience-believing hippies with Republicans.

    I'm from Hawaii (specifically the Big Island), and that state (and county) is dominated by Democrats who are very, very far from being creationist Republicans. Heck, even our Republicans are more liberal than a lot of mainland Democrats. So yeah - totally pseudoscience hippies. We have a saying (due to our macadamia nut orchards) that we send our nuts (macadamia) to the mainland and they send their nuts (california hippies) to us.

  4. The food industry has been wrong before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Remember artificial sweeteners? They kept saying there were no health issues to worry about, they had peer-reviewed clinical studies showing no ill effects, and you were getting sweetness without the calories.

    It seemed to a lot of us that something was wrong that story, and it turned out something was wrong. What if they had turned out to be right? No problem - those of us who abstained would've just missed the benefits of using their invention for the first 15-20 years. Well, it's the same with GMOs.

    I'm not necessarily endorsing a ban, but those who want GMO-free food should be able to buy it from a local grocer.

    1. Re:The food industry has been wrong before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am not against GMOs in principle, I think they can be very beneficial - as long as they are thoroughly and carefully tested over an extended trial period. That's not what's happening. The agri-giants are taking a very scattershot approach to testing in order to be first to market.

      In one case (too lazy to look it up, sorry), a research lab was contracted to test some GMO potatoes and found an increase in intestinal lesions in the rats they fed the potatoes to. They went to the FDA to advise caution, and found that the potatoes had been approved and shipped to store shelves months earlier!

      (captcha: concern)

    2. Re:The food industry has been wrong before by Bartles · · Score: 1

      Can I see some of these peer-reviewed studies showing ill affects from artificial sweeteners?

    3. Re:The food industry has been wrong before by the+plant+doctor · · Score: 1

      Don't look now but, GMOs have been around for at least 15 years now...

  5. Re:victory against science by mikael · · Score: 1

    If growing healthy food is going to done more efficiently, it's going to have require higher crop yields while requiring less oil-based fertilizer, pesticides, herbicides and fungicides. Growing crops that have a temporary resistance to pests that quickly adapt through natural evolution isn't the way forward.

    --
    Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
  6. More accurate headline by onyxruby · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Let's make this headline more accurate and honest, okay?

    Anti-GMO Luddites Win Victory On Hawaiian Island

    These has never been a single reputable study by anyone anywhere that has shown GMO anything to be unhealthy. GMO products have been made for decades and have been intensely studies by people with a vested interest in keeping them out. This range of scientific lunacy is in the same camp as wifi causes cancer and vaccination scaremongering.

    Let's get real, this has jack to do with GMO and everything to do with eco naive that get their talking points from greenpeace and protectionism from those countries that haven't started making their own GMO foods yet. Once other countries start making their own versions of GMO foods all of the objections to GMO foods will vanish overnight from everyone that isn't an eco-naive twit.

    1. Re:More accurate headline by raind · · Score: 2
      --
      Get up!
    2. Re:More accurate headline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      In a couple of years roundup and Bt will be completely worthless ... then we'll engineer the next broad spectrum shit into all the plants and that will become worthless as well. It's fucking anti-biotics all over again ...

    3. Re:More accurate headline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was going to claim that GMO induced allergies are a problem. Then I googled it. Never mind.

    4. Re:More accurate headline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you also advocate for the ban of Non GMO crops that induce allergies?

    5. Re:More accurate headline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      GMO products have been made for decades and have been intensely studies by people with a vested interest in keeping them out.

      While objective proponents of GMO products have fought tooth and nail to avoid labeling the products as such. I am sure they are doing that to keep the debate objective and equitable. Because labeling things is is very biased.

    6. Re:More accurate headline by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      I advocate proper labeling so that I can determine whether or not such an allergy might be a problem. There are a number of foods and food additives that the industry doesn't want you to know about because you might turn your back on them.

      That's corporate profits being held in higher esteem than the health of individuals.

      That's just what happens when you declare corporations to be people and actual humans to some sort of underclass.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    7. Re:More accurate headline by hibiki_r · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Very likely, yes. Do you want to go back to a world before penicilin?

      Weeds will keep evolving to beat whatever you throw at them: If they didn't, they would be extinct. If anything, we should invest more in genetic research, so taht we can have a bigger advantage over weeds and diseases. Feel free to regulate their application of said technology though, just like we could regulate antibiotic use on farm animals.

    8. Re:More accurate headline by printman · · Score: 1

      I'm sure there are many who are concerned about the long-term effects of GMO crops on the viability of non-GMO crops (cross-pollination between fields, economic factors, strong-arming by companies that produce GMO seed, etc.), but I am more concerned with the primary usage of GMO, at least in North America - herbicide resistance. With ordinary seed you might still use herbicides to control weeds, but overall you can't use much because you'll kill your crop. Use a GMO seed that is engineered to not be susceptible to those herbicides and now you can use a bunch more to ensure that those pesky weeds don't reduce the yield of your crops. We already know that most herbicides, pesticides, and fungicides are bad for people, yet we seem to be rushing forward to use more of them...

      It would be better to require labeling of GMO products and the 'cides that have been used in their production... Then let the market/consumers decide which products they want to buy...

      --
      I print, therefore I am.
    9. Re:More accurate headline by ganjadude · · Score: 4, Funny

      exactly, I keep being told that my weed today is exponentially more potent than in the past.

      --
      have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
    10. Re:More accurate headline by Jherek+Carnelian · · Score: 1

      These has never been a single reputable study by anyone anywhere that has shown GMO anything to be unhealthy.

      Just down that path yesterday.

      have been intensely studies by people with a vested interest in keeping them out.

      OK, lets see all these studies. Note in the thread linked to above the one citation of ~2000 such studies turned out to be a dude.

    11. Re:More accurate headline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I advocate proper labeling so that I can determine whether or not such an allergy might be a problem.

      No you don't you advocate for mislabeling GMO crops that are proven to be perfectly safe.

    12. Re:More accurate headline by Mitreya · · Score: 1

      These has never been a single reputable study by anyone anywhere that has shown GMO anything to be unhealthy.

      I know very little about the topic, but a short search shows that at least someone published anti-GMO results and lost about 36 years worth of a career as a result. See Arpad Pusztai.

    13. Re:More accurate headline by interkin3tic · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That's a slight bit of a strawman argument. Or whatever it is when you pick the dumbest arguments made by the dumbest, loudest people one one side and write off the entire side. GMOs aren't "unhealthy," you're right. But a lot of people who are concerned about GMO are concerned first about the transgenes spreading. Resistance to glyphosphate is spreading to pests, and transgenes have contaminated other crops. Normal pollution can be cleaned up and doesn't multiply. Polluting the gene pool is much more problematic and should require MUCH higher standards.

      A lot of opposition to GMO also has more to do with economics than with health issues. Specifically, I don't want anyone to have a monopoly on food. Monsanto especially, given their past behavior. GMO has a huge advantage over non-GMO, and monsanto is a dominant (if not THE dominant) player in GMO. My fear is that they're going to get us to a monoculture with major foodstocks, changing legislation around the world to fortify their position. As mentioned in the previous links, glyphosphate resistance already exists and is spreading. So we need to buy the next version from Monsanto at increased cost and decreased quality of life for farmers and everyone else.

      Your last bit about "once other countries start making their own versions" is flawed I think. Monsanto has been aggressive with their patenting. Other countries aren't going to reinvent the wheel to avoid monsantos patents and still make a product which is competitive.

      TLDR, I think you dislike a subset of stupid anti-GMO activists who are, sure, very annoying, but there are still important objections to GMO.

    14. Re:More accurate headline by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      > No you don't you advocate for mislabeling GMO crops that are proven to be perfectly safe.

      No. You're just a lying sack of shit and a corporate toadie.

      In no universe does full disclosure equal "mislabeling". It might be ugly but that's your problem not mine. As a buyer, I have a right to know what I'm buying. That's a pretty well settled idea that goes back to around Magna Carta.

      Telling the truth runs into the "Bismark" problem that you may not want to know how the sausage is made. That's not an issue of dishonesty thought. That's just an indication that you are up to no good.

      If something is called "Roundup Ready", then pointing it out as such is not misleading or mislabeling. It's just inconvenient to your corporate overlords.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    15. Re:More accurate headline by jovius · · Score: 4, Informative

      Yes, GMO's may be totally healthy, but the real issue is who controls the GMO market. It's definitely not healthy if only few companies control the food chain. The companies are even happy to restrict the reuse of the seeds. This is unnatural, but of course natural in terms of making profit. Also the aim to create food for only human use (GMO crops that repel everything else) will have an impact on biodiversity. Diversity is the natural mechanism to cope with the changing conditions, and the lack of diversity will polarize the eco-system, which would as a whole weaken.

      Once it becomes possible to create nutrition in closed production plants the fields can be freed to be at their natural state. Artificially produced food is in the end as natural as GMO.

    16. Re:More accurate headline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I want to go back to a world where we used curative care for livestock and plants ...

    17. Re:More accurate headline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's misleading because labeling something "roundup ready" has no relevance to safety of the consumer. If you think it has any relevance then every non GMO or organic crop should also come with a label that states it was also grown with pesticides and weed killers since they are too.

    18. Re:More accurate headline by fermion · · Score: 1
      It is interesting that when science supports what one wants everyone is like'yeah science' but when it doesn't everyone is like 'science bad'.

      For instance w have seen long studies that show, in general. vitamins do no good and should not be allowed to make health claims. Big Business does not like this so the science is bad. We know that raising animals as we do is bad for the environment, atmosphere, lakes, rivers, etc, but Agribusiness does not like this so science is bad. We know that using antibiotics to increase the yield of livestock is bad for human health, but again Agribusiness does not like this so science is bad. Even in cases where we know that equal results can cheaply be achieved without antibiotics, such as pork, the antibiotics are still in use.

      But all of the sudden when GMOs are vindicated, science is good. Make up your mind. Science is a process, not a religious proclamation where one gets to pick and choose. You can't flip flop like your average church and say meat is bad on friday, then change you mind the next fortnight. It does not work that way.

      In reality we have few long term studies of GMO effect humans. What we do have is instances where GMO crop has infected other crops, even crops that are not nearby. We have instances where farmers who have been infected have been sued by the intellectual property owner, as if seeds, which have evolved to travel or be carried large distances, even over seas, can be controlled like a common household appliance. And we have major markets, such as China, India, and Russia that ban or severely restrict GMO crops.

      At the end of the day this a free market issue, not a science issue. The world market has spoken and said that it does not want GMO crops and thinks that it can feed it's people without them. The perception is the key here as if something is perceived as less valuable, it will not generate as much profits. This is important for the US as we are a nation who wants premium wages, so we as nation must make sure to create premium products. We cannot be part of the race to the bottom. We have to continuously build value.

      Now, GMO might have been a way to build value, and in time it might be. But right now GMO crops, in themselves and in the fact they infect other crops, reduce the value of the US product. We are jeopardizing the value of nation to satisfy on corporates entity for profit. That is not the way the US is supposed to work. This is independent of the science.

      Let's take another example. Horse and other non-tradition US meats. Our meat supply is trusted because we slaughter relatively few animals. Other countries not only slaughter more types of animals, but also allow fillers. We, the US, however, have a supply of meat that is not going to be contimated by fillers or horse because that was the last thing that went through the line. Scientifically such a thing is of no value. I does not matter what meat we eat. But in terms of the free market, it is critical.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    19. Re:More accurate headline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In reality we have few long term studies of GMO effect humans.

      In reality we have few long term studies of non GMO effects on humans also.

    20. Re:More accurate headline by Jherek+Carnelian · · Score: 1

      In reality we have few long term studies of non GMO effects on humans also.

      False equivalency. We have millions of years of evolution.

      Cue: Selective breeding is the same as GMO.
      Response: No amount of selective breeding will transfer genes between incompatible species.

    21. Re:More accurate headline by Black+Parrot · · Score: 2

      These has never been a single reputable study by anyone anywhere that has shown GMO anything to be unhealthy.

      Just curious, who is doing these studies and not funded by Monsanto?

      Studies cost a lot of money, and usually no one but the manufacturer is willing to shell out for them. Which is why we spent decades being told that cigarettes aren't bad for you (nay, they're actually good for you!), and still get medicines that aren't pulled off the market until years after the manufacturer-funded studies show that they are harmful.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    22. Re:More accurate headline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      These has never been a single reputable study by anyone anywhere that has shown GMO anything to be unhealthy.

      Is that argument by "no true Scotsman"? There have clearly been studies closely matching Monsato's own protocols which showed harm. I guess these are ruled out as disreputable since they found that GMO's might not be healthy?

      GMO products have been made for decades and have been intensely studies by people with a vested interest in keeping them out.

      Just as each different species is different; a Hedgehog is very unlikely to harm you as a house guest, however inviting a tiger over might be more unwise, each individual GMO would have to be studied for decades in every eco-system it might interact with in order to see if they are actually safe.

      This is where we really see the arguments of GMO supporters for the lies they are. Science means experiment. There is no way to "scientifically prove" that GMOs are safe since you never know about the next different one. You can just show that no known mechanism of danger exists for the ones created so far and that it is unlikely that an unknown one exists.

      The only side here which is in any way scientific is the people who believe in the "precationary principle" and they are only scientific since they clearly admit a lack of evidence and knowlege. Almost everyone else involved in this argument is lying.

    23. Re:More accurate headline by sneakyimp · · Score: 1

      To constrain the discussion to the direct effect of GMO on human health is myopic. One must also consider the other ecosystems that might be affected. Ever heard of the food chain? When the pests can't eat, the pest-eaters can't eat, and the pest-eater-eaters can't eat, etc. There's also the influence that GMO patents have on small aggro. You can ignore all the human health issues and still find reasons to worry about the impact of GMO.

    24. Re:More accurate headline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      False equivalency. We have millions of years of evolution.

      No it's not a false equivalency. For millions of years non GMO crops have been killing people. We hold GMO crops to a higher scientific standard than traditional crops and science overwhelmingly states that they are safe. Traditional foods have not been held to the same rigor so false to assume non GMO crops are safe when there is no scientific evidence showing it.

      Cue: Selective breeding is the same as GMO.

      Response: No amount of selective breeding will transfer genes between incompatible species.

      Citation needed

    25. Re:More accurate headline by sneakyimp · · Score: 1

      You don't have to ban antibiotics entirely. You should definitely avoid using them recklessly or incorrectly. Perhaps you recall that once you start taking antibiotics, you are supposed to take them all. If you take a few and then stop, you risk worsening your infection -- i.e., just make the infection mad.

      Your point about weeds evolving also ignores one problem: Is it a good thing that the weed becomes extinct? Suppose that has a ripple effect on some other species? No species lives in a vacuum. Extinction does happen, you know.

      Investing in genetic research does sound like a very good idea, but letting hack scientists tinker with DNA, modify plants, and introduce them into the food chain does not sound like a very good idea. There's a difference between a first-class, ethical scientist and a profit-motivated hack engineer working for Big Aggro. The problem is complex and deserves serious thought.

    26. Re:More accurate headline by EngnrFrmrlyKnownAsAC · · Score: 1

      These has never been a single reputable study by anyone anywhere that has shown GMO to be as or more healthy.

      FTFY

      --
      Howdy howdy howdy
    27. Re:More accurate headline by raind · · Score: 1

      how come were not as high then huh?

      --
      Get up!
    28. Re:More accurate headline by sneakyimp · · Score: 1

      This post brings up a point that I have suspected and seems very very important to me. Do you have any sources to back up this assertion that GMO is largely to improve pesticide/herbicide resistance?? Increased use of herbicide/pesticide seems like an obvious contributor to Colony Collapse Disorder.

    29. Re:More accurate headline by Kohath · · Score: 1

      mod parent up

    30. Re:More accurate headline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Solution to the monopoly problem: Get rid of patents. People shouldn't have government-enforced monopolies over procedures or ideas to begin with; it's unjustifiable because it infringes upon real private property rights and creates monopolies like the ones you fear.

    31. Re:More accurate headline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is that argument by "no true Scotsman"

      No, and the fact that you even suggest that it could be means you don't understand the fallacy at all. By suggesting that it is a "no true Scotsman" fallacy to say that no reputable study exists that proves X, you're suggesting that there is no such thing as being reputable or disreputable, which is absolutely absurd.

    32. Re:More accurate headline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just like those pesky jews with their gold stars! It's not mislabeling; they are Jewish after all.

    33. Re:More accurate headline by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      You can find reasons to worry about anything.

      If you applied that sort of logic to say, fire, we would still be living in dark unheated caves eating raw meat.

    34. Re:More accurate headline by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 0

      About 90% of studies on GMO are NOT funded by Monsanto.

      http://www.euractiv.com/science-policymaking/chief-eu-scientist-backs-damning-news-530693

      The idea that this work is all Monsanto funded is a huge lie.

    35. Re:More accurate headline by sneakyimp · · Score: 1

      So if we *don't* worry about anything, that provides evolutionary advantage? You seem to have conveniently ignored the fact that our evolutionary advantage that allows us to dominate the planet is our ability to think. Although unpleasant, worrying is a form of thinking. In fact, most of our most profound advances in the past century are outgrowths of worry over conflicts.

      There's a word for people who don't worry when they should. It's blithe.

      If you take the philosphy of "don't worry about it" to its logical conclusion, we'd already be extinct.

    36. Re:More accurate headline by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 2

      Notice the word 'reputable'.

      From the Wikipedia article:

      "The Royal Society of Medicine declared that the study is flawed in many aspects of design, execution and analysisâ(TM) and that no conclusions should be drawn from it."

      Here is the BBC report:

      http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/464416.stm

    37. Re:More accurate headline by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      No, there is a known process for deciding what to worry about that you seem to be ignoring. It's based on actual evidence. It's called science.

      People who go off and advocate that things should be banned just because they can think up stuff that sounds like it might be worth worrying about while ignoring the evidence that it's actually a weird fantasy are what I worry about.

      THIS IS EXACTLY THE SAME KIND OF CRAP ALL SCIENCE DENIERS COME UP WITH.

      Some lefties deny GMO research and vaccine effectiveness. Some righties deny global warming and evolution.

      Both groups are wrong. I worry that we have a society where it's considered to be ok to make decisions based on ideas that are known to be completely crackpot.

    38. Re:More accurate headline by sneakyimp · · Score: 1

      I worry that we have a society where it's considered to be ok to make decisions based on ideas that are known to be completely crackpot.

      I believe you said it best: You can find reasons to worry about anything.

      I'm hardly a science denier. I'm not trying to suggest -- in the face of all manner of evidence -- that GMO causes allergy problems or tumors. I was merely trying to suggest that limiting our concern about GMO food production to only it's direct impact on human health ignores some other possibilities and that I've yet to see any evidence showing or refuting that these might be a problem. Some standard examples, which may or may not be caught and/or prevented by sufficient caution and regulation:
      * Potential to create an invasive species. Kudzu, which is not GMO, comes to mind. If you introduce a new vegetation that is exceptionally viable, it may potentially overwhelm a given habitat, thereby upsetting the balance of species. "Pest resistant" is not especially far-removed from "lacks no natural predators."
      * Potential to upset the nonlinear relation between species in a delicate ecosystem. It's been a very long time since I studied nonlinear differential equations, but I recall one example describing the mutual dependency of prey and predator relations. Some of these featured dangerous instabilities and asymptotes if you pushed them too far to one side. What happens when you prevent "pests" from feeding on their natural food supply? Might this possibly have a catastrophic impact on predatory species that eat those pests? Might that in turn effect other species further up the food chain? This issue does not relate to human health as much as species diversity. Call me a bleeding heart, but I like animals.
      * Use of GMO to build herbicide/pesticide resistance, allowing more liberal use of herbicide/pesticide to the detriment of non-human species (e.g., bees, possibly causing or contributing to Colony Collapse Disorder).

      These things worry me. I am an not a biologist, but I am an engineer. Please don't accuse me of being a "science denier" and coming up with "crap." If you do, you out yourself as precisely one of the hacks that should never be allowed to conduct this kind of research. If, on the other hand, you can kindly and convincingly *explain* why we shouldn't worry about this stuff, please do so! If you demand that anyone with a reasonable education simply "have faith" in the scientific establishment, then you are not scientist but a cultist.

      Quite aside from ecological and human health concerns, what about social equity and legal concerns? I oppose both software and genetic patents because I believe they unfairly favor bean-counting assholes and financial analysts over human interest and inventors. I am skeptical of the "noble" aspirations of feeding starving populations. While I am sympathetic to hungry peoples, I also wonder if it's a good idea to introduce global factors to the food chain which may result in a population boom of the most invasive species of all -- humans. I think it goes without saying that adding another billion people to the earth is going to have catastrophic consequences: pollution, conflict, destruction of wilderness.

    39. Re:More accurate headline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In no universe does full disclosure equal "mislabeling".

      OK, I propose that we label all bananas with a sticker that says "THIS PRODUCT CONTAINS RADIOACTIVE MATERIALS".

      Are you for or against?

    40. Re:More accurate headline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually anything that's carbon based contains radioactive material.

      So everything should contain that label.

    41. Re:More accurate headline by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

      Well okay, that's one simple albeit impossible way to slow down monsanto, but there's still the first point to consider.

    42. Re:More accurate headline by the+plant+doctor · · Score: 1

      "a bunch more"? I'm not aware that the label rate of RoundUp changed once RR Soybean was introduced. In fact, there's plenty of scientific evidence that says that pesticide applications and use of fossil fuels and soil erosion were reduced when these soybeans were introduced.

      As for RoundUp Ready corn, everyone conveniently forgets Atrazine and the other *zines that were used and leached into groundwater etc. prior to it's introduction.

      Your "bunch more" really is a "bunch less".

    43. Re:More accurate headline by the+plant+doctor · · Score: 1

      These things worry me. I am an not a biologist, but I am an engineer. Please don't accuse me of being a "science denier" and coming up with "crap."

      Well, since you're not "anti-science" why have you not read the literature? Reductions in mycotoxins and pesticide application seem like a verygoodthing to me. Just two articles of general nature, but there's plenty of others out there...

      http://www.ask-force.org/web/Benefits/Phipps-Park-Benefits-2002.pdf http://informahealthcare.com/doi/abs/10.1081/TXR-200027872

    44. Re:More accurate headline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, this is about free will. GMO crops SHOULD NOT be forced into the food chain. I say forced, because that is exactly what is happening, despite your lack of study claim for evidence of anything GMO being unhealthy.

      You can not say, with certainty, that GMO crops are 100% safe to everyone who consumes them. That is a scientific absolute. Just as certain plants that I'm allergic to, that others aren't, introducing gene specific manipulated plants, when not studied against the either human digestion or immunology, into the vast diversity of the human population is going to have unseen consequences. And if it has been, citation please because I sure as hell can't find it! With certainty I can say there will be unintended and possibly deadly outcomes from this. You can not in all honesty, say that. My point, if you haven't figured it out, is that introducing GMO crops is both benign, and toxic at the same time, depending on who consumes them. Right now, we don't know. And that is what's concerning. To claim we should just let chips fall where they may is not only reckless, but scientifically and legally unethical.

      But that's where we are at. Because a certain sector of the Ag. industry wants this to happen, we should just let it? I supposed you think hydraulic fracking should proceed unquestioned as well, despite the cement compounds that are used being protected by patent so we'll never know if they're toxic once they hit the water supply. I don't use fracking as an example lightly, especially since in Texas, they've been fracking beneath the Edwards Aquifer.

      Free will has been exercised on the Hawaiian Islands. And here you claim that it's eco. naivete that is the problem? Perhaps if the GMO industry was vastly scientifically more transparent, and took to educating the public about what EXACTLY they are doing, they wouldn't have these sorts of backlash. But there's the argument. It's being run just like every other business in the US. With supporters, and opposition, with disinformation in the middle. Congratulations on being part of the problem, rather than working to educate people on what it is they are exactly eating, and how and why it's been modified.

      To you, I say cheers! You're a shining example of what is wrong with GMO supporters.

    45. Re:More accurate headline by ne0n · · Score: 1

      glyphosate is a large part of Monsanto's argument for more roundup-resistant weeds^W GMO crops. It's proven to have a nasty track record of encouraging superweeds, it doesn't decompose naturally & quickly in the soil as once promised to farmers, and it's certainly not benign in its destruction of symbiotic organisms naturally found in soil. Monsanto is a poison peddler and their entire business model requires duping the masses into doublethinking "safety" whenever questions arise.

      --
      $ :(){ :|:& };:
    46. Re:More accurate headline by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      You can also find reasons to ignore anything....like you're doing right now.

    47. Re:More accurate headline by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      Idiot's argument. The labeling push isn't even subtle, and it fools no one. You think if you can force them to put "Note: this product contains GMO" type notes on things it will scare people. Why put a label on something if it isn't dangerous is what people think.

      You're like a KKK member innocently asking why he can't have foods prepared by the "inferior races" labeled, I mean what are you scared of, it's just a label right?

      Idiot.

    48. Re:More accurate headline by ChromeAeonium · · Score: 1

      It's definitely not healthy if only few companies control the food chain.

      Which has what, exactly, to do with the technology those companies use? They also use marker assisted selection, tissue culture, induced polyploidy, inbred lines, and tractors, but no one is blaming them.

      The companies are even happy to restrict the reuse of the seeds.

      You mean the seeds that farmers haven't saved since the advent of hybrid seed in the 1930's, the ones that they sign a contract to get, the ones they are free to not use if they so choose? Not seeing the problem here.

      Also the aim to create food for only human use (GMO crops that repel everything else) will have an impact on biodiversity.

      There is an increase in biodiversity with GE crops. The GE crops aren't 'toxic to everything but humans' they are toxic to very specific orders of insect pests. Swapping that out for broad spectrum insecticides is a good thing. Unless you are talking crop biodiversity, which is a very big issue, but not one relating much to GE crops, unless you consider that the opposition to biotechnology is holding back those would wish to improve biodiverse crops to make them better able to be cultivated, in which case anti-GMO is very anti-biodiversity.

      Diversity is the natural mechanism to cope with the changing conditions, and the lack of diversity will polarize the eco-system, which would as a whole weaken.

      Which is why intensive agriculture is a good thing. Keep the farms productive and less land needs to fall under the plow.

    49. Re:More accurate headline by Jherek+Carnelian · · Score: 1

      For millions of years non GMO crops have been killing people.

      If EVER there was a "citation needed" that bullshit is it. Name one widely consumed food that has been shown to kill people under normal conditions.

      Response: No amount of selective breeding will transfer genes between incompatible species.

      Citation needed

      No, that is the definition of incompatible. The day you can demonstrate cross-breeding between oranges and corn is the day you'll have a point.

    50. Re:More accurate headline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Name one widely consumed food that has been shown to kill people under normal conditions.

      Peanuts

      No, that is the definition of incompatible. The day you can demonstrate cross-breeding between oranges and corn is the day you'll have a point.

      Again Citation Needed
      You show me that scientific proof that there is no why what so ever that DNA from one organism can transferred to another.

    51. Re:More accurate headline by TangoMargarine · · Score: 1

      Not to try to legitimize fiction (though they say the writers based the episodes on real stories, for what it's worth), but every time the topic of biodiversity in GMO crops come up, I remember the Leverage episode where AgriCorp tries to release a blight that only their corn is immune to, in order to make a killing when the rest of the world corn supply is destroyed and theirs survives.

      Just stupid enough for somebody to actually try, I say...

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    52. Re:More accurate headline by TangoMargarine · · Score: 1

      So if we *don't* worry about anything, that provides evolutionary advantage?

      Yes. The important part is that the risk-takers don't have to be everybody, but only a sufficiently-sized subset of the population that then shares their findings.

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      Unity? Screw that: XFCE. Slashdot Beta? Screw that: SoylentNews. Australis? Screw that: Pale Moon. UX developers DIAF
    53. Re:More accurate headline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually he pretty much hit the nail on the head as the GMO industry and its groupies attack anyone showing danger from their products declaring them not 'true science'. Complaining about the data while at the same time not releasing their own research data is a common one.
      http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2012/sep/28/study-gm-maize-cancer
      Of course sciencedirect of Elsevier, being the money loving scum they are, sucked up to industry and retracted the article.
      People have been fired previosuly for criticising GM foods, this is why there is so little data on it. Trustworthy information anyway as I definitly don't consider the 'tests' performed by the industry itself as worth the paper its printed on (or the screen realestate it uses)

    54. Re:More accurate headline by Jherek+Carnelian · · Score: 1

      Peanuts

      What part of "normal conditions" do you fail to understand? Sunlight is fatal to people who have erythropoietic protoprohphrya. By your logic, sunlight is fatal too.

      You show me that scientific proof that there is no why what so ever that DNA from one organism can transferred to another.

      What part of "cross-breeding" do you fail to understand?

      Oh, I get it, you are a nut.

    55. Re:More accurate headline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean the seeds that farmers haven't saved since the advent of hybrid seed in the 1930's, the ones that they sign a contract to get, the ones they are free to not use if they so choose? Not seeing the problem here.

      I must be imagining all the seed crop round here then. I don't know weather you are a paid shrill or just deeply ignorant of agriculture but you statements so far are distant from reality as I know it (yes there is a lot of agriculture where I live)

      The GE crops aren't 'toxic to everything but humans'

      Quite right some can become toxic to humans as well!
      http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2266143/Uncovered-toxic-gene-hiding-GM-crops-Revelation-throws-new-doubt-safety-foods.html
      Ok its the daily mail so I'm not so sure on this one

    56. Re:More accurate headline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      With GMO the risk takers ARE everyone if its done badly

    57. Re:More accurate headline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wash said pesticides off my food, harder when its inside. Incidentally you may have heard of this think called 'organic' food (stupid name) that doesn't have artificial pesticides used....

    58. Re:More accurate headline by TangoMargarine · · Score: 1

      True. Hence the "limited subset" which could be rather a better thing.

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    59. Re:More accurate headline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Twat
      If you can't see that one is labeling a difference in food that you somewhat condescendingly think no one will understand and the other leads to discrimination that harms people then I really hope you're not in a position of power.
      Again, twat.

    60. Re:More accurate headline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Discriminating between foods is not the same as discriminating people (unless you're a cannibal)

    61. Re:More accurate headline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you'd had a look at that study you would have seen its just a puff piece. It includes all the name of every royal society but very little in the way of scientist names or actual evidence. You'll have great trouble getting funding in the UK (don't know about the rest of the EU) without it being done 'with industry' so call bullshit of this.
      captcha:hustle

  7. Re:victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We have a saying (due to our macadamia nut orchards) that we send our nuts (macadamia) to the mainland and they send their nuts (california hippies) to us.

    lol

  8. Poor Chaps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Expect military drones to wipe off that small nation. You don't start a war with Big GMO and their lobbyists.
    Many unexpecting wedding guests already learned that lesson.

  9. Penalties by TubeSteak · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Field tests to study new G.M.O. crops would also be prohibited. Penalties would be $1,000 per day.

    What a joke.
    That's a rounding error to a multinational corporation.

    --
    [Fuck Beta]
    o0t!
    1. Re:Penalties by sneakyimp · · Score: 1

      But it could be serious income to a small government.

    2. Re:Penalties by TubeSteak · · Score: 1

      But it could be serious income to a small government.

      Most of the time these fines get tied up in court for a few years, then negotiated down to some piddling amount.
      The only time fines actually get paid in full, is when it's part of a settlement that avoids criminal charges/penalties.
      Everything is negotiable when you're a corporation and have enough lawyers to fend off the regulators.

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    3. Re:Penalties by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Field tests to study new G.M.O. crops would also be prohibited. Penalties would be $1,000 per day.

      What a joke.
      That's a rounding error to a multinational corporation.

      ... per plant.

    4. Re:Penalties by ChromeAeonium · · Score: 1

      Not to the small farmers who grow papaya or corn for the Big Island dairy industry though, which they will have to pay if they wish to grow their crop in a 'non-traditional' location, as per the bill.

  10. These must be women-hating Republicans by CajunArson · · Score: 1

    Women have the RIGHT to choose to eat GMOs if they want and I stand against this right-wing Republican War on Women since they insist on telling women what to do with their bodies!

    --
    AntiFA: An abbreviation for Anti First Amendment.
  11. Re:victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You mean like people who keep claiming that "evolution is just a theory", and that trickle-down economics work?

  12. Before it’s too late by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Before It's Too Late!

    Somehow that familiar refrain often escapes the notice of critics around here.

  13. Re:Plenty of evidence worldwide for GMO harm by aevan · · Score: 2

    Hmm, you've a point... there is hard evidence linking screwdrivers to murders all over... maybe GMO is safer than screwdrivers?

  14. Re:victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting
    I wouldn't call it pseudoscience. It's pure BS and they know it.

    We have a saying (due to our macadamia nut orchards) that we send our nuts (macadamia) to the mainland and they send their nuts (california hippies) to us.

    In Oregon they call that "being californicated".

  15. Re:Plenty of evidence worldwide for GMO harm by ranton · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So a better analogy for GMOs might not be with screwdrivers, but with concentration camps and gas chambers, which by themselves did no harm.

    That is a horribe analogy. A better analogy would be comparing GMOs to Hydrogen Cyanide. GMOs can be used poorly, just like hydrogen cyanide can be used in gas chambers. But both are used for good far more than for evil.

    Actually, even mine is a bad analogy. An even better one would be comparing genetically modifying foods with chemical synthesis in general. Both are simply scientific techniques. We can use genetics to change the color of food, make it resistant to pesticides, or create deadly bacteria. Just like we can use chemical synthesis to create table salt, carbonic acid, or hydrogen cyanide.

    --
    -- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
  16. Wrong again by zerosomething · · Score: 4, Insightful

    More hippy FUD. "....according to the National Cancer Institute and other health agencies, there's no sound scientific evidence that any of the artificial sweeteners approved for use in the U.S. cause cancer or other serious health problems." http://www.mayoclinic.org/artificial-sweeteners/art-20046936

    --
    It all starts at 0
    1. Re:Wrong again by Fallen+Kell · · Score: 3, Informative
      The poster said nothing about cancer. But what has been found true is the human body's reaction to the sweetener in which insulin is still produced even though there is no sugars that it can attach to, which drops the blood sugar levels to an extreme low level. This DOES have health implications.

      http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/261179.php

      --
      We were all warned a long time ago that MS products sucked, remember the Magic 8 Ball said, "Outlook not so good"
    2. Re:Wrong again by hazem · · Score: 1

      Artificial trans-fats, also pushed by many of the same players as GMO today, on the other hand, are another story.

      http://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/high-blood-cholesterol/in-depth/trans-fat/ART-20046114

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AReHTIVuCbA

    3. Re:Wrong again by Bartles · · Score: 2

      So you mean they have the same affect as natural sweeteners or whole wheat bread, but without the calories? Idiot.

    4. Re:Wrong again by VortexCortex · · Score: 1

      More hippy FUD.
      "....according to the National Cancer Institute and other health agencies, there's no sound scientific evidence that any of the artificial sweeteners approved for use in the U.S. cause cancer or other serious health problems."

      Ah, well, there's no scientific evidence that an extremely small china teapot doesn't orbit the sun between here and Mars. I guess it must exist. Oh! There's no scientific evidence that invisible intangible unicorns shit dreams into the heads of sleeping people. Guess that's what dreams are made of: Mystical horse shit.

      Now, here's the thing: If you want to sell me something and claim it's not harmful and good for me, then I need evidence for that shit. The burden of proof is on the claimant, fool. I agree it's bullshit to claim causal relationships where none exist, however, realize that the claim it's safe to eat hasn't been sufficiently proven for some people -- Especially those with insulin issues, where replacing sugars with artificial sweeteners can indeed be harmful. If it claims to be a sugar substitute but isn't, then I'm not buying their claims.

    5. Re:Wrong again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sacharin causes cancer, you're just an obtuse Republican fatty who denies the world is round like a punk.

    6. Re:Wrong again by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      lol that makes sense; once I found some sugar-free cookies. I ate half the box at once (because hey! no sugar!). I didn't feel too good after that.......

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    7. Re:Wrong again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you think a drop in blood sugar level is the same as a steady-state or increase blood sugar levels, you should seek some sort of supervision or care-taking service because one of these days you're going to accidentally hurt yourself or someone else.

    8. Re:Wrong again by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 1

      But what has been found true is the human body's reaction to the sweetener in which insulin is still produced even though there is no sugars that it can attach to, which drops the blood sugar levels to an extreme low level.

      This is a highly exaggerated account of the study you link to. I've been paying attention to studies on artificial sweeteners for some time, and this is one of the first to show any significant effect.

      However, (1) it only had 17 subjects, (2) they were severely obese -- with an average BMI of 42, (3) none had been diagnosed with diabetes, and (4) only one sweetener (sucralose) was tested. Besides the very small number of subjects, the fact that they all were quite obese suggests that many could already have weird metabolism or digestive issues (even if they hadn't officially been diagnosed with diabetes).

      As for your claim that the irregular insulin makes the blood sugar drop to "an extreme low level," well that isn't actually proven by the study in your link. What they measured were "enhanced" insulin levels (increased 20%) following the ingestion of caloric food after the artificial sweetener. But previous studies looking at insulin response when the sweeteners were consumed by themselves showed no such response. So, under certain conditions and in certain people who may already have metabolic problems ONE specific artificial sweetener may produce an "enhanced" insulin response when combined with other food.

      I absolutely agree that a study like this should DEFINITELY lead to immediate follow-up studies, because artificial sweeteners are ubiquitous these days. If there are subsequent studies that show similar effects, I'll be the first one to start screaming it from the mountaintops.

      But given that this is the first study to find a response of this kind -- and given that it was only a tiny group of subjects with abnormal medical histories -- I'd hardly say that your claim "has been found true" yet.

      Lots of new studies come out every day that are false for all sorts of reasons, and given the disagreement between this study's results and previous ones, caution is suggested before making too much of the claims.

    9. Re:Wrong again by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      Lol, bullshit and I see other hippies modded you Informative. He was clearly talking about cancer, as that's the rumor that all of those sweeteners caused cancer.

      And they do... if you eat about 20 pounds of it a day, probably.

    10. Re:Wrong again by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      You are an idiot. There is a mountain of evidence that these sweeteners were safe, and that GMOs are safe. So the burden is on you.

    11. Re:Wrong again by Bartles · · Score: 1

      But it's got chemicals in it. It's not natural. Chemicals are bad for your body. Chemicals cause cancer and make toxins build up. Because chemicals are toxic. Corporations make chemicals and put them in our food. They want to poison us.

    12. Re:Wrong again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lucky you're a mind reader and can tell what he was thinking, the rest of us just had to go on what he said which didn't mention cancer.
      Just because you & the people you know have heard something it doesn't mean the whole world has or that that is what they are automatically referring too.

    13. Re:Wrong again by jemmyw · · Score: 1

      You can't prove that it has no harmful effect. Everything has a harmful effect if you overdose on it. Artificial sweeteners have been tested so much that if you aren't convinced of its safety at this point I would suggest you are holding onto an ideological belief rather than basing your point of view on available evidence.

    14. Re:Wrong again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Saying there is a mountain of evidence saying GMOs are safe doesn't make it so. Every GMO has to be tested.

    15. Re:Wrong again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You forgot the part where it can lead to hypoglycemic shock and death.

  17. Re:victory against science by interkin3tic · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I wouldn't equate "Republican creationists thugs" with republicans.

    I would say that creationists and climate change deniers are both associated with republicans the same way anti-GMOs are associated with democrats. But I'd say that creationists and climate change deniers are far, far more dangerous than anti-GMO morons.

  18. Read the fine article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    You could have read the fine article, which nicely mentions "overuse of pesticides". The current reason to use GMO is raised pesticide/herbicide resistance, which naturally means that farmers are encouraged to go overkill with Roundup and co. to kill of everything else in the area. AFAIK it has also been shown that the poisons used accumulate within the plants, sadly the only health study on that point I know of has been unreliable (the lab animals used hat a naturally high chancer rate).

    So while GMOs may not be responsible for the harm done to humans, the pesticides/herbicides sold as part of the package - the only reason GMOs are currently used - are responsible for killing of local plants and insects. It might be overly broad, but it is based on reality and facts.

    1. Re:Read the fine article by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Remember. The major proponents of GMO crops are not really seed companies. They aren't farmers or agronomists. They are herbicide companies that want to sell more herbicide.

      More likely than not, a GMO crop is just a pretense to put more poison in your food.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    2. Re:Read the fine article by Jherek+Carnelian · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You could have read the fine article, which nicely mentions "overuse of pesticides". The current reason to use GMO is raised pesticide/herbicide resistance,

      It is also worth noting that the Hawaiian islands have one of the most unique and fragile ecosystems in the world due to the isolation of being in the center of the pacific ocean. There are thousands, if not tens of thousands, of species unique to the islands and many of them have gone extinct since man showed up, especially western man.

      We've already lost hundreds of unique bird species due to the misguided introduction of mongooses to hunt rats -- rats are nocturnal, mongooses are diurnal so that didn't work, instead the mongooses raided indigenous birds' nests which had evolved in the absence of such predators so they had no protection.

      Hawaii's got a sad history of this sort of thing and, for one reason or another, the GMO corps have made Hawaii one of their most popular testing grounds. It is no surprise that many of these "hippies" are paranoid.

    3. Re:Read the fine article by sl149q · · Score: 1

      Almost all of the damage to the Hawaiian ecosystems can be traced to two species. Rats and Humans.

    4. Re:Read the fine article by EngnrFrmrlyKnownAsAC · · Score: 1

      Uh... the herbicide companies are the seed companies! Well, company.

      --
      Howdy howdy howdy
    5. Re: Read the fine article by Entrope · · Score: 1

      Clearly the solution is mandatory labeling for Hawaiian-origin products, so that consumers can be educated about the terribly destructive effects of producing those products.

    6. Re:Read the fine article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      the pesticides/herbicides sold as part of the package - the only reason GMOs are currently used

      Not even remotely true.

      Transgenic species are also widely used for nutritional enhancement, freeze-resistance, transportation-tolerance, etc.

      It's just that Roundup Ready seed is the most visible and controversial use, and primarily due to its use of the terminator gene rather than concerns about herbicide exposure.

      captcha: "healthy"

    7. Re:Read the fine article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unless the seed company and the herbicide company are the same. Combine it with evil lawyers and you approach the ultimate evil: Monsanto.

    8. Re:Read the fine article by caseih · · Score: 2

      Overuse of pesticides is a problem irrespective of GMO, but GMO is designed to reduce the problem. I think it would not hurt to educate yourself a bit to understand why GMO crops are designed to be herbicide resistant. The goal is to reduce overall pesticide use by a) making the crop naturally more resistant to disease and pests and b) to reduce the use of herbicides by making it resistant to one herbicide that, in theory, all other plants are not resistant to. Thus instead of spraying a crop with multiple chemicals to target various weed types, you have to spray once. In general herbicide resistant crops have reduced herbicide spraying by maybe 50%. There are currently only two herbicide resistance programs in active use that I know of: glyphosate resistance and Liberty resistance. Of these glyphosate is the most common (and becoming the most problematic).

      There are a limited number of herbicides that crops are resistant to, and thus this has dramatically increased the use of the particular herbicide (mainly glyphosate), even though overall herbicide use has dropped. This increased use of one herbicide has led to the huge problem of selecting for resistant weeds. As well, resistant crop volunteers become a huge issue especially if subsequent crops are also glyphosate resistant. In order for this program to ultimately be successful, we as farmers need a variety of chemicals that we can rotate through. However there just aren't any new chemicals coming, and the next new choice for herbicide resistance (2-4D) also has its own problems. These include selecting super weeds resistant to both glyphosate and 2-4D, and 2-4D's runoff and soil water contamination problems.

      So ultimately while herbicide resistant crops have been a boon both to farmers and the environment in the short, the long term is questionable. Right now as long as I only grow resistant crops every few years, I am okay, and still using less herbicide on those crops than conventional. And I'll choose GMO canola for its traits every time (shorter, higher-yielding, stiffer stems, stronger pods, much better disease resistance, and much easier weed control).

  19. Re:victory against science by NoKaOi · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I wouldn't call it pseudoscience

    From the hippie side of things, yes, it is. These are the same people who think that eating an "alkalizing" diet and drinking "alkalized water" is a necessity for being healthy and ridding the body of "toxins." It's pseudoscience because they have BS "science" that "proves" it. For example, there are papers by people with fake phd's that say eating protein means your pee is more acidic, which means your body is toxic. Anyone who remembers high school biology should know why that's BS (and why the "Westernmost Institution for Gaia Science" is not an accredited institution), but they believe it because they've smoked away their high school memories.

    Interestingly, at least on Maui, I can't necessarily speak for the Big Island but I'm going to assume parallels, it wasn't the hippies that got the anti-GMO ball rolling, although they're the ones taking off with it. The initial ball-rollers were the taro farmers, and for entirely different (and IMO legitimate) reasons. There are a lot of small independent family (actually a family, not just a big conglomerate owned by a family) taro farmers. With taro (it's like a big potato), much of the planting is done by cutting of the top of the corm (the potato part) and replanting it. They saw what Monsanto was doing with not allowing corn farmers to save seed, and were concerned that if the taro market went to GMO the same thing would happen with taro, where farmers would be entirely dependent on Monsanto and pretty much unable to resist or remain independent.

  20. GMOs=evil business by EmperorOfCanada · · Score: 2

    It is not so much the science of GMOs that is specifically bad but the companies that are typically behind them. These companies have a long history of being James Bond Villain evil, manipulating governments to their will, hurting people in corrupt countries, and pushing other things that are bad like pesticides, herbicides, hormone/antibiotic meat, and vicious anti consumer anti labeling campaigns.

    The other thing with most GMOs is that they (the main commercial ones) are aimed at things that on the surface I don't care about such as herbicide resistance. I suspect that people would have a whole lot more buy in if the GMOs made the food healthier, tastier, have a longer shelf life (Bananas that don't turn brown in 3 seconds) etc.

    But it seems the main beneficiaries of GMOs are big agribusiness and only big agribusiness. So when people reject GMOs they don't personally feel like they are losing much. One might argue that they are losing if the food costs a bit more but the reality is that the savings at the consumer end is actually quite minimal. (In theory a pest resistant crop might have fewer pesticides/herbicides which is a gain but hard for the average consumer to know as big agribusiness has fought all public disclosures of chemical levels in food.)

    So looking at the science in most people's heads they might be thinking, "Hey this GMO only has one study in 100 that says it is bad. But what benefit do I have even taking that tiny risk? Whereas the agribusiness people won't eat this crap if it is toxic but they stand to make a fortune selling it."

    1. Re:GMOs=evil business by jbeaupre · · Score: 2

      Or in the case of Hawaii, papaya.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Papaya_ringspot_virus

      --
      The world is made by those who show up for the job.
    2. Re:GMOs=evil business by EngnrFrmrlyKnownAsAC · · Score: 2

      In theory a pest resistant crop might have fewer pesticides/herbicides

      And in reality, more pesticides are used on pesticide-resistant crops. FTA:

      "Resistant weeds have become a major problem for many farmers reliant on GE crops, and are now driving up the volume of herbicide needed each year by about 25 percent," Benbrook said.

      Monsanto officials had no immediate comment.

      --
      Howdy howdy howdy
    3. Re:GMOs=evil business by the+plant+doctor · · Score: 1

      Blaming GMOs for this is silly. We've had herbicide resistant weeds before. It's the cultural practices used in production. Scientists warn of this and companies give guidelines on proper use, e.g. refuges of non-Bt corn to help prevent resistance from building up in insect population, use different mode of action herbicides, etc. but farmers (yes my father was one) often ignore these guidelines and do what's easy. Thus the problems.

    4. Re:GMOs=evil business by EngnrFrmrlyKnownAsAC · · Score: 1

      It's true the GMOs aren't dousing themselves with pesticides. Irresponsible farmers do bear some responsibility.

      The situation is analogous to antibiotics though: over-prescription by doctors leading to overuse by patients accelerates resistance. The doctors' willingness to prescribe enables the patients. You can provide patients with guidelines but it's far more effective to be more discerning in what is prescribed.

      --
      Howdy howdy howdy
    5. Re:GMOs=evil business by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Problem is -- who else can afford to fund the research?

      Universities? Well, their research money still has to come from somewhere.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  21. slashdot biased by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    According to a report from the MLnewshour the bitching isn't so much GMO but the health problems of the people living downwind of the corporate farms that are consistently dumping herbicide on the fields all year round. Many of the health problems are ten times the norm or worse with unusual maladies showing up. It seems the corporations are milking everything for all it's worth without any regard for collateral damage like always. But don't let facts interfere with the slashdot pro-GMO crusade.

    1. Re:slashdot biased by LikwidCirkel · · Score: 2

      If this is true, then why do people keep blanket banning "GMOs", rather than banning things like glyphosate?

    2. Re:slashdot biased by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      "Roundup Ready"

      GMO seeds are a pretense to get farmers to buy MORE Roundup. It's not just a baseline level of chemical abuse that may have been present 30 or 40 years ago but an ESCALATION above and beyond what was done before.

      GMO -> more chemicals sprayed on your food.

      Plus GMO crops contaminate everything. They're like an untrained dog that shits in everyone's yard. Except patents allow for the dog's owner to take your house.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    3. Re:slashdot biased by EngnrFrmrlyKnownAsAC · · Score: 1

      Glyphosate can be used responsibly. But GMO crops don't promote responsible use. They encourage "over prescription," if you will, which accelerates pests' resistance.

      Not to mention GMO crops are patentable and able to cross-breed with non-GMO crops, which places that non-GMO farmer at risk of patent litigation.

      --
      Howdy howdy howdy
    4. Re: slashdot biased by Entrope · · Score: 1

      Any reputable cite for the claim of 10x worse health problems? The coverage I've seen says health problems are not worse near the GMO research and growing fields.

    5. Re:slashdot biased by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First, farmers are not dumb. If the combination of GMO corn and roundup did not procduce more corn & profits, farmers would not grow corn that way.

      Second, GMO crops contaminate everything. Really, so you are saying that GMO plants cross-bred with every other plant out there (No!), they prevent other plants from growing (NO!), please supply actual facts on what you mean when you say "contaminate everything"

    6. Re:slashdot biased by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Making grass "Roundup Ready" is a very small subset of what GMO is used for. This is like banning all metal cans because some use CFCs in aerosol applications.

    7. Re:slashdot biased by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That someone can make more profit doesn't automatically make something acceptable. Transgenic transfer to nearby weeds might be a problem (don't know) but what I do know is that they can generally breed with other plants of the same species. Unsurprisingly you get a lot of the same species in the same area and with the retarded patent system the patent holder then has a claim on those crops (in the USA anyway, probably the UK as well). If I was a a non GM farmer I'd be pissed off and want them to stop damaging my crops (damaging in the sense of causing a loss of value)

    8. Re:slashdot biased by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is one that is very much pushed though. Given this I suspect you are wrong and its actually quite a large slice of the GMO market

  22. Re:More accurate sentence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    These has never been a single reputable study by anyone anywhere that has shown GMO anything to be safe.

  23. Re:victory against science by phantomfive · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The tests that show a link between certain GMO and cancers is "pure BS"?

    Yes, actually, it was BS, if you're talking about this one. Which is why the study was retracted.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  24. Re:victory against science by sneakyimp · · Score: 2

    I agree. I also wouldn't equate opposition to GMO with opposition to science. It is precisely that kind of oversimplification that impedes helpful discourse on the topic.

  25. Re:More accurate sentence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    These has never been a single reputable study by anyone anywhere that has shown GMO anything to be safe.

    There has never been a single reputable study by anyone anywhere that has shown non GMO anything to be safe.

  26. Re:victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Funny how you people in the US are stuck in a rut over this.

    People of ALL political beliefs here in the UK don't want GMO crops. The result is that NO supermarket will sell food with any GMO content.
    It is far more than Democrat vs Republican. It is the beliefs that people can decied what they want to eat. Given the choice and in this part of the world, the vasy majority give a big thumbs down to GMO food.

    Only in the US could the debate be relegated to Democrats vs GOP. Sigh.
    I am so glad I didn't take up the offer of staying in the US in the 1990's. IMHO, the USA is in danger of becoming irellevant in the late 2010's, early 2020's. You are building a wall and retreating behind it and giving two fingers to the rest of the world.

    I like Big Island and on my two visits I found the people very welcoming. A big difference to the Stepford Wives community we lived in in New England. More power to the folks in HILO. right on folks.

  27. Authority by jklovanc · · Score: 4, Interesting

    According to this regulating GMO's is a federal responsibility. Will the ban and/or fines even hold up in court?

    United States regulatory policy is governed by the Coordinated Framework for Regulation of Biotechnology This regulatory policy framework that was developed under the Presidency of Ronald Reagan to ensure safety of the public and to ensure the continuing development of the fledgling biotechnology industry without overly burdensome regulation.The policy as it developed had three tenets: "(1) U.S. policy would focus on the product of genetic modification (GM) techniques, not the process itself, (2) only regulation grounded in verifiable scientific risks would be tolerated, and (3) GM products are on a continuum with existing products and, therefore, existing statutes are sufficient to review the products."

    I am pretty sure that a ban with no scientific review or investigation would fail tenet #2.

    1. Re:Authority by EngnrFrmrlyKnownAsAC · · Score: 1

      The irony here is that the FDA itself conducts no scientific review.

      As reported last October: (emphasis added)

      Q: Does the FDA test these foods before they're allowed on the market?

      A: No. Instead there is a voluntary consultation process. Genetically engineered foods are overseen by the FDA, but there is no approval process. Foods are presumed to be safe unless the FDA has evidence to the contrary, Jaffe says. The FDA "has to show that there may be a problem with the food, as opposed to the company needing to prove it's safe to FDA's satisfaction before it can get on the market," he says.

      And from the horse's mouth itself: (emphasis added)

      [Section V B] It is the responsibility of the producer of a new food to evaluate the safety of the food and assure that the safety requirement of section 402(a)(1) of the act is met. In section VII., FDA provides guidance to the industry regarding prudent, scientific approaches to evaluating the safety of foods derived from new plant varieties, including the safety of the added substances that are subject to section 402(a)(1) of the act. FDA encourages informal consultation between producers and FDA scientists to ensure that safety concerns are resolved. However, producers remain legally responsible for satisfying section 402(a)(1) of the act, and they will continue to be held accountable by FDA through application of the agency's enforcement powers.

      Also, the basis for the fallacious assumption that genes introduced from other species are not worth rigorous testing: (emphasis added)

      [excerpted Section V C] With respect to transferred genetic material (nucleic acids), generally FDA does not anticipate that transferred genetic material would itself be subject to food additive regulation. Nucleic acids are present in the cells of every living organism, including every plant and animal used for food by humans or animals, and do not raise a safety concern as a component of food. In regulatory terms, such material is presumed to be GRAS. Although the guidance provided in section VII. calls for a good understanding of the identity of the genetic material being transferred through genetic modification techniques, FDA does not expect that there will be any serious question about the GRAS status of transferred genetic material.

      "Obviously GMO organisms are safe because we have no expectations they won't be safe." Most people would call BS on that kind of self-fulfilling prophecy. Does the FDA really not understand it's how those nucleic acids are arranged, not just what nucleic acids are present?

      --
      Howdy howdy howdy
    2. Re:Authority by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The irony here is that the FDA itself conducts no scientific review.

      The FDA conducts no scientific review of non GMO crops either. That those crops have been linked to death.

    3. Re:Authority by jklovanc · · Score: 1

      Genetically engineered foods are overseen by the FDA, but there is no approval process.

      They are also overseen by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) and the EPA where there is an approval process.

      I like the selective emphasis.

      FDA encourages informal consultation between producers and FDA scientists to ensure that safety concerns are resolved. However, producers remain legally responsible for satisfying section 402(a)(1) of the act, and they will continue to be held accountable by FDA through application of the agency's enforcement powers.

      how about this alternate emphasis

      FDA encourages informal consultation between producers and FDA scientists to ensure that safety concerns are resolved. However, producers remain legally responsible for satisfying section 402(a)(1) of the act, and they will continue to be held accountable by FDA through application of the agency's enforcement powers.

      Again you missed the paragraph before that one.

      Section 402(a)(1) of the act will continue to be FDA's primary legal tool for regulating the safety of whole foods, including foods derived from plants genetically modified by the new techniques. Section 402(a)(1) of the act will be applied to any substance that occurs unexpectedly in the food at a level that may be injurious to health. This includes a naturally occurring toxicant whose level is unintentionally increased by the genetic modification, as well as an unexpected toxicant that first appears in the food as a result of pleiotropic effects. Such substances are regarded by FDA as added substances whose presence adulterates the food if present at a level that "may render" the food injurious to health.

      FDA does not expect that there will be any serious question about the GRAS status of transferred genetic material.

      Obviously GMO organisms are safe because we have no expectations they won't be safe.

      Way to take a statement out of context. They are talking about whether or not to class transferred genetic material as an additive (section 409 of the Act) that needs separate approval. There are other sections of the act that GMOs fall under. The consumption of the genetic material itself is not an issue; What the genetic material produces is and that is covered by other regulations from agencies including the EPA and the USDA.

      Picking and choosing what to post is a weak way to argue.

      This is even all beside the point of the question I posed which is "Does a county have the regulatory authority to pass a bylaw that bans GMO's?"

    4. Re:Authority by EngnrFrmrlyKnownAsAC · · Score: 1

      Changing the emphasis doesn't amount to much: if the FDA is not conducting, or compelling companies to conduct, sufficiently rigorous safety assessments prior to the marketing of a GMO product and instead presumes such products to be safe until evidence to the contrary arises, they are failing their responsibility to protect consumers. Of course the FDA retains its enforcement powers; my complaint is their being reactive instead of proactive.

      Sorry if my selections were unsatisfactory--I didn't think /. would appreciate the whole text. My concerns then, in general terms, are:

      1) The FDA permits companies themselves to make the determination of whether the genes introduced by GM are "generally regarded as safe" (GRAS). When companies determine GM modifications are GRAS (and I'm unaware of an instance they haven't), those foods are exempt from the food additive regulations.
      2) Regulatory authority is, as you point out, split across the FDA, USDA and EPA. Each of the agencies only considers a subset of a proposed product. In the case of Bt potatoes, for instance, the FDA doesn't care about the Bt protein since it's a pesticide and therefore the EPA's problem. The EPA figures the original potato was safe and the Bt protein is safe, therefore the new Bt potato is safe. Interestingly, when it comes to labeling, the potato is back to being considered food and the FDA regs prohibit labeling of pesticides so Bt potatoes are anonymous when sold.
      3) When GMO crops are evaluted, they are not done so with sufficient rigor. Consider again the Bt potato: the EPA supposedly tested the effects of Bt on mice but they didn't feed the mice Bt potatoes, they fed them pure Bt. If complications arose in the production of the protein within the potato itself, they couldn't have known.

      How's that for process? Does the USDA do better? That second link you provided describes how the USDA 'streamlined' its regulations in order to "reduce the length of the petition process by more than 50 percent". I don't consider that an improvement.

      Ultimately, though, you bring up the trump card: regulatory authority. I have no doubts whatsoever this will result in litigation which ultimately sees the ban struck down.

      --
      Howdy howdy howdy
    5. Re:Authority by jklovanc · · Score: 1

      those foods are exempt from the food additive regulations.

      You still don't get it. As a food, anyone can eat any nucleic acid on the planet without being harmed. That is why it is not treated as an additive.

      3) When GMO crops are evaluted, they are not done so with sufficient rigor.

      There is enough rigor for the scientists involved. It is a simple chemical analyses that to find all the anomalous chemicals in the GMO plant. None have been found so far. All your "what if's" are just fear mongering when you have no facts to support your stand.
      Where Bt crops are involved you might want to look here

    6. Re:Authority by EngnrFrmrlyKnownAsAC · · Score: 1

      You're not listening. I'm not talking about eating nucleic acids. I'm talking about the proteins they encode.

      I doubt a "simple chemical analysis" would be sufficiently rigorous to catch all changes in gene expression. I also wouldn't claim no surprises have been found so far Do you recall the Starlink corn recall?

      Anyway, I haven't put forth any "what ifs". My contention is that it's inappropriate to accept manufacturer's claims of safety at face value. True for other industries, true for GMO. Studies done thus far have put forth opposing conclusions about the safety of GMO crops and I'm inclined to err on the side of caution.

      For me, the safety issue is ancillary to the considerations of unfair patent litigation against farmers whose crops get contaminated, the rights of consumers to know just what they're consuming, and the accelerated resistance of pesticides caused by overuse. There's economic and ecological harm to consider in addition to physical.

      So feel free to dismiss my valid concerns as "fear mongering". Make claims I have 'no facts to stand on'. I can't do anything about your biases and you can't do anything about mine.

      --
      Howdy howdy howdy
    7. Re:Authority by jklovanc · · Score: 1

      I'm talking about the proteins they encode.

      The quote about section 409 of the Act, which regards nucleic acids as RAS, has noting to do with the proteins produced so why did you quote it. The section you didn't reference, the one about section 402(a)(1) of the Act, does cover those concerns.

      Do you recall the Starlink corn recall?

      Wow, you can't even keep a coherent argument. The Starlink recall was because the corn was approved for animal feed and not human food. This goes against your argument that there is no rigorous approval process for GMO human food. There was no proof that Startlink was bad for human just that it had yet to be approved for human consumption.

      The CDC studied the blood of these 28 individuals and concluded there was no evidence the reactions these people experienced were associated with hypersensitivity to the Starlink Bt protein.

      Hysteria and money grab all around brought on by the anti-GMO crowd and not based on scientific evidence.

      Anyway, I haven't put forth any "what ifs".

      From your post

      If complications arose in the production of the protein within the potato itself, they couldn't have known.

      That's a "what if".

      Studies done thus far have put forth opposing conclusions about the safety of GMO crops and I'm inclined to err on the side of caution.

      Citations needed and please take into consideration the source of these reports. If you do not believe the food producer's reports because they may be bisaed you must also look at the reports funded by the anti-GMO crowd with the same skeptical eye as they too have an agenda. By the way, here is a quote from the Starlink article:

      However, because the Cry9C protein lingers in the digestive system before breaking down, the EPA had concerns about its allergenicity, and PGS did not provide sufficient data to prove that Cry9C was not allergenic.

      This is evidence that the EPA does not "just take their word for it" and are concerned with the aditional chemicals produced. Had they taken the companies word Starlink would have been approved for both human and animal food.

      For me, the safety issue is ancillary to the considerations of unfair patent litigation

      So you conceed that your safety argument has little or no bearing so you pull in something else equally suspect. Sure Monsanto probably went the wrong way on a few cases but the most important one, suing a company for re-selling seeds, was spun by the anti-GMO crowd into something that it was not. The GMO crowd made it sound like the farmer was sued for selling seed that had a few incidental GMO seeds in it. That is not true. The seed farmer would buy soybeans timed to be right after a farmer who used GMO seeds. He also purchased the soybeans as feed stock and not seeds. He would then dose his crop with so much Roudup, far above normal application, to kill all non resistant plants and then sell the crop as seeds. He was a seed farmer who deliberately broke license agreements and specifically grew seeds. This is far different than the poor farmer who made a sold a few seeds and got slammed, which is what was portrayed by the anti-GMO crowd. How about you dig a little before taking sides.

      the rights of consumers to know just what they're consuming,

      That would be great if every consumer were scientists who could decide whether or not a GMO food was a danger. That is not true and consumers are guided by hype and hysteria. Look at the number of people who still believe in chemtrails even though there is no valid evidence that they even exist. The average person is not equipped to decide what is safe and what is not; that is what scientists are for.

      Make claims I have 'no facts to stand on'

      You have yet to cite an

    8. Re:Authority by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And those with a peanut allergy might be surprised if it is kicked off by GM food that now contains 'peanut' but is not normally consider a peanut.
      Everyone knows how common peanut allergy is so hopefully they wouldn't actually do that, but it could happen with a less commonly known allergy or one totally unknown before its added in.

    9. Re:Authority by EngnrFrmrlyKnownAsAC · · Score: 1

      /eyeroll

      --
      Howdy howdy howdy
    10. Re:Authority by jklovanc · · Score: 1

      Is that your best well founded argument? You funny.

    11. Re:Authority by EngnrFrmrlyKnownAsAC · · Score: 1

      No, that's a signal I've realized this isn't an argument. This is troll feeding. My bad.

      --
      Howdy howdy howdy
    12. Re:Authority by jklovanc · · Score: 1

      If putting forward real information about a subject rather than references to articles that do not support your position is trolling I guess I am a troll. You have yet to post an article that does not support my position.

  28. Re:victory against science by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 2

    Wait until the Chinese start implementing cross-species modifications of the human genome to, say, extend our visual range into the far ultraviolet. Will the same Americans who preached open borders for all suddenly become advocates of keeping "frankenpeople" away from our precious shores?

  29. Re:victory against science by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The linked NYT article is very informative. According to it, that bogus study was the very study cited by the anti-GMO hippies in the Hawaii vote.

  30. Re:victory against science by phantomfive · · Score: 3, Funny

    People of ALL political beliefs here in the UK don't want GMO crops

    Are you saying that all people in the UK are pseudoscience believers? That's not very nice to say.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  31. Re:victory against science by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 3, Interesting

    There is a different in dueling political pseudosciences, though: how many infrastructure projects, public or private, in any state, have been bullied to a halt by creationists? Can you name even one?

  32. Re:Plenty of evidence worldwide for GMO harm by sneakyimp · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think that analogous concept you might be looking for is DDT. It was originally a godsend -- it kills pests! The problem is that it also collapsed entire ecosystem (animals that ate pests, animals that ate those animals, etc.). The analogy works IMHO because it was developed by the Chemical industry (analagous to big aggro) and it provided relief from pests and the harm it caused was not immediately clear. NOTE: I am not suggesting that GMO is inherently bad. I merely mean to point out that new tech and new toys can have unintended consequences that are not immediately evident. Perhaps more importantly, the unintended consquences might not have any immediate relation to nourishment, allergies, digestibility, or human health.

    In the GMO discussion, people love to bicker over bullshit like allergies, tumors, "noble" causes, etc. People do not talk as much about the insidious influence of profit motive over one's ethics. Or sensitive nonlinear dependencies between crops and adjacent ecosystems. What happens when the pests can't eat? Will our bird population leave or die out? I have heard some talk about how big aggro funds a lot of the GMO research which influences opinions. In my reckoning, this is even more direct and troublesome than big oil funding environmental studies.

    Additionally, policymakers -- like those in Hawaii amply illustrated by this article -- have no knowledge of what is going on. Regulators (does a GMO seed need FDA approval to be planted? How do we insure crop isolation?) don't know anything either and can hardly make effective regulations. People also ignore that disaster scenarios, which might be EXTREMELY unlikely, must nevertheless be contemplated because when you have a disaster HELLO IT'S A FUCKING DISASTER DUMMIES.

    I for one don't buy the argument that the world needs more food to support a growing population. There are more than enough people in the world. I for one would rather see fewer suburbs, shack villages, and shanty towns, and more wilderness in the world. While I question the wisdom of Hawaii's move, I treasure the idea that Hawaii might remain pure, pristine, and full of naive hippies.

  33. Re:victory against science by SumDog · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Really? There is a lot of evidence that shows our GMOs are not good. Monsanto and Dupont based GMOs lack a lot of testing. It doesn't appear to be affecting our health now, but the long term effects could be bad. Plus, the PATENTS! It's not about science, it's about freedom of seed! Banning GMOs is an important first step to getting rid of life-patent laws. Seeds should be part of the public trust. If they become public again, I'd have no problem with GMOs that were open to people looking at them and doing real research on them; as well as people saving their seeds instead of being forced to buy terminal seed.

    This idea that GMO stopped world starvation is a myth. Good cultivation can stop food shortages without the need of this GMO and with GMO, we have less diversity and more monoculture.

    anti-GMO is not a conservative/republican issue. It's a global health and a progressive issue.

  34. Re:victory against science by EngnrFrmrlyKnownAsAC · · Score: 5, Informative

    These are the same people who think that eating an "alkalizing" diet and drinking "alkalized water"

    That's an overly broad and unfair characterization. Everyone seems to be ignoring that companies are not required to prove with sufficient rigor that GMO crops are adequately safe.

    The FDA requires new pharmaceuticals to undergo years of testing. In contrast, GMO crops are assumed to be safe because they 'closely approximate' their originating crop. That's a foolish assumption.

    --
    Howdy howdy howdy
  35. Re:Plenty of evidence worldwide for GMO harm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    The problem is that if Hawaii remains that way, they will inevitably be invaded by people who need to turn the island chain in a factory farm to feed themselves, and no amount of hippie gentleness will stop that from happening. Ironically, whatever they think about GMOs won't help in a world that needs them so much that it doesn't matter if evil companies tarnish the name.

  36. Re:victory against science by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

    If growing healthy food is going to done more efficiently, it's going to have require higher crop yields while requiring less oil-based fertilizer, pesticides, herbicides and fungicides. Growing crops that have a temporary resistance to pests that quickly adapt through natural evolution isn't the way forward.

    I'm pretty certain that the way of the future is going to be full factory farming, as in large scale growing of gunk in covered facilities. Then converting it into pretend meats and veggies. It's not all gross. We alreay can hydroponically grow greens that fit the definition of organic.

    Even though there is a lot of land, much of the best land is being covered by housing developments as farmers find they can make enough money to retire just by selling to developers. And since we keep finding clever ways to produce more food, and therefore support more of us, it's inevitable as far as I can see.

    This roundup ready crap is just a dead end. The future is processed algae.

    --
    The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
  37. Re:victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They are both as delusional as each other.... I would.

  38. Re:victory against science by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    According to it, that bogus study was the very study cited by the anti-GMO hippies in the Hawaii vote.

    That's so depressing.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  39. Re:victory against science by Jmc23 · · Score: 1

    No, you're thinking of USians or Japanese.

    --
    Don't complain about syntax, grammar, or spelling. There is no.hell like input on android.
  40. Re:victory against science by Kohath · · Score: 1

    Besides making yourself a target for anti-religious bigots, what harm of any kind comes from professing and supporting creationism?

    Meanwhile, anti-GMO pseudoscience supports malnutrition and some of the diseases and deaths caused by malnutrition. And anti-vaccination pseudoscience leads to children dying of preventable diseases.

    Which one matters to you depends on what type of person you are.

  41. Re:victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    That's an overly broad and unfair characterization. Everyone seems to be ignoring that companies are not required to prove with sufficient rigor that GMO crops are adequately safe.

    The FDA requires new pharmaceuticals to undergo years of testing. In contrast, GMO crops are assumed to be safe because they 'closely approximate' their originating crop. That's a foolish assumption.

    Everyone seems to be ignoring that nobody is required to prove with sufficient rigor that non GMO crops are adequately safe.
    In fact to purposely allow non GMO crops that have been linked to death to continue to be grown and sold.

  42. Re:victory against science by Kohath · · Score: 1

    Because the creationists hurt ... who exactly? Someone who died 100 or 1000 years ago? There are children dying of malnutrition today.

  43. Re:victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'd have no problem with GMOs that were open to people looking at them and doing real research on them

    As long as that research concludes what you want it to conclude. That GMO crops are unsafe and should be banned. Otherwise any scientific conclusion you don't agree with will be demised as bad science.

  44. Re:victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I for one welcome our albino overlords,

    But seriously, my wife is an albino, and ultraviolet is painful

  45. We don't need GMOs by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

    The food "shortage" is as phony as a three dollar bill, just like the gas shortages in '73. Everybody is falling for Wall Street trickery.

    --
    “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
  46. GMO != selective breeding by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    duh

  47. Re:victory against science by the+gnat · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Because the creationists hurt ... who exactly?

    The creationists are actively trying to increase scientific illiteracy among American children - that's their entire reason for existence. In the short term, this doesn't really hurt anyone; in the long term, it would lead to the US being far less economically competitive, and more dependent on other nations for new scientific advances, especially medical technology. That has a very real impact on people's lives.

  48. Re:victory against science by the+gnat · · Score: 5, Informative

    Plus, the PATENTS! It's not about science, it's about freedom of seed! Banning GMOs is an important first step to getting rid of life-patent laws. Seeds should be part of the public trust. If they become public again, I'd have no problem with GMOs that were open to people looking at them and doing real research on them

    If you'd read the article, or paid any attention at all to the subject, you'd know that many GMOs are unencumbered by IP laws and/or were always intended to be given away. This includes both golden rice (which was specifically intended for the third world - developed nations don't really have endemic vitamin A deficiency) and virus-resistant papayas, which Hawaii currently grows. Banning them does nothing at all to advance the cause of open science.

  49. OTOH... by msauve · · Score: 2

    Screwdrivers don't reproduce with hammers, permanently altering the property of a hammer.

    An island is in a rather unique position regarding GMOs. Once they're let in, there's no turning back. Where's the harm in keeping a naturally isolated island free from them, at the very least until the long term science is real?

    Unless, of course, you're simply looking for cheaper Kona coffee due to increased yields.

    --
    "National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
  50. Re:victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is a lot of evidence that shows our GMOs are not good. Monsanto and Dupont based GMOs lack a lot of testing.

    There is a complete lack of evidence that non GMO crops are good since they aren't tested at all.

  51. release of gmo seeds? by D1G1T · · Score: 4, Insightful

    When I was studying genetics in the late 80's/early 90's, we were taught that releasing GMOs into the environment was immoral. It had nothing to do with whether or not food products were safe, and everything to do with the impossibility of understanding what effect such new organisms would have on the incredibly complex wild environment. When I heard that Monsanto's GMO crops had become superweeds, causing major problems for farmers not growing Monsanto crops, it seemed that what I was taught was correct. From the article, it seems that most of Hawaii's concern is protecting their ecosystems.

    1. Re: release of gmo seeds? by Entrope · · Score: 1

      What course of study was that? Did it also apply the precautionary principle to writing software, along the lines of "you never know for sure that oppressors or terrorists won't use it to kill people, so don't even try"?

    2. Re: release of gmo seeds? by D1G1T · · Score: 1

      The program was called Cell Biotechnology. This was from a genetics professor. I also recall lectures and discussions of ethics as part of an embryology course (use of human stem cells) and as part of a human genetics course (gene therapy, elective abortion after Amniocentesis, etc.). It would sadden me to think practical ethics issues are not discussed as part of any course of study. It has nothing to do with "don't even try". The gist was this: Make whatever you want in a contained lab. Just don't let it out because you won't be able to contain it again. So, if you want a software analogy, it would kind of be like writing a self replicating computer virus that fixes some known bug and then releasing it onto the Internet. Sounds great at first but often doesn't end well.

    3. Re: release of gmo seeds? by Entrope · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I guess you are unfamiliar with how the Internet treats software. Once you release something on the Internet, you can't put it back in the bottle, but you always think it will scratch some itch. It just might have the opposite effect that you expect -- which is why actually applying the precautionary principle boils down to "never try anything for the first time".

    4. Re:release of gmo seeds? by ChromeAeonium · · Score: 1

      When I heard that Monsanto's GMO crops had become superweeds

      Which crop became a superweed, and how did it do that? Or are you referring to glyphosate resistant weeds, which are only super in that they are resistant to one particular herbicide, which is a problem that existed for decades before the use of GE crops but never got popular press until GE crops became controversial? Opposing GE crops on that basis is like opposing HIV treatments because the virus can become resistant to them.

      it seemed that what I was taught was correct.

      Seems more like you are confused. Farmers not using glyphosate are not going to have an issue with glyphosate resistant weeds.

      From the article, it seems that most of Hawaii's concern is protecting their ecosystems.

      I wish. The hippies supporting this wouldn't know adenine from their asshole, and are just convinced that anything that isn't natural is dangerous. They are citing bad science and using conspiracies to discredit anyone who disagrees (calling the university of Hawai'i at Manoa 'UH Manoa-santo).

    5. Re: release of gmo seeds? by TangoMargarine · · Score: 1

      You're obstructing the conversation by making the issue excessively black and white. You can experiment on crops in a controlled environment without spraying the seeds into the wind.

      --
      Unity? Screw that: XFCE. Slashdot Beta? Screw that: SoylentNews. Australis? Screw that: Pale Moon. UX developers DIAF
    6. Re: release of gmo seeds? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you write a computer virus, worm or other sort of self-replicating program, you are indeed well-advised to not let it get out "into the wild" because even if you didn't add explicit malicious code, you never know if it might cause harm to people who get infected with it in a way you didn't anticipate.

      Fortunately most computer software is not self-replicating, therefore such concerns are irrelevant for it.

    7. Re:release of gmo seeds? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which crop became a superweed, and how did it do that? Or are you referring to glyphosate resistant weeds, which are only super in that they are resistant to one particular herbicide, which is a problem that existed for decades before the use of GE crops but never got popular press until GE crops became controversial? Opposing GE crops on that basis is like opposing HIV treatments because the virus can become resistant to them.

      They become super weeds as the herbicide resistant crops allow more herbicide so the farmers use more. However they don't totally kill all weeds (this could have adverse effects if they actually managed anyway so I'm glad they don't) leading to the weeds become more resistant as the herbicide becomes a greater forcing. This leads to farmers without the herbicide resistant crops being unable to kill them as well without causing greater damage to the crop.
      To counter you HIV point consider antibiotics. If you use them willy nilly and don't complete courses you end up helping to breed antibiotic resistant bacteria. OK antibiotics don't kill HIV but it'd probably be similar with a hypothetical HIV treatment

      Seems more like you are confused. Farmers not using glyphosate are not going to have an issue with glyphosate resistant weeds.

      D1G1T didn't say anything about farmers not using glyphosate, he said about them not using the GMO crops.

      Another strawman falls, +5exp

    8. Re: release of gmo seeds? by Entrope · · Score: 1

      Maybe you haven't ever observed agricultural businesses, but "spraying the seeds into the wind" is just about the last thing they want to do.

      The person who made the issue excessively black and white is the one who claimed, without qualifications, that releasing GMOs into the environment was immoral. (To anti-GMO activists, that means "outdoors".) Maybe D1G1T likes to spend other peoples' money on expensive forms of mental masturbation, using expensive labs to develop GMOs that will never see the light of day, but serious scientists and engineers know that ethical issues involve weighing issues, and just about the only things that are that black-and-white are the things that are tantamount to murder.

    9. Re: release of gmo seeds? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You may not want to spray in the wind but seeds have a habit of getting there anyway

  52. Slashdot got it backwards re: population by echtertyp · · Score: 1

    I wonder if Slashdot's minders have been overrun by Cato Institute people? There is logic problem here. If the population is ever increasing, then tweaking food production from finite resources is bound to end in tears as the realities of logarithmic growth curves (for supply) kick in, along with the 2nd law of thermodynamics. Corrected version: "The pressure to move to GMO foods, along with the phenomenon of global warming, underscores the need to rein in human population growth"

  53. Re:victory against science by Kohath · · Score: 1

    That's an interesting story/prediction about one possible future. I'm not sure why being "dependent on other nations" in an interconnected future world is a huge tragedy that must be avoided.

    Is it worse than children dying of malnutrition?

    Are you for reforming the FDA to make US medical technology research more competitive? Or is medical technology research competitiveness only good as a taking point versus religious folks?

  54. Re:victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I have zero problem with GMO foods as a general matter. "GMO" means as much to me as the word "chemicals"; it's devoid of substantive meaning.

    That said, anti-GMO activists are not supporting malnutrition. We don't need GMOs to solve food shortages. We have more than enough food. It's a distribution problem, and where solving distribution is intractable existing agricultural methods can be used. Africa, for example, had more than enough food in the 1960s and 1970s; it wasn't until Western agribusiness put all the domestic farmers out of business that we ended up with famines in the 1980s, and that's because most poor nations are incapable of adapting to rich nations' sophisticated food management systems.

    The reason why Western scientists push GMO crops to help solve international nutrition problems is because GMO is what Western scientists spend all their time on. GMOs aren't necessary, they're simply the tool most familiar to rich nations. It's like a guy who spends his day job writing Java code; guess what kind of language he'll prefer when doing open source projects at home. Java, most likely. Does that mean Java is the best language out there? Even if it is, that doesn't mean others are sufficient for any particular task.

  55. Re:victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    People of ALL political beliefs here in the UK don't want GMO crops. The result is that NO supermarket will sell food with any GMO labels.

    FTFY GMO genes don't care about the law.

  56. Re:victory against science by benzapp · · Score: 1

    No, the way of the future is a managed eugenics system and the gradual reduction of the human population to sustainable levels. This is already official state policy in China, and the Beijing Genomics Institute is very close to identifying key genetic markers of ideal traits, especially intelligence. You combine this with China rapidly establishing sovereignty over Africa, and the major cause of world overpopulation will be eliminated and hundreds of millions of acres of prime farmland will be freed up for productive use.

    How can you possibly think the future is processed algae? Do you realize a billion people would rather burn your civilization to the ground?

    --
    I don't read or respond to AC posts
  57. Re:victory against science by Kohath · · Score: 2

    I have zero problem with GMO foods as a general matter. "GMO" means as much to me as the word "chemicals"; it's devoid of substantive meaning.

    It means the same thing as "evil spirits" used to mean.

  58. Re:victory against science by apol · · Score: 1

    There are many people who don't think that this study was bogus. Read this and judge yourself on whether or not there are something suspecious in the rejection of this paper.

    http://dissidentvoice.org/2013/12/gmo-retractions-denials-and-downright-lies/

    apol

  59. Re:Plenty of evidence worldwide for GMO harm by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

    While I question the wisdom of Hawaii's move, I treasure the idea that Hawaii might remain pure, pristine, and full of naive hippies.

    Haven't been to Honolulu or Hilo, I gather?

    Much less the Pearl Harbor Naval Base, Schofield Barracks, Wheeler Army Air Base, and the other cities and military installations....

    --

    "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
  60. Re:victory against science by JimSadler · · Score: 1

    You are right. republicans are quite a way from being up to the level of dope addled hippies.

  61. Re:victory against science by BringsApples · · Score: 1

    There is a lot of evidence that shows our GMOs are not good.

    You're right, and one problem is that they're patented, which means that it's hard, if not impossible, to determine what effects it's having, because (to my knowledge) you cannot go purchase the, say, wheat itself. Personally, I've noticed a lot of people in America suddenly allergic to wheat, myself included. At age 33 I suddenly developed a wheat allergy.

    As a side note, to those that are also suddenly allergic to wheat, this stuff works very well.

    --
    Politics; n. : A religion whereby man is god.
  62. Re:victory against science by JimSadler · · Score: 1

    Actually large companies will soon gain control of almost all farms. By using large data crunching along with highly automated farm equipment individual plants can be fed and watered precisely as needed. That will give high tech farms such an economic advantage that farmers who choose more traditional farming methods will not be able to compete in selling their crops. The end result is that big business will own a percentage of the income from almost every farm in existence and in the long term as well. Imagine fertilizer, water and pesticides custom made for each plant daily and the yield that a farm could get per acre.

  63. Re:Plenty of evidence worldwide for GMO harm by sneakyimp · · Score: 1

    I have not, but I've seen hints or modern Hawaii on the one or two occasions I was forced to watch "Dog the Bounty Hunter." Personally, I find it off-putting. I meant the comment about hippies partly in jest. I know it's really a bunch of rich yuppies (kidding again haha).

  64. Damn. You Win This One, Hawaii! by Greyfox · · Score: 1

    There goes my plan to take over Hawaii with a race of mutated pineapple people! Well, played, Hawaii. Well played.

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

    1. Re:Damn. You Win This One, Hawaii! by TrollstonButterbeans · · Score: 1

      Meat is food.

      And people are made out of meat.

      I'm am very concerned where this is leading ...

      --
      Priest: "Universe from nothing, no laws of physics, sped up time"+ huge discrepancies. Creationism? No. Big Bang Theory
  65. Re:victory against science by the+gnat · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure why being "dependent on other nations" in an interconnected future world is a huge tragedy that must be avoided.

    No matter how interconnected the future world is, there will still be winners and losers. I don't think it's entirely a coincidence that the nations that embraced Enlightenment principles of secularism, rational inquiry, and the scientific method are immensely richer than the nations that remained mired in superstition. (Like most of the Islamic world, for instance, which is just about the only part of the world where you can find people similarly obsessed with spreading ignorance.) I can't predict the future, but I'm guessing that the US will be a much nicer place to live in 100 years if we continue to lead the world in scientific advances, versus if we're a nation of superstitious fools waiting for knowledge and technology to trickle down from, say, China.

    Are you for reforming the FDA to make US medical technology research more competitive?

    Of course, as long as there remain severe financial (and perhaps criminal) penalties for companies that knowingly push dangerous and/or unproven treatments. I use the exact same arguments with anti-GMO activists. I find them slightly less nauseating on an intellectual level only because they're campaigning primarily against consumer products rather than an entire body of knowledge. (The vandalism of the golden rice study in the Philipines is an exception.) The former is short-sighted but possibly correctable - scientists will continue to experiment as long as that remains legal (I say this as someone who has personally spilled transgenic organisms all over my lab bench), but if the scientists disappear altogether...

  66. Re:victory against science by l0n3s0m3phr34k · · Score: 2

    They hurt our education system, forcing teachers to teach mythology as science. They hurt the kids trying to learn, telling them some religious-based crap is equal to the scientific method. They hurt our progress as a nation, causing confusion amongst students who might have been STEM but instead now have doubts that the science is "real", when no other leading country muddies their science classes with completely unproven made-up ideas.

  67. Re:victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Besides making yourself a target for anti-religious bigots, what harm of any kind comes from professing and supporting creationism?

    It means that some students might get failing grades in some biology and geology courses. And perfectly competent physicists and engineers might get fired from NASA if they get a little too pushy.

  68. Re:victory against science by l0n3s0m3phr34k · · Score: 1

    I'm hoping that they make it into an air-borne virus!

  69. Re:victory against science by phantomfive · · Score: 2

    There are many people who don't think that this study was bogus.

    There are also people who think the moon landing was faked.

    I've looked into it, and whether there was something 'suspicious' or not, the paper was seriously deficient.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  70. Re:victory against science by lgw · · Score: 1

    The are "many people" who believe in every kind of magical-thinking anti-science BS, from "EM waves bad" to "GMO bad" to "creation science". The fact that many people will believe any kind of stupid nonsense you can spout doesn't exactly give it credibility.

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  71. Unpredictable? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Conflating hybridization that takes many generations and may or may not yield a specific product with one where you can put completely unrelated and unpredictable genes in is completely wrong."

    That is more horseshit. The genes inserted in GMOs are quite predictable. That's why they put them in. The genes in hybrids are the ones that are unpredictable. Your comment suggests that you know this already, but you said the opposite.

    1. Re:Unpredictable? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They're predictable in the organism they put them into. They're not predictable when they jump into other organisms where they can and do combine with other genes in ways that might not be predictable. Also, just because the genes today are somewhat predictable does not mean that the ones they put in future crops will be.

      Bottom line here is that despite all the booster for GMO, we do not have any assurances that they won't cause huge problems in the future. I've personally seen the kind of damage that exotic species make when they enter the ecosystem where they don't belong, I can only imagine how bad it's going to be when they're also resistant to pesticides and contain genes to make them pest resistant as well.

    2. Re:Unpredictable? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No they're not. The limitation of the complexity of modelling molecular interactions prohibits it. Please explain how they have overcome this as it would be of great interest to many people.
      They're are probably many other reasons they are not 'entirely predictable' but this is one that leaps out at me

  72. Re: victory against science by Entrope · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Anti-GMO activists have done things like destroy golden rice fields. Golden rice is currently just about the best bet for combatting vitamin A deficiency. It certainly seems like these rich yuppies prefer that brown people be malnourished to having GMO foods even tried.

  73. Re:victory against science by lgw · · Score: 1

    Oh, and "fan death" - no discussion of "wacky shit people really believe" is complete without fan death.

    Electric fans sold in South Korea are equipped with a "timer knob" switch that turns them off after a set number of minutes. This is perceived as a life-saving function, particularly essential for bedtime use.

    I don't even?

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  74. Re:victory against science by the+gnat · · Score: 4, Informative

    I just thought of the other analogy: the Soviet Union, for all of its many unredeemable flaws, did manage to rack up some impressive scientific accomplishments. But not in biology or agriculture, because its leaders made a conscious choice to embrace Lysenko's pseudo-science and demonize genetics. The result was to set back progress by decades, because an entire generation was trained to be scientifically ignorant in that particular field. Russia still produces some excellent mathematicians and physicists, but it's never recovered in biology and medicine.

    (Another contemporary example would be Hitler's opposition to much of physics research as being "too Jewish", and his own support for less rigorous science, but it was ultimately his anti-Semitism that caused the most damage to Germany's scientific community, rather than his embrace of pseudoscience.)

  75. Re:victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    That's exactly what the anti-GMO idiots are doing. Don't turn a blind eye just because the idiots are on your side of the fence!

  76. Change Headline Please by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

    This is not winning a victory. It's winning a defeat.

  77. Most folk vote with their wallets... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I expect this will get reversed when food prices spike in Hawaii.

  78. Re:victory against science by the+gnat · · Score: 1

    That's exactly what the anti-GMO idiots are doing. Don't turn a blind eye just because the idiots are on your side of the fence!

    They're not on my side of the fence. As a biologist, I find both revolting; I am only slightly more tolerant of the anti-GMO activists - the ones who aren't actively vandalizing scientific experiments, that is - because in my experience, they spend less time actually lying outright about the scientific evidence than creationists do, and at least some of their claims are actually testable hypotheses.

  79. Give a choice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Whats wrong with labeling GMO foods? I mean, the people that are so pro-GMO should just eat the GMO themselves and stop forcing it on others. With labeling, people can decide what they want to eat. Is that really so wrong? Its basically similar to the nutrition labels. Whats next, they will remove the sugar content from labels as well since people are avoiding too much sugar?

  80. Re:Plenty of evidence worldwide for GMO harm by ranton · · Score: 1

    I think that analogous concept you might be looking for is DDT. It was originally a godsend -- it kills pests!

    No, that would be a good analogy if we were just talking about Roundup Ready seeds. That is a more reasonable thing to ban if there are good (non-tin foil hat) reasons to ban it. But any problems with roundup ready seeds would be a problem with that particular use of genetic modification, not genetic medication in general. That seemed to me what the original post was saying about this rulings similarity to banning screw drivers. Banning all GMOs because of a few brands of GMOs would be like banning all pesticides because of DDT.

    Almost all technologies that have been developed in the past 100 years or so to feed the world's expanding population have the chance of being harmful to our health in ways we don't know yet. There will be times when new advances will have unintended consequences, but we can't just be scared of every new technology that comes along. It is only because of these technologies that our lives are so good that we spend time on 1st world problems like worrying about the health problems of GMOs.

    The benefits of these advances are staggering. In 1900 average people spent 43% of their budget on food, compared to 13% today. I am very glad that my food expenditures are only about $800 per month (I am above the 13% number) instead of probably $2500 if not for the green revolution. If you want to not eat GMOs, just eat organic food. Its price is more in line with what food costs would be when we discard some of the the last century's advances in tech.

    I for one don't buy the argument that the world needs more food to support a growing population. There are more than enough people in the world.

    Until a large portion of the world starts performing population control, our opinions about the harm of growing populations is not relevant to topics related to feeding more people. As long as we as a society let people have as many kids as they want, and do not wish to punish children for the sins of their parents, we need to find ways of feeding all of these people.

    --
    -- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
  81. Re:victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You really shouldn't cite golden rice as an example of GMO unencumbered by IP law. The licensing agreement for golden rice has some humanitarian 'freedoms' but it is certainly not public domain. It is more analogous to commercial software that offers free licenses to people working on open source projects.

    http://www.goldenrice.org/Content1-Who/who4_IP.php

  82. In a related story..... by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

    The Indiana State legislature proposes bill that defines pi to be 3.2 and a procedure to square a circle with compass and straightedge.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indiana_Pi_Bill

  83. Re:victory against science by MobSwatter · · Score: 1

    To be honest, scientific analysis about things such as global warming has been shown to be strong armed/manipulated. It doesn't really matter what the people are told about it, deep down they know that messing with mother nature in that capacity just doesn't sit well with them. When it is observed that organic food is under attack by way of competition from it, along with GMO becoming more impossible to avoid, that settles it for them.

  84. Re:victory against science by Kohath · · Score: 1

    Unlike in the Soviet Union, we have individual choices here. We can choose to learn anything from creationism to evolution or anything else we wish -- unless the government controls the schools and censors the lessons. We should learn to avoid the Soviet Union's failures.

    We also have the internet, where info about science and all other topics is abundant. The science topics don't get crowded out by the non-science topics -- there's enough space for all ideas.

  85. Re:Plenty of evidence worldwide for GMO harm by sneakyimp · · Score: 1

    Until a large portion of the world starts performing population control, our opinions about the harm of growing populations is not relevant to topics related to feeding more people. As long as we as a society let people have as many kids as they want, and do not wish to punish children for the sins of their parents, we need to find ways of feeding all of these people.

    How do you figure that concern over population growth is not relevant to feeding people? I smell in this statement some kind of ethical concept which needs to be more clearly elucidated. I'm willing to accept that it's a Machiavellian notion, but if you don't feed people, they find it harder to reproduce. And, as long as we're on the topic of feeding everyone with GMO, why not engineer the GMO to reduce fertility rates? I'm sure it's possible. We just need to find some kind of GMO that contributes an anaphrodisiac to Golden Rice. As long as we are taking charge of our destiny with genetic tools, why not solve all the problems we can?

  86. Re:victory against science by Kohath · · Score: 1

    Do you think these impure thoughts and confusing messages should be censored from our textbooks and banned from our schools? How should we dispose of these books that are so harmful?

  87. Re:victory against science by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    What, are you saying the study was good, or are you saying people are naive?

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  88. Re:victory against science by the+gnat · · Score: 1

    Unlike in the Soviet Union, we have individual choices here. We can choose to learn anything from creationism to evolution or anything else we wish -- unless the government controls the schools and censors the lessons. We should learn to avoid the Soviet Union's failures.

    Teaching pseudoscience and political ideology in biology classes is exactly how the Soviet Union fucked up. We can choose to pursue intellectual inquiries that expand our knowledge of natural processes and inform our efforts to control our environment and treat our illnesses, or we can ignore these subjects in favor of religious doctrine. Which do you think will do more to improve our quality of life? Should we also be encouraging aspiring doctors to go into faith healing instead of modern Western medicine? Obviously in America people are free to do exactly this, just as they are free to lobby against GMOs, or vaccines, or general relativity. I can't stop them, nor would I if I had the power, but I won't stop calling them out as anti-progress misanthropes either.

  89. Re:Plenty of evidence worldwide for GMO harm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "People do not talk as much about the insidious influence of profit motive over one's ethics." ...I see this beaten to death EVERY TIME GMOs are mentioned. What are you basing this "not as much" off of?

  90. Re:victory against science by sjames · · Score: 1

    The issue is that GMO crops can diverge a great deal further in a signle generation. Imagine corn with a peanut protean in it.

  91. Incredibly ridiculous. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Remember artificial sweeteners? They kept saying there were no health issues to worry about, they had peer-reviewed clinical studies showing no ill effects, and you were getting sweetness without the calories."

    And there indeed we're NO HEALTH ISSUES to worry about. Why the fuck are you framing your words like there was? Oh, because you are an actual agent of ignorance, working against basic rationality and reason.

  92. Re:victory against science by spinozaq · · Score: 1

    Your sudden wheat allergy is probably a nocebo effect....

  93. Re:Plenty of evidence worldwide for GMO harm by ranton · · Score: 2

    Until a large portion of the world starts performing population control, our opinions about the harm of growing populations is not relevant to topics related to feeding more people. As long as we as a society let people have as many kids as they want, and do not wish to punish children for the sins of their parents, we need to find ways of feeding all of these people.

    How do you figure that concern over population growth is not relevant to feeding people? I smell in this statement some kind of ethical concept which needs to be more clearly elucidated. I'm willing to accept that it's a Machiavellian notion, but if you don't feed people, they find it harder to reproduce.

    Like I said, once society is ready to start performing population control on a global scale, then we no longer have to worry about feeding growing population. I did not talk about the morality of population control, just that as long as we both let people have the freedom to reproduce and do not condone letting people starve, it is irrelevant what our opinions on growing population are when talking about finding ways of feeding them.

    --
    -- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
  94. Re:Plenty of evidence worldwide for GMO harm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mistaken.

    Global Warming - not happening.
    DDT - not really all that harmful.
    GMO - another name for breeding.
    Cancer - not caused by our modern lifestyle, in fact the opposite is true.

  95. Re: victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Two things: 1) you make a lot of assertions about GMO risk without any citation, leading Me to doubt the accuracy of those assertions; 2) I fail to see how ending seed patents would be good because, as far as I can tell, absent those patents, Someone would be able to create GMO seeds, not make that information public, and introduce those seeds into the general population without notice prompting Me to think You would WANT seed patents in order to have the royalties act as a pseudo-tax on GMOs.

  96. Re:victory against science by sjames · · Score: 1

    If all GMO crops were as carefully studied and as open as the Rainbow papaya before introduction, a lot less people would object.

  97. Re:victory against science by MobSwatter · · Score: 1

    People do not trust the studies anymore, being aware the media is used, publicized studies smell of political and profit based motivation behind them. Yes, people behind GMO are naive, with consideration to man kinds unique and almost focused ability to screw things up, usually due to cut corners and are profit motivated, playing in the arena of the basis of life is quite naive...

  98. Re:victory against science by Kohath · · Score: 1

    Rather than choose which is better for everyone, I would let them choose for themselves. I'm against banning GMOs and against banning creationism. I don't support government schools because the government shouldn't be telling anyone what to think. The country wouldn't suffer if the phrase "some people don't believe in evolution, choosing instead to believe God created all creatures in their current form" were uttered in a science class, but the country wouldn't be helped either. The government should neither censor creationism nor teach it, neither promote it nor compartmentalize it.

    Evolution vs. creationism is a topic rarely discussed among religious people. Among anti-religious bigots it is discussed all the time, because bigots tend to be obsessed with differences in beliefs or characteristics. The different people are always bad, always dangerous and threatening to them. But these threats are almost never actualized. They're a "what if" scenario, or a callback to something that happened in a different place or time. Hence the original question: "the creationists hurt ... who exactly?" Realistically, they don't. People should choose reason and fairness over bigotry.

    Freedom and reason will improve our quality of life, because free people want better lives and reason allows them to make better choices. Government control and bigotry degrade our quality of life.

  99. Re:victory against science by BringsApples · · Score: 1

    I wish you were right. As far as I know, the nocebo effect can only take place in one that knowingly takes the "allergen".

    However, in my case, I had stomach problems for about 2 years before a suspect diagnosis. I went to the doctor 4 or 5 times for this stomach discomfort, and they did all sorts of tests. Finally they found that I was allergic to wheat, by way of a blood test. Once I started a non-wheat diet, the symptoms went away. But to hell with that diet. Wheat is in so many things that I love to eat, and to go gluten-free, which is what you have to do, is costly. That stuff in the link in my last post helps tremendously. It could be argued that it's a placebo effect that enables me to get benefit from it, but I highly doubt it.

    --
    Politics; n. : A religion whereby man is god.
  100. Re:victory against science by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    Ah, I see, so what you are saying is, since you don't understand the science, you would rather not trust? That's mainly ignorance, not naivete.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  101. Re:victory against science by sa1lnr · · Score: 0

    Are you saying that all people in the UK are pseudoscience believers? That's not very nice to say.

    No, we just don't like the thought of Monsanto controlling our food supply.

  102. Re:victory against science by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    No, we just don't like the thought of Monsanto controlling our food supply.

    That's different than being opposed to GMO. It's not clear you understand that.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  103. Re: victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Non gmo has been feeding the world for a while I think. Evolution has performed the ultimate test of non gmo safety.

  104. Re: victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Non GMO crops are still killing people today.

  105. Re:victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The issue is that GMO crops can diverge a great deal further in a single generation.

    Citation Needed

  106. Re:victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm pretty sure that believing GMO foods to be safe while most of them have had no long-term testing either as food or for environmental interactions would qualify as the being on the side of pseudoscience. The best "long-term" testing of GMOs I could find was all of three years, meanwhile I found many highly dubious articles and blog posts claiming that of course GMOs are well-tested and safe. (One particularly galling one was on a site named "skeptic ink", devoid of any skepticism.)
     
    The genuinely scientific person would say something like, "We have evidence showing no immediate danger in short-term consumption of GMOs. We don't know what the long-term effects of GMOs will be either on health or the environment."

  107. Re:victory against science by sjames · · Score: 1

    Simple logic unless you know how to breed corn with a salmon in a single generation without GMO techniques.

  108. Re:victory against science by ChromeAeonium · · Score: 1

    Nope, the same people opposing every other GE crops also oppose the Rainbow papaya. The anti-GE people don't care that the papayas were developed by the university.

  109. Re:going after GMO is like banning heroin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What, you think the two are incompatible?

    "Noble" is incompatible with "eeevil"; therefore, yes.

    labeling does nothing other than give GM foods a stigma

    Nutrition facts are required. Your argument is moot.

  110. Re:victory against science by ChromeAeonium · · Score: 2, Informative

    Ok, then explain the thugs who tried to destroy the GE wheat trial at Rothamsted, or the ones who did destroy the GE potatoes at the University of Leeds.

    The anti-Monsanto is just a convenient attempt to justify anti-science bullshit (and even that card is factually weak). That's why there's opposition to Golden Rice, the Rainbow papaya, The Arctic apple, and every other non-Monsanto GMO. If it was just about Monsanto, that wouldn't happen, but it does.

  111. There's already a religious anti-GE law in HI by ChromeAeonium · · Score: 1

    There is already a ban on genetically engineered taro in Hawai'i. The justification was that it was religiously offensive to (some) Native Hawaiians (who had been used as tools by anti-GE groups, IMO). How that one managed to become law is baffling, but considering that region is a good enough reason to pass an anti-GE law in Hawai'i, this law passing was not much surprise. Take note, by the way, that the taro research was being done by the University of Hawai'i, also known as not Monsanto. That's right, university research is being stiffed over religion. How is there no outrage over this?

    This new law may be overturned however. The farmers do not like it, at least, the ones who aren't peddling overpriced organic food anyway...conveniently, those guys seem okay with legislating away the competition. It is not fair, hurts local agriculture on the Big Island (read the bill,expanding a farm if you use biotechnology comes with a $1000 a day fine, which will not help food security on the island). This whole thing is just wrong. We should be encouraging agriculture, and encouraging technology, not hurting something good and ignoring the real issues that legitimately are cause for concern, like land costs.

    1. Re:There's already a religious anti-GE law in HI by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who was the University of Hawai'i partnered with?
      captcha:disclose :)

    2. Re:There's already a religious anti-GE law in HI by ChromeAeonium · · Score: 1

      Nobody. Monsanto (because I'm sure that's who you are implying) could not care less about taro. This was 100% publicly funded research done out of concern for the local taro producers. The exact kind of research the anti-GMO people love to insist they don't oppose.

    3. Re:There's already a religious anti-GE law in HI by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not just them, there's a number of dodgy biotech companies I wouldn't trust as far as I can throw them.
      OK this one may not have been done by industry but there are many 'university studies' in a number of subjects that are sham fronts for companies so I hope you can forgive the suspicion.

  112. Re:victory against science by sjames · · Score: 1

    At least one less is opposed, I imagine more as well.

    More importantly, it was enough to convince Japan to accept the papayas even though it rejects many other GM crops.

  113. Re:victory against science by Uberbah · · Score: 1

    Everyone seems to be ignoring that nobody is required to prove with sufficient rigor that non GMO crops are adequately safe.

    Because that's nothing more than stupid trolling, that's why. We don't need to study if people can eat corn or tomatoes, since people have been eating corn and tomatoes for thousands of years. People have not spent thousands of ears eating their corn and tomatoes with fish DNA grafted onto it. You're also ignoring the fact that we have decades of research into diets from around the world. We don't have that for pork meat with DNA from a cactus or whatever else it is you want us to eat.

  114. Re: victory against science by Uberbah · · Score: 1

    It certainly seems like these rich yuppies prefer that brown people be malnourished to having GMO foods even tried.

    If you were the sort of stupid troll that ran around accusing hippies of wanting brown people to die of malaria because of DDT bans, maybe.

  115. Re:victory against science by ChromeAeonium · · Score: 1

    The initial ball-rollers were the taro farmers, and for entirely different (and IMO legitimate) reasons. There are a lot of small independent family (actually a family, not just a big conglomerate owned by a family) taro farmers. With taro (it's like a big potato), much of the planting is done by cutting of the top of the corm (the potato part) and replanting it. They saw what Monsanto was doing with not allowing corn farmers to save seed, and were concerned that if the taro market went to GMO the same thing would happen with taro, where farmers would be entirely dependent on Monsanto and pretty much unable to resist or remain independent.

    That whole 'save the kalo' thing was driven a lot by religion and ignorance. There was a lot of vitriol because of patented taro varieties that the UH developed. However, they patented those varieties for a damned good reason: when they developed the macadamia varieties that are now used worldwide, they did not patent them, and as a result, the trees found themselves right away in South Africa and Australia where labor costs are cheaper, then sold back into the US, thus hurting the Hawaiian industry. The researchers who worked with the taro did not want that to happen again. There were also people getting pissy about new varieties making bad poi, which is a dumb thing to get angry about because that is not the taro breeder's fault that farmers try new taro huli. Yeah, some were mad about the patents, but no one is forcing anyone to use patented huli!

    The GMO thing was absolutely absurd, especially considering that the University of Hawai'i allows replanting of transgenic papaya. I have a strong suspicion that the anti-GE groups had a strong hand to play in the GMO taro fiasco, and furthermore, not all taro growers supported that ban. The fact is, disease wiped out taro in other islands, like Samoa. The southern leaf blight and taro blight that the GE taro were engineered to be resistant to were not as bad as what Samoa had, but if the Alomae-Bobone Virus Complex comes to Hawai'i kiss your poi goodbye. And there was even one kupuna who said they would rather the taro die out than see it be GMO. Such concern for ol' Haloa! And of course there were a lot of ignorant moke who just wanted to pound their chests at the haoles, that hullabaloo was part of it too.

  116. Re:victory against science by ChromeAeonium · · Score: 1

    I work in plant science, and I sure would. The anti-GMO movement is to agriculture and plant science what the anti-vaxxers are to medicine and immunology, climate change denialists are to climate science, and creationists are to evolutionary biology and biology in general. The vast majority of their arguments, even the ones that initially sound like they make sense (for example, the 'superweed' thing, or non-scientific issues like labeling), range from very weak and only coherent provided you hold a low level of botanical/agricultural knowledge to downright false (ex. the often quoted Séralini study). I so often hear otherwise rational people repeat anti-GE arguments because the opposition continues to adapt without actually changing their stance, sort of like how the anti-vaxxers started out focusing on thimerosal, then too-many-too-soon, ect. First opposition to GMOs is about health, then the environment, then biodiversity, then corporations, then labeling, then back to health every time you show how the concern is either misplaced or outright false. This is an movement that has so much misinformation, ignorance, and ideology mixed up into it, and ti is wrong in many ways.

    And I'm not saying there is no nuance on the topic, I'm not, there is, there are legitimate issues here, but to say that gives the anti-GE movement any credibility is like taking the very real controversy over the evolutionary history of the gnetophytes as evidence that creationism has some merit.

  117. Re:Plenty of evidence worldwide for GMO harm by ChromeAeonium · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I have heard some talk about how big aggro funds a lot of the GMO research which influences opinions.

    Go to your local university. The vast majority of scientists in relevant areas support the use of GE. You should not find it surprising when the people who cry Monsanto conspiracy at every inconvenient fact also accuse research of being part of the conspiracy.

    I for one don't buy the argument that the world needs more food to support a growing population.

    Well, you're wrong. The population is not only growing, but it is also demanding more than just rice, corn, and wheat. Also, there is less land, encroaching urbanization, more demand for water, evolving pests and diseases, and climate change. We need all the technology we can to face that.

    While I question the wisdom of Hawaii's move, I treasure the idea that Hawaii might remain pure, pristine, and full of naive hippies.

    I'd like two of those three.

  118. Re:victory against science by ChromeAeonium · · Score: 1

    Even better, several of the University of Hawai'i scientists who were there got less between the group of them than Jeffrey Smith, who is kind of like the Jenny McCarthy of genetic engineering. That's right, a guy whose only claim to fame is peddling nonsensical books about genetic engineering was given more time than the local, reputable, independent university scientists. Science was not welcome at the testimonies for the bill.

  119. Re:victory against science by enrevanche · · Score: 1

    I understand your problems with gluten (which I also have), however it is important to understand that the product you are recommending really has very little of its claimed ingredients. The 6X stuff is 1 part in a million, the 12X is 1 part in a trillion. If you take 1 gram of the liquid, you are only getting 1 microgram each of the 6X ingredients and one millionth of a microgram of the 12X ingredients. For almost all substances, these amounts are unlikely to have any substantial physiological effects, especially ones related to something as large as the gut. For something to be labled as gluten-free, it must have less that 20 parts per million and you will typically eat much more than a gram of something. The claim of homeopathy is that the carrier (water or sugar) contains "memory" of the original ingredient which is supposedly as powerful as the ingredient itself.

  120. Re:victory against science by AlphaWolf_HK · · Score: 1

    A big difference to the Stepford Wives community we lived in in New England. More power to the folks in HILO. right on folks.

    I very much doubt that, especially if you believe everything you just said above.

    Conventional farming cannot last long term. Period. The green revolution is the whole reason most of us aren't starving right now, and being against GMO's is attempting to roll agriculture back to before the green revolution. That means your most basic needs become a LOT more expensive, and your economy has to now devote more of its resources towards food production instead of technology advancement.

    Sure, eat what you want, but don't come running to the US for aid packages when famine hits, because you've been warned about that pandora's box you're opening up. The same warnings were given to the anti-vaccine movement, and they're just now starting to see the error of their ways (The data is in: Non-vaccined kids have not had reduced autism rates, however they do have increased fatalities caused by what are otherwise third world problems while living in a first world country.)

    The science doesn't support any of the claims of the anti-GMO or anti-vaccine movements.

    --
    Careful with names containing L slashdot.org/~AiphaWolf_HK slashdot.org/~AlphaWoif_HK slashdot.org/~AiphaWoif_HK
  121. Re:victory against science by AlphaWolf_HK · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Hell, who am I kidding, they'll come running to us anyways, and we'll give them aid packages anyways. They always do, and we always do.

    --
    Careful with names containing L slashdot.org/~AiphaWolf_HK slashdot.org/~AlphaWoif_HK slashdot.org/~AiphaWoif_HK
  122. Re:victory against science by AlphaWolf_HK · · Score: 1

    How would creationists be more dangerous? If anti-GMO people had their way, we'd effectively roll back the green revolution, and famine would return to India, China, and various parts of Eastern Europe. Africa's famine would get much worse.

    Creationists at the worst might get a public school textbook changed in Texas. People might get dumber, but nobody will die.

    I'd say climate change deniers won't hurt either. We've already seen periods much warmer than the current one, and the result has always been increased biodiversity and "greener" terrain (literally, much more prosperous plantlife.) These periods also are accompanied by CO2 levels about 18 times what we have right now. We are actually heading for another one of these in a few million years, regardless of whether or not mankind exists (search google for "pangea ultima", which current earth sciences say is inevitable.) Whether it happens by us, or it happens naturally, I'm not sure what difference it makes in the end.

    --
    Careful with names containing L slashdot.org/~AiphaWolf_HK slashdot.org/~AlphaWoif_HK slashdot.org/~AiphaWoif_HK
  123. Re:Plenty of evidence worldwide for GMO harm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    By the way: DDT and GMO was produced by Monsanto...

  124. Re:victory against science by AlphaWolf_HK · · Score: 1

    Probably because in the end, these foods are chemically indistinguishable from non-GMO plants.

    Keep in mind that every time you breed a plant, you have thousands of genes that mutate in unknown ways; we have no idea what kind of change might take place in that plant, and it's impractical to ever know. But, we assume they're safe anyways - which isn't a bad idea, it's worked for thousands of years after all.

    Yet in the case of GMO, we have one very small and very controlled deliberate mutation that makes them resistant to glyphosate, we know precisely what it does, akin to other plants that are naturally resistant...and HOLD THE FUCKING PHONE, THIS CAN'T BE SAFE TO EAT!

    Really, in light of the second paragraph, is the third at all rational? Think about it for a minute.

    Contrast to that of pharmaceuticals where we're looking at a chemical structure that flat out hasn't ever been put inside of a human body before. In the case of a GMO plant, what you are consuming from the plant might have a different protein pattern, but by the time they reach your plate they aren't distinguishable from non-GMO plants. This is mainly because there are so many variations from plant to plant that without doing a DNA analysis you aren't going to tell one minor strain from another very easily.

    --
    Careful with names containing L slashdot.org/~AiphaWolf_HK slashdot.org/~AlphaWoif_HK slashdot.org/~AiphaWoif_HK
  125. Re:victory against science by AlphaWolf_HK · · Score: 1

    Just for added giggles to debunk the organic movement, have a look at this from the American Cancer Society:

    Are foods labeled "organic" more effective in lowering cancer risk?

    The term organic is popularly used to designate plant foods grown without pesticides and genetic modifications. At this time, no research exists to demonstrate whether such foods are more effective in reducing cancer risk than are similar foods produced by other farming methods.

    Do pesticides in foods cause cancer?

    Pesticides and herbicides can be toxic when used improperly in industrial, agricultural, or other occupational settings. Although vegetables and fruits sometimes contain low levels of these chemicals, overwhelming scientific evidence supports the overall health benefits and cancer-protective effects of eating vegetables and fruits. At present there is no evidence that residues of pesticides and herbicides at the low doses found in foods increase the risk of cancer, but fruits and vegetables should be washed thoroughly before eating.

    http://www.cancer.org/healthy/eathealthygetactive/acsguidelinesonnutritionphysicalactivityforcancerprevention/acs-guidelines-on-nutrition-and-physical-activity-for-cancer-prevention-diet-cancer-questions

    If you just object to the idea of pesticides, then organic isn't your solution either, as virtually ALL organic farmers who sell their crops commercially use pesticides. Rather instead of synthetic pesticides, they use much larger quantities of "natural" (and I use that term loosely) pesticides.

    The anti-GMO movement is every bit as destructive as the anti-vaccine movement, perhaps more so. They basically want to take the green revolution, which has ended famine in SOO many countries, and throw it away just because it makes them feel better about themselves. Sure, they might have the money to blow on organic food that costs a lot more and has no scientifically proven benefits, but poor people do not.

    --
    Careful with names containing L slashdot.org/~AiphaWolf_HK slashdot.org/~AlphaWoif_HK slashdot.org/~AiphaWoif_HK
  126. Re:victory against science by jalopezp · · Score: 1

    We don't need GMOs to solve food shortages like we don't need airlines to cross the ocean. It would be ridiculous to handicap ourselves by ignoring our best tool in this situation. As for GMOs being the most familiar solution to western scientists, I don't think that's even a problem. It's like a guy who codes java all day at work. He may know that he's using a deficient language that's only fit for non-technical managers, but he's going to make a much bigger contribution using java than anything else, given his expertise. We may not need GMOs to solve food shortages, but we should definitely be using GMOs to try and solve food shortages.

    I'm not sure what you're trying to say about the agribusiness and famines, but you're going to have to explain that one again. The only way we could put african farmers out of business is by selling cheap crops in Africa. Cheap crops, yet famine?

  127. Re:victory against science by BringsApples · · Score: 1

    I'm not following you completely, but I've had about 5 hours of sleep in the last 3 days. All I know is that stuff has in it, some grain, and some wheat, as well as some stuff that relaxes the allergic reaction. The theory is that by introducing very small amounts of the "problem" (grain or wheat) as well as a small amount of the "relaxant", it could train your immune system to calm the hell down during times when you eat grain or wheat in normal doses. I don't think it's working that way for me, so I'm simply using it for it's "relaxant" effects. You just take 15 drops every 3 or 4 hours, and eat what you wish. I admit that it's not the best plan, perhaps cutting out wheat would be (I think wheat in it's own right isn't good to eat a lot of) ultimately a better idea. But cutting out wheat leaves you with a limited menu, that's pretty pricey.

    --
    Politics; n. : A religion whereby man is god.
  128. Re:victory against science by Barsteward · · Score: 1

    "They saw what Monsanto was doing with not allowing corn farmers to save seed, and were concerned that if the taro market went to GMO the same thing would happen with taro, where farmers would be entirely dependent on Monsanto and pretty much unable to resist or remain independent."

    I'm with them on this point. And that is what should be highlighted, companies like Monsanto are evil.

    --
    "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
  129. Re:Plenty of evidence worldwide for GMO harm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about a car analogy? We know for sure that cars kill millions of people, both directly and indirectly by pollution. We know that cars have huge impact on nature. Yet we keep using cars and we don't see any problem with that. Many also fier age flying over driving, even we know that flying is much safer.

    This is just simply human stupidity. If we would be really afraid of the future of the human kind, we would be spending more than 10 million dollars to find incoming asteroids and comets. If we would be afraid of the nature suffering, we would stop over fishing and pollution. GMO, even if worst case happens is probably the least of our problems.

  130. Tritium is chemically identical to Hydrogen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    However, Tritium will kill you: it's radioactive AND the resulting T2O has a different binding therefore different reaction rates to H2O.

  131. Everything is everything by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and anything is anything. The Big Tao of Things. Why regulate anything?

    Idiot.

  132. Those tests were illegal. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They bypassed regulation on control of the site to exclude contamination.

  133. Poor stigmatized GMOs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They have been bullied in school and grew up with only one thought: "REVENGE!".

    > labeling does nothing other than give GM foods a stigma

    Monsanto, is that you?

  134. Just a slight correction by aepervius · · Score: 1

    nitpick : there has not been any study showing GMO currently cultivated to be unhealthy, but there has been 1) GMO made with nut allergene (thankfully stoppedby the firm before commercialisation) 2) evidence of resistance gene spreading in the wild which brings all sort of complication (but again is thankfully not an health problem, more like a crop versus pest growing problem).

    But basically you are righ and GMO hater are nutter (pun intended).

    --
    C. Sagan : A demon haunted world:
    http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0345409469/
    visit randi.org
  135. banning GMO and the banana by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Right now, the cavendish banana is being attacked by a fungus that detroys the fruit. The cavendish banana is the one that most Norrth Americans eat, it is an example of a single produce variety dominating the market. The Cavendish banana variety replaced the Gros Michel variety which was wiped out by a similer fungus in the 1950's. The cavendish variey was produced through an early form of GMO enginerring.

    About 20% of the areas that produce cavendish have been affected by this fungus with the bigger farms in South America not yet being attacked.

    Wonder how many GMO critics will stand on principle and refuse to eat a GMO banana variety that replaces the cavendish?

  136. Legislation by the ignorant ... by johnlcallaway · · Score: 1

    ... is far more dangerous than GMO.

    --
    I rarely read replies, it's my opinion and if you thought about your opinion a little more, I'm OK with that.
    1. Re:Legislation by the ignorant ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unless the legislation is to use WMD no it isn't

  137. Re:victory against science by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1
    --
    There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
  138. Re:victory against science by drakaan · · Score: 1

    Sadly, I am without mod points...would have had a +1 Insightful from me for sure, AC or not.

    --
    "Murphy was an optimist" - O'Toole's commentary on Murphy's Law
  139. Re:victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No it's not simple logic because it makes the false assumption that you can insert saki into corn in the first place. 2: That inserted gene is actually active.

  140. GMOs are dangerous because of this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Corn can be altered so the plants produce the toxic-pesticide molecules themselves.
    Now the farmer no longer needs to spray with pesticides.

    But do you think this is healthier? Nope.
    More profitable to the farmer? Yep.

    End the bad news is: in the end, the insects will adapt (quickly) and then what? Add more self-pesticide-producing genes?

  141. Re:victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The assumption that since we have been eating them for hundreds or years means that they are safe is unscientific bullshit. For hundreds of years people assumed tobacco was harmless until they studied it scientifically. If non GMO crops were held to the same standard as GMO crops, then things like peanuts, wheat, rye, barley etc... would be banned because they cause food allergies. Walnuts would be banned because they produce cyanide.

    People have not spent thousands of ears eating their corn and tomatoes with fish DNA grafted onto it.

    We don't need to spend thousands of years studying it to show it safe.

  142. Re:Plenty of evidence worldwide for GMO harm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm from Kauai, and have a lot of family on the Big Island. Those two islands are nothing like Oahu in terms of political demographics. "Naive hippies" would be a generous description of much of the population that has been immigrating for the past few decades, and that group has formed an extremely vocal political bloc at the county levels of all the outer islands.

    On Kauai, for example, the island is essentially split in 2, with everything North of Kapaa being overtaken by trust fund kids, celebrities, surfers, and new agers to the extent that the culture and community there is essentially unreconcilable and unrecognizable to the rest of the island. The recent explosion of physically and verbally confrontational shock politics driven by activists around the GMO issue is unlike anything Kauai has ever seen. People vehemently disagreeing with eachother at county council meetings has always been fodder for the public access channel, but it's escalated to people pushing, hitting, spitting, and screaming at other peoples' faces from inches away. My parents and grandparents can't ever remember, for example, a case where groups of people screamed threats and obscenities at the mayor during meetings, or surrounded people representing opposing groups and tried to physically intimidate them with shoving.

  143. Re:victory against science by MobSwatter · · Score: 1

    Science, or the understanding of it is not relevant, it is the people that present it that can be subject to manipulating results due to political or monetary interests.

  144. Re:victory against science by Rich0 · · Score: 1

    Bit of a tangent, but I saw an interesting Nova episode which included a tour of a Russian missile base. The commander bragged about using biorhythms to predict when soldiers would be at their best performance so that they could staff the silos accordingly and how this was much more advanced than what they did in the west. The operational manual was out of the old Soviet days.

    That's the problem with dictatorships - they're really efficient about what they do, so when they do good stuff it often turns out rather good, and when for whatever reason the guy in charge is a bit crazy, well, they're really good on follow-through.

  145. Re:victory against science by gx5000 · · Score: 1

    Watch "Seeds of Death" and let me know when you come to the same conclusion as thousand of silenced researchers and scientists. We're not Anti-Science, we're anti-tobacco science......

    --
    End of Line.
  146. Re:victory against science by gx5000 · · Score: 2

    It's shills like you that continue to suppress the information that GMO's are a pandoras' box. There is so much information out here that Monsanto and their ilk you'd rather not know. Anti-GMO proponents are not anti-science (sounds like a fox news insult) they are on the side of labeling so we, the people can choose. The pro gmo faction knows if we have a choice, their products will no longer sell, and there are a multitude of reasons for this, but until you avail yourself of the documented effects of gmo's you'll remain ignorant of their dangers. Side with the Corps that told us that Agent Orange is safe and get back to me.

    --
    End of Line.
  147. Re:victory against science by gx5000 · · Score: 1

    It was retracted because of threats, corruption and one of their team become co-opted. Read some more and find out what actually happened. Never mind that ANY researcher trying to get funds to research GMO's for possible negative effects is asking for his career to end. Monsanto doesn't play fair when profits loom in the balance and they couldn't give two shits about our health.

    --
    End of Line.
  148. Re:victory against science by gx5000 · · Score: 1

    The film Seeds of death, watch it and then fact check it....you'll have nightmares.

    --
    End of Line.
  149. Re:victory against science by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    Everyone seems to be ignoring that companies are not required to prove with sufficient rigor that GMO crops are adequately safe.

    People with non-scientific backgrounds, like you, think the tests are not sufficient. Scientists who understand the issues think the tests are sufficient.

    Mainly people like you aren't thinking rationally, you're thinking out of fear.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  150. Re:victory against science by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    Science, or the understanding of it is not relevant,

    I see, so you are basing this all on 'what you feel,' or 'what seems right.' That's a real winner.

    Back in the real world, people look at things like 'evidence' and 'experiments.' Stop being so braindead.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  151. Re:victory against science by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    It was retracted because of threats, corruption and one of their team become co-opted.

    It was a poorly done experiment.

    Read some more and find out what actually happened.

    Stop reading the propaganda and look at the actual experiment. Because in science, experiments and data are all that matter.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  152. Re:victory against science by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    Honestly, you sound like an ignoramus. I doubt you'd know a double-blind test if it hit you in the face. Did you skip fourth grade science or something? I think you must be drooling on your keyboard right now. Lack proper drool control. Remember, you can swallow, it's helpful.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  153. Re:victory against science by TangoMargarine · · Score: 1

    While it does sound silly (and the two proposed causes have glaring logical flaws), I wonder if this isn't an urban myth that sprang from actual concerns. Kind of like leaving a pot of boiling water unattended on a stove...presumably if the fan motor was sufficiently shitty it could start a fire? And obviously the electricity is kind of going to waste as well.

    --
    Unity? Screw that: XFCE. Slashdot Beta? Screw that: SoylentNews. Australis? Screw that: Pale Moon. UX developers DIAF
  154. Re:victory against science by TangoMargarine · · Score: 1

    Call it Murphy's law; when the GMO company/ies inevitably cut corners while playing with living things, eventually something will get fucked up. And then when somebody finally realizes the result is unhealthy, they'll suppress the findings.

    Considering that we keep finding studies that are full of shit, it's unreasonable for you to attack people who doubt studies.

    --
    Unity? Screw that: XFCE. Slashdot Beta? Screw that: SoylentNews. Australis? Screw that: Pale Moon. UX developers DIAF
  155. Conservative Alert by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Doing 16 ideologically incompatible things before breakfast and demanding that all their fellow conservatives do it harder lest they be labeled a heretic.

  156. Re:victory against science by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    Call it Murphy's law; when the GMO company/ies inevitably cut corners while playing with living things, eventually something will get fucked up. And then when somebody finally realizes the result is unhealthy, they'll suppress the findings.

    Oh no, what should we do?? If only we had a government agency who regulated and made sure these things were safe. We could call it the 'USDA.'

    Nah, that's insanity. Continue on with your fearmongering.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  157. Victory against Tobacco Science by gx5000 · · Score: 1

    Calling anti-gmo activists ant-science is a monsanto trick and it's getting annoying. Watch Seeds of Death and learn something about how Business works...

    --
    End of Line.
  158. Re:victory against science by TangoMargarine · · Score: 1

    And nobody could possibly grease the USDA. Especially not a multihojillion-dollar corporation.

    --
    Unity? Screw that: XFCE. Slashdot Beta? Screw that: SoylentNews. Australis? Screw that: Pale Moon. UX developers DIAF
  159. Re:victory against science by phantomfive · · Score: 2

    They probably could, but you're a superstitious freak, because you don't understand science.

    Get an understanding of science, then we'll talk. Otherwise I'm just wasting my time and you're being an idiot.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  160. Re:victory against science by TangoMargarine · · Score: 1

    This has absolutely nothing to do with science; this is about humans acting for human reasons (money) instead of science!

    --
    Unity? Screw that: XFCE. Slashdot Beta? Screw that: SoylentNews. Australis? Screw that: Pale Moon. UX developers DIAF
  161. Re:victory against science by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    You are unable to evaluate the quality of the science, because you don't understand it. Because you don't understand it, you fear it.
    It has to do with you, and fear, and the unknown. You are a loser.
    Fix that.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  162. Re:victory against science by TangoMargarine · · Score: 1

    This is the same argument as the open source code base, which was what I was trying to get at, somewhat. Sure you *could* theoretically audit all the code on your computer, but nobody has the time for that, and very few have the domain knowledge. I "could" read up on all the studies, but...

    Do *you* understand all the nuances of the science? Really?

    And stop insulting me. That isn't helping anything.

    --
    Unity? Screw that: XFCE. Slashdot Beta? Screw that: SoylentNews. Australis? Screw that: Pale Moon. UX developers DIAF
  163. Re:victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you are right in your allegation about supermarkets, which is more serious in the UK than the US, then shouldn't the action be to stop them deceiving people?
    Incidently misquoteing people doesn't 'prove' your misquote and I very much doubt you know much about the UK supermarket market so how exactly did you draw this conclusion?

  164. Re:victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "It is the beliefs that people can decied what they want to eat."

    Unless they want to eat GMO crops, in which case they cant because theyre banned.

    So change that to be - "People can decide what they want to eat as long as other people say its OK"

  165. Re:victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >People of ALL political beliefs here in the UK don't want GMO crops. The result is that NO supermarket will sell food with any GMO content.

    Huh? Are you sure? I think you'll find that there is no way that any food sold by any supermarket can be guaranteed NOT to have a GM ingredient. try doing some research before engaging keyboard, f'rinstance;

    http://tescofoodnews.com/news/an-update-on-our-poultry-feed/

    That beacon of healthy eating supermarkets "Iceland" tried to market themselves as 100% GM Free a few years ago and had to retract and since then the majority of the worlds Soya is now GM.

    Also to use the UK as a shining light for informed consumerism is even more ridiculous. People in the UK will eat any old crap provided it's cheap as chips (mmmm chips). The only decision most consumers in the UK use for buying food is price and with the increase in demand from developing nations prices for even badly produced food will increase and people will start to demand cheap GM food.

    Finally there is no consensus throughout UK politics about anything, let alone the development of GM product and to say so is just plain wrong.

    As to my view on the rights and wrongs of GM, I'm not sure we have a choice anymore 7.5 Thousand Million people need feeding and for us to keep a significant minority of them starving because there is not a 100% guarantee of safety is a luxury we don't have.

  166. Re:victory against science by sjames · · Score: 1

    You can and it will be if you do it right. Should is another question entirely.

  167. Eating RoundUp is Stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Look folks for all the supposed benefits of genetically engineered foods it has been done for one main reason. To sell more glyphosate (RoundUp).

    Every time you eat RoundUp ready food, which is 90% of GM food, you are eating glyphosate. That kills plants by what is known as the shikimate pathway. That pathway exists in the bacteria in your gut. Destroy it and autoimmune and inflammation based diseases will run rampant.

    Anthony Samsel and Stephanie Seneff, "Glyphosate's Suppression of Cytochrome P450 Enzymes and Amino Acid Biosynthesis by the Gut Microbiome: Pathways to Modern Diseases" Entropy 2013, 15(4), 1416-1463; doi:10.3390/e15041416

    http://people.csail.mit.edu/seneff/Entropy/entropy-15-01416.pdf

    Enjoy eating your poison folks. I'm going to make sure the stuff I eat isn't and without labeling laws it is very hard but I'm not going to knowingly put poison in my stomach. That would be just plain stupid.

  168. Re:victory against science by Gryle · · Score: 1
    There is so much information out here that Monsanto and their ilk you'd rather not know.

    Citations please? It there is so much information readily available, please provide some citations. Burden of proof is on you at this point, since you're the one making claims. And I want actual legitimate scientific papers published in reputable journals, not anecdotes from moms with Internet connections or stories related third-hand from some friend's cousin's barber who heard it from this one guy down the block.

    Anti-GMO proponents are not anti-science (sounds like a fox news insult) they are on the side of labeling so we, the people can choose
    To be clear, I strongly support the labeling of GMO as such; people have a right to decide whether or not they want to eat GM-foodstuffs. I am, however, strongly against claims made based on emotion and questionable sources. Having read the article (and several more articles and books on the subject of GMO), many GMO opponents appear to be anti-science, changing the reason for the ban whenever someone presents them with a legitimate counter-arguement.

    --
    Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not entirely sure about the universe - Einstein
  169. Re:victory against science by Gryle · · Score: 1

    Don't waste your time. As G.K. Chesterton observed, "If a man says (for instance) that men have a conspiracy against him, you cannot dispute it except by saying that all the men deny that they are conspirators; which is exactly what conspirators would do." A lack of solid evidence is evidence that the Big Agriculture (TM) has bribed the authorities to supress it.

    --
    Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not entirely sure about the universe - Einstein
  170. Re:victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Seralini_affair
    http://www.independentsciencenews.org/health/seralini-and-science-nk603-rat-study-roundup/
    http://gmoseralini.org/seralini-validated-by-new-efsa-guidelines-on-long-term-gmo-experiments/
    This is rather enlightening and I second the view that wikipedia are libelling a scientist. (just because you're a wiki it doesn't excuse libel)

  171. Re: victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If they are known to be safe, why did the US government enact legislation that absolves Monsanto of any blame that their products might cause ?
    Someone knows something they aren't telling, otherwise this legislation would not have been necessary.

  172. Re:victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There are many people, espicially on slashdot, unqualified to judge the scientific merits who think that this study was bogus.

    There FTFY

  173. Re:victory against science by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

    Above posters have covered how creationists are more dangerous than all that, and the "climate change won't be bad" has been extensively debated to death elsewhere.

    Anti-GMO people are not going to "have their way" around the world. People in india are not going to starve to appease some Hawaian hippies.

  174. Re:victory against science by MobSwatter · · Score: 1

    'I' do not have a 'feeling' or an 'opinion' on GMO because I have not seen 'any' uncorruptible scientific presentations or documentation capable of being recreated by third party or by myself on the matter based upon coherently perceived understanding and observation of corruption in both science and media for obvious reasons of profits. China and Africa have both refused delivery of GMO products, and I'd have to say they probably won't be the only ones in the future. Would you jump off a bridge for a dollar?

  175. Re:Plenty of evidence worldwide for GMO harm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, you're wrong. The population is not only growing, but it is also demanding more than just rice, corn, and wheat. Also, there is less land, encroaching urbanization, more demand for water, evolving pests and diseases, and climate change. We need all the technology we can to face that.

    Unfortunately, GMO Round-Up ready CORN is on it's third (3) instance, primarily because it requires the use of MORE and MORE pesticide (round-up). It requires no LESS water, and no LESS land than ORGANIC crops.

    How does the above example HELP the situation??? It ONLY CREATES a HUGE PROFIT for Monsanto, and squeezes out the more nutritious and healthy organic crops that we SHOULD be feeding our bodies.

  176. Re:Plenty of evidence worldwide for GMO harm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Go to your local university. The vast majority of scientists in relevant areas support the use of GE. You should not find it surprising when the people who cry Monsanto conspiracy at every inconvenient fact also accuse research of being part of the conspiracy.

    Supporting appropriate use of genetic engineering is not the same as supporting Monsanto's GMO money grab

  177. Re:victory against science by Reziac · · Score: 1

    If they already eat the fish, why should it matter if the fish DNA is in a plant instead??

    --
    ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  178. Re:Plenty of evidence worldwide for GMO harm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Speak for yourself, I don't drive. Yes I indirectly use vehicles (eg for food transport to supermarkets) but without private cars the roads would be much safer and there would be less polution. OK me not driving doesn't stop everyone else driving but I'm only responsible for my own actions.

  179. Re:victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A lot of pharma comes from plants & organisms that have been eaten so that doesn't hold true. Also I wouldn't mind so much if GMOs actually had the same levels of supportive evidence as pharma.

  180. Re:victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So change that to be - "People can decide what they want to eat as long as other people say its OK"

    That's always the case. Just try eating a person and see what people say. Eating animals that are normally pets will often result in social stigmatisation as well

  181. Re:victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    GMO as currently used wont help feed people, it'll just cause those not using GMOs out of buisness

  182. Re:victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, some were mad about the patents, but no one is forcing anyone to use patented huli!

    If you require more herbicide than the non patent varieties can withstand due to weeds becoming highly resistant as other people use more due to the patented varieties you effectively are or they go bust.

  183. Re:victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Rains pretty cheap and quite common in some parts of the world you know...

  184. Re:victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Put them in the library, no one will read them then!

  185. Re:victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The green revolution wasn't due to GMO. Quite a bit had to do with organisation, irrigation, fertilsers etc.. I'd say the difference caused by golden rice was minimal (its not much better than normal rice)

  186. Re:victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Our best tool would actually be a more even distribution of food not GMOs. Thats looking to the wrong technology to solve what is essentially an organisational problem. As currently practised its not even an answer.

  187. Re:victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I really hope your vision of the future falls flat on its face. Even defining intelligence is hard but somehow Beijing is apparently on the verge of creating intelligence 'super men'. I guess they wont have blonde hair and blue eyes so it'll be a change at least.

  188. Re: victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Someone would be able to create GMO seeds, not make that information public, and introduce those seeds into the general population without notice

    They could do that with patents

  189. Re:victory against science by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    'I' do not have a 'feeling' or an 'opinion' on GMO because I have not seen 'any' uncorruptible scientific presentations or documentation capable of being recreated by third party or by myself on the matter

    Then you're arguing out of ignorance.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  190. Re:victory against science by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    I'm willing to continue as long as it gives me amusement.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  191. Re:victory against science by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    This is the same argument as the open source code base, which was what I was trying to get at, somewhat. Sure you *could* theoretically audit all the code on your computer, but nobody has the time for that, and very few have the domain knowledge. I "could" read up on all the studies, but...

    Yes, yes, and for some reason, though you won't look at it for yourself, you choose to not believe the scientists. Brilliant, that.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  192. Re:victory against science by quantaman · · Score: 1

    These are the same people who think that eating an "alkalizing" diet and drinking "alkalized water"

    That's an overly broad and unfair characterization. Everyone seems to be ignoring that companies are not required to prove with sufficient rigor that GMO crops are adequately safe.

    The FDA requires new pharmaceuticals to undergo years of testing. In contrast, GMO crops are assumed to be safe because they 'closely approximate' their originating crop. That's a foolish assumption.

    Pharmaceuticals are designed to have a significant biological effect on the body, side effects are almost impossible to avoid. GMO crops are designed to indistinguishable to the human body. Making a safe GMO crop is a far easier task than making a safe pharmaceutical (and I've yet to hear real evidence of any GMO related health issues in humans).

    --
    I stole this Sig
  193. Joan Russow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is unconscionable that the global food system has been tampered with by companies, such as Monsanto and Dow , which have left a legacy of disasters behind them. There should have been a global ban years ago.

    We are living in a wake of negligence from previous harmful substances that were once deemed safe for human health and the environment. Given the unattended consequences of genetically engineered foods and crops, and the global commitment to the precautionary principle in the Rio Declaration, and in the Convention on Biological Diversity, UNCED, 1992, it becomes imperative to institute a global ban on genetically engineered foods and crops

    At a Conference in 1998, in St Louis, scientists stated that using the term Genetically modified would be confusing because there has been modification over the years through breeding but breeding is completely distinct from Genetic engineering/transgenic processes. The scientists advised everyone to use the terms genetically engineered or transgenic food and crops.

    Dr. Thierry Vrain a genetic engineer who worked for 30 years for Agriculture Canada pointed out the following: While on the one hand, the biotech companies argued initially that they should get a patent because their transgenic products were unique; on the other hand, subsequently they proceeded to argue that there was no need to test these products derived from the transgenic process because they were substantially equivalent. He has left the department and is speaking out against genetically engineered food and crops , and he now supports a ban.

    The profusion of genetically engineered food and crops resulted from institutional collusion. The institutional Collusion, in relation to genetically engineered food and crops, among corporations, governments, universities and regulatory agencies has been endemic; For the sake of food safety and food security for present and future generations: (i) this collusion must end; (ii) the precautionary principle must be invoked, (iii) genetically engineered food and crops, banned; (iv) Genetically engineered products dumped from the shelves (v) the charters of Monsanto et al, revoked; and (vi) charges of gross/criminal negligence against these corporations, levied.

    The rest of the world should follow the lead of Hawaii; There has been a petition, calling for a global ban, launched.

    http://www.change.org/en-CA/petitions/the-un-general-assembly-institute-a-global-ban-on-genetically-engineered-food-and-crops

  194. Re:victory against science by Uberbah · · Score: 1

    What part of "we already have extensive research on diets" did you not understand? There's data on low fat, vegitarian, seefood diets, etc etc etc, going back decades. That is not the case for GMO products.

    Take your willful stupidity and pound sand, troll.

  195. Re:victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    People said the same thing about products labelled "Made in China." Yet, when people have the choice between made in USA or saving a few dollars, which do they choose? Considering Wal-Mart is #1 on the Fotune 500 list, that ought to be your answer.

  196. Re:victory against science by EngnrFrmrlyKnownAsAC · · Score: 1

    these foods are chemically indistinguishable from non-GMO plants.

    Except they produce proteins which provide resistance to glyphosate, right? That would imply they are distinguishable, right? If they weren't, how would Monsanto be able to sue farmers for planting GM crops without their permission (which they do).

    Anyway I agree it's generally okay to assume 'traditionally' breeded plants are safe. Eons of natural selection seems to have worked well.

    What I don't agree with is the implicit trust given to the methods of introducing GM genes. A gene gun literally shotgun blasts cell DNA with the new genes stuck to metal particles hoping some sticks in the right spots; progeny are selected which express the desired trait but it can't be known if other areas of the DNA were adversely affected. Another method hijacks a soil bacterium to produce a new gene which is transferred to the target host. Relatively controlled but in an absolute sense pretty messy.

    In light of the second paragraph, it should be noted the third paragraph ignores how that deliberate mutation would never happen without human intervention.

    The safety aspects of GMO crops are still up for debate (obviously!). I advocate caution is all. That and transparency. If they're so freakin' safe, why does Monsanto spend sooo much cash to prevent labeling?

    A lot of (probably safe to say most) pharmaceuticals are derived from plants/animals/mold/etc or based on modified existing substances. The completely novel compound is the minority. I think the analogy stands.

    But aside from the potential for physical harm, there's demonstrated economic harm in the form of unfair patent litigation against farmers whose crops were contaminated and ecological harm by the dilution of heritage strains and acceleration of pesticide resistance. Personally, I think these are more important concerns because they are more concrete but for some reason people get upset when you attempt to steer the debate that direction.

    --
    Howdy howdy howdy
  197. Re:victory against science by EngnrFrmrlyKnownAsAC · · Score: 1

    Making a safe GMO crop is a far easier task than making a safe pharmaceutical

    I think it's fair to say [Citation needed]

    I've yet to hear real evidence of any GMO related health issues in humans

    yet

    --
    Howdy howdy howdy
  198. Re:victory against science by EngnrFrmrlyKnownAsAC · · Score: 1

    You mean scientists like Árpád Pusztai?

    Árpád Pusztai (8 September 1930) is a Hungarian-born biochemist and nutritionist who spent 36 years at the Rowett Research Institute in Aberdeen, Scotland. He is a world expert on plant lectins, authoring 270 papers and three books on the subject.

    In 1998, Árpád Pusztai publicly announced that the results of his research showed feeding genetically modified potatoes to rats had negative effects on their stomach lining and immune system. This led to scientific criticism and Pusztai being suspended and his annual contract was not renewed. The resulting controversy became known as the Pusztai affair.

    I'm not fearful; that's silly. I've been educating myself and based on my understanding of the current GM technology, including a familiarity with the methods by which GMO crops are evaluated for safety, I've decided they are not sufficiently rigorous to convince me of the crops' safety.

    FWIW, I'm a civil engineer. I currently work in the field of air quality. Yes, I do science! (Everyday!)

    --
    Howdy howdy howdy
  199. Re:victory against science by quantaman · · Score: 1

    Making a safe GMO crop is a far easier task than making a safe pharmaceutical

    I think it's fair to say [Citation needed]

    No it isn't, it's fairly evident from the argument I posted, if you have to hunt down citations for every obvious fact you want to write than you'll never have time to communicate anything. Particularly when that fact is something as oddly formed as the relative complication rates of pharmaceuticals vs GMO's (am I supposed to track down a paper or something?)

    I've yet to hear real evidence of any GMO related health issues in humans

    yet

    Considering that almost all pharmaceutical products have side effects of some kind then GMO's have already proven far safer to human health.

    I'd actually hold up that 'yet' as evidence that the difference is so self evident that a citation is unnecessary.

    --
    I stole this Sig
  200. Re:victory against science by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    ou mean scientists like Árpád Pusztai

    No, I mean scientists that know how to design a decent experiment. See this for example (p 16): "he main conclu- sion to be drawn from the efforts of more than 130 research projects, covering a period of more than 25 years of research, and involving more than 500 independent research groups, is that biotechnology, and in particular GMOs, are not per se more risky than e.g. conventional plant breeding technologies."

    including a familiarity with the methods by which GMO crops are evaluated for safety, I've decided they are not sufficiently rigorous to convince me of the crops' safety.

    ok, this could be interesting. Are you worried that starch in GMO corn is different than starch in non-GMO corn? What exactly is your problem with the current methods?

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  201. Re:victory against science by EngnrFrmrlyKnownAsAC · · Score: 1

    You didn't actually provide an argument. You made a broad observation (yes, drugs should elicit an effect) followed by a questionable assertion (aren't GMO crops supposedly distinguishably healthier?), then an unfounded claim (far easier task...). Citing 'self-evidence' isn't very convincing. [I mean would you have difficulty tracking down supportive papers? ;) ]

    'yet' was an allusion to potential but not-immediately-apparent, chronic or cumulative effects. I would bring up DDT/Agent Orange/... but those are very extreme examples and most definitely would/will feed trolls. More likely, if detrimental effects do appear, they won't be lethal, just suboptimal. Meanwhile, waiting won't do me any harm.

    What we currently have is an absence of evidence, not evidence of absence.

    --
    Howdy howdy howdy
  202. joanrussow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The rest of the world should follow the lead of Hawaii and ban genetically engineered food and crops. We are living in a wake of negligence from previous harmful substances that were once deemed safe for human health and the environment. Given the unattended consequences of genetically engineered foods and crops, and the global commitment to the precautionary principle in the Rio Declaration, and in the Convention on Biological Diversity, UNCED, 1992, it becomes imperative to institute a global ban on genetically engineered foods and crops

    At a Conference in 1998, in St Louis, scientists stated that using the term Genetically modified would be confusing because there has been modification over the years through breeding, but breeding is completely distinct from Genetic engineering/transgenic processes. The scientists advised everyone to use the terms genetically engineered or transgenic food and crops.

    Dr. Thierry Vrain a genetic engineer who worked for 30 years for Agriculture Canada pointed out the following: While on the one hand, the biotech companies argued initially that they should get a patent because their transgenic products were unique; on the other hand, subsequently they proceeded to argue that there was no need to test these products derived from the transgenic process because they were substantially equivalent. He has left the department and is speaking out against genetically engineered food and crops , and he now supports a ban.

    The profusion of genetically engineered food and crops resulted from institutional collusion. The institutional Collusion, in relation to genetically engineered food and crops, among corporations, governments, universities and regulatory agencies has been endemic; For the sake of food safety and food security for present and future generations: (i) this collusion must end; (ii) the precautionary principle must be invoked, (iii) genetically engineered food and crops, banned; (iv) Genetically engineered products from the shelves, dumped; (v) the charters of Monsanto et al, revoked; and (vi) charges of gross/criminal negligence against these corporations, levied.

      There has been a petition, calling for a global ban, launched.
    http://www.change.org/en-CA/petitions/the-un-general-assembly-institute-a-global-ban-on-genetically-engineered-food-and-crops

  203. joanrussow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The rest of the world should follow the lead of Hawaii and ban genetically engineered food and crops. We are living in a wake of negligence from previous harmful substances that were once deemed safe for human health and the environment. Given the unattended consequences of genetically engineered foods and crops, and the global commitment to the precautionary principle in the Rio Declaration, and in the Convention on Biological Diversity, UNCED, 1992, it becomes imperative to institute a global ban on genetically engineered foods and crops

    At a Conference in 1998, in St Louis, scientists stated that using the term Genetically modified would be confusing because there has been modification over the years through breeding, but breeding is completely distinct from Genetic engineering/transgenic processes. The scientists advised everyone to use the terms genetically engineered or transgenic food and crops.

    Dr. Thierry Vrain a genetic engineer who worked for 30 years for Agriculture Canada pointed out the following: While on the one hand, the biotech companies argued initially that they should get a patent because their transgenic products were unique; on the other hand, subsequently they proceeded to argue that there was no need to test these products derived from the transgenic process because they were substantially equivalent. He has left the department and is speaking out against genetically engineered food and crops , and he now supports a ban.

    The profusion of genetically engineered food and crops resulted from institutional collusion. The institutional Collusion, in relation to genetically engineered food and crops, among corporations, governments, universities and regulatory agencies has been endemic; For the sake of food safety and food security for present and future generations: (i) this collusion must end; (ii) the precautionary principle must be invoked, (iii) genetically engineered food and crops, banned; (iv) Genetically engineered products from the shelves, dumped; (v) the charters of Monsanto et al, revoked; and (vi) charges of gross/criminal negligence against these corporations, levied.
    The rest of the world should follow the lead of Hawaii; There has been a petition, calling for a global ban, launched.

    http://www.change.org/en-CA/petitions/the-un-general-assembly-institute-a-global-ban-on-genetically-engineered-food-and-crops

  204. Re:victory against science by TangoMargarine · · Score: 1

    I didn't say I refused to believe it; I'm just skeptical of all studies these days, especially ones done by the same corporation that markets the thing being tested.

    Considering that we keep finding studies that are full of shit, it's unreasonable for you to attack people who doubt studies.

    --
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  205. Re:victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because it might be expressed differently?

  206. Re:victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Monsanto doesn't think its rigorous enough when other people do it, only themselves...

  207. Re:victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Patents mean that effectively being opposed to Monsanto is being opposed to GMO. Get rid of patents and it will be different to oppose Monsanto & GMO

  208. Re:victory against science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes but you don't even believe any farmers store seed crop anymore so I think your views are at the best suspect. Working in plant science almost certainly means you have an interest in this as evidenced by your view the Seralini was 'downright false'. It certainly compares favourably with industry studies on the subject (better than many I'd say due to the time).
    Incidentally who do you work for so we know your bias?

  209. Re:victory against science by Reziac · · Score: 1

    Sure -- but it's still going to express in the range of that gene. If it's a gene for making an amino acid, it's not suddenly going to start making cyanide.

    You know all those weird colors you can now get in commercial petunias? came from a corn gene. But it doesn't suddenly turn them into mandrakes.

    --
    ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  210. joanrussow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The rest of the world should follow the lead of Hawaii and a ban genetically engineered food and crops. We are living in a wake of negligence from previous harmful substances that were once deemed safe for human health and the environment. Given the unattended consequences of genetically engineered foods and crops, and the global commitment to the precautionary principle in the Rio Declaration, and in the Convention on Biological Diversity, UNCED, 1992, it becomes imperative to institute a global ban on genetically engineered foods and crops

    At a Conference in 1998, in St Louis, scientists stated that using the term Genetically modified would be confusing because there has been modification over the years through breeding, but breeding is completely distinct from Genetic engineering/transgenic processes. The scientists advised everyone to use the terms genetically engineered or transgenic food and crops.
    Dr. Thierry Vrain a genetic engineer who worked for 30 years for Agriculture Canada pointed out the following: While on the one hand, the biotech companies argued initially that they should get a patent because their transgenic products were unique; on the other hand, subsequently they proceeded to argue that there was no need to test these products derived from the transgenic process because they were substantially equivalent. He has left the department and is speaking out against genetically engineered food and crops , and he now supports a ban.
    The profusion of genetically engineered food and crops resulted from institutional collusion. The institutional Collusion, in relation to genetically engineered food and crops, among corporations, governments, universities and regulatory agencies has been endemic; For the sake of food safety and food security for present and future generations: (i) this collusion must end; (ii) the precautionary principle must be invoked, (iii) genetically engineered food and crops, banned; (iv) Genetically engineered products from the shelves, dumped; (v) the charters of Monsanto et al, revoked; and (vi) charges of gross/criminal negligence against these corporations, levied.

    The rest of the world should follow the lead of Hawaii; There has been a petition, calling for a global ban, launched.

  211. joanrussow by JoanRussow · · Score: 1

    The rest of the world should follow the lead of Hawaii and ban genetically engineered food and crops. We are living in a wake of negligence from previous harmful substances that were once deemed safe for human health and the environment. Given the unattended consequences of genetically engineered foods and crops, and the global commitment to the precautionary principle in the Rio Declaration, and in the Convention on Biological Diversity, UNCED, 1992, it becomes imperative to institute a global ban on genetically engineered foods and crops At a Conference in 1998, in St Louis, scientists stated that using the term Genetically modified would be confusing because there has been modification over the years through breeding, but breeding is completely distinct from Genetic engineering/transgenic processes. The scientists advised everyone to use the terms genetically engineered or transgenic food and crops. Those opposed to Genetically engineered food and crops do pay attention to science For example, Dr. Thierry Vrain a genetic engineer who worked for 30 years for Agriculture Canada pointed out the following: While on the one hand, the biotech companies argued initially that they should get a patent because their transgenic products were unique; on the other hand, subsequently they proceeded to argue that there was no need to test these products derived from the transgenic process because they were substantially equivalent. He has left the department and is speaking out against genetically engineered food and crops , and he now supports a ban. The profusion of genetically engineered food and crops resulted from institutional collusion. The institutional Collusion, in relation to genetically engineered food and crops, among corporations, governments, universities and regulatory agencies has been endemic; For the sake of food safety and food security for present and future generations: (i) this collusion must end; (ii) the precautionary principle must be invoked, (iii) genetically engineered food and crops, banned; (iv) Genetically engineered products from the shelves, dumped; (v) the charters of Monsanto et al, revoked; and (vi) charges of gross/criminal negligence against these corporations, levied. The rest of the world should follow the lead of Hawaii; There has been a petition, calling for a global ban, launched. http://www.change.org/en-CA/petitions/the-un-general-assembly-institute-a-global-ban-on-genetically-engineered-food-and-crops

  212. Re:victory against science by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    Considering that we keep finding studies that are full of shit, it's unreasonable for you to attack people who doubt studies.

    There's widespread scientific concurrence that GMOs are safe. I'm mocking you specifically because you disagree with the widespread scientific agreement, because.....no good reason. You deserve to be mocked for that stupidity.

    So, do you also think that vaccines cause autism? There have been studies that show a link.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  213. Re:victory against science by TangoMargarine · · Score: 1

    So, do you also think that vaccines cause autism? There have been studies that show a link.

    A good case in point of crap studies being published.

    --
    Unity? Screw that: XFCE. Slashdot Beta? Screw that: SoylentNews. Australis? Screw that: Pale Moon. UX developers DIAF
  214. Re:victory against science by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    Right, so how do you justify that you disagree with broad scientific consensus on GMO foods?

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  215. Re:victory against science by AlphaWolf_HK · · Score: 1

    Except they produce proteins which provide resistance to glyphosate, right? That would imply they are distinguishable, right? If they weren't, how would Monsanto be able to sue farmers for planting GM crops without their permission (which they do).

    Let me be a little more precise: There are only 100,000 or so different proteins in nature; what we're changing is how they are arranged. You can identify a GMO plant with a DNA test, but once it reaches your plate, and further once it reaches your blood stream (which all food you eat eventually does) it's for all intents and purposes the same food.

    This is why none of those tests linking GMO to any sort of health problems have ever lived up to scrutiny. Ever. Not a single one. They were all based on junk science.

    A gene gun literally shotgun blasts cell DNA with the new genes stuck to metal particles hoping some sticks in the right spots; progeny are selected which express the desired trait but it can't be known if other areas of the DNA were adversely affected.

    Yes it can, and further those scary sounding metal particles don't end up in the new plant.

    The safety aspects of GMO crops are still up for debate (obviously!). I advocate caution is all. That and transparency. If they're so freakin' safe, why does Monsanto spend sooo much cash to prevent labeling?

    I don't know whether or not they do that, but if they do I know why and I don't blame them. It's the same reason cell phone companies don't want labeling of radiation output of phones. It's a useless figure that will not impact public health in any way, yet it will inevitably be used as a bargaining tool by some to try to make some "low radiation phones" be preferable for no good reason at all, and therefore phones will needlessly cost more money to make in order to make them "safer". That inevitably means lower sales, and nothing was gained by anybody, except some smug politician now feels even more smug.

    Further, I myself wholly reject the idea of GMO labeling, but not for this reason. There's already limited space available on food labels to the point that very vital information to my own personal health is omitted already, namely the potassium and phosphorus content of foods, which being on a renal diet I have to watch carefully. I don't expect the government to require those on the label (us kidney failure people are a small minority, and I don't expect the masses to bend to us unlike certain other minorities) but needs for my diet far outweigh a label as useless as one indicating whether or not the food has GMO in it, and the government if anything should take that into consideration, as well as vitamin k (for people with cirrhosis) and a whole slew of other things that are already omitted from labels due to space concerns long long LONG before we take into consideration whether some hippie doesn't "feel good" about his food.

    --
    Careful with names containing L slashdot.org/~AiphaWolf_HK slashdot.org/~AlphaWoif_HK slashdot.org/~AiphaWoif_HK
  216. Re:victory against science by TangoMargarine · · Score: 1

    You're not listening. I've said that I don't necessarily believe they're harmful, but I acknowledge the strong chance that they're abusing the bureaucracy for their own profit by concealing relevant data. If GMOs make better foodstuffs, are more viable as crops, and are the same price or cheaper (to the consumer!), then fine. You seem to be refusing to admit that any of those 3 conditions could possibly be found false at any point in the future.

    But I guess I'll just keep being skeptical and you'll keep calling me names. Good day, sir.

    --
    Unity? Screw that: XFCE. Slashdot Beta? Screw that: SoylentNews. Australis? Screw that: Pale Moon. UX developers DIAF
  217. Re:victory against science by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    You're not listening. I've said that I don't necessarily believe they're harmful, but I acknowledge the strong chance that they're abusing the bureaucracy for their own profit by concealing relevant data.

    In other words, you disagree with scientific consensus, because........of conspiracy for which you have no evidence. Brilliant.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  218. Re:victory against science by EngnrFrmrlyKnownAsAC · · Score: 1

    If you're going for precision, shouldn't it be

    what we're changing is an organism's ability to produce proteins that it previously couldn't.

    Depending on the food, those additional proteins could end up in your bloodstream, right? Now is that bad? Maybe, maybe not. Not all industry-funded studies have held up to scrutiny either but you're right insofar as the broad consensus is that GMOs are generally safe. The longer that consensus exists, the more convinced I'll be but until we have a couple generations experience, I guess I'll be the "paranoid" one.

    I'm a little surprised you didn't hear about the multimillion dollar campaigns against Prop 37 (CA) and Initiative 522 (WA) last year. The Grocery Manufacturers Association was willing to "spend anything" and it resulted in a new record: the most money ever raised to defeat an initiative in Washington state. After a little scuffle, the top donors were revealed to be Grocery Manufacturers Association, Monsanto Company, DuPont Pioneer, Dow AgroSciences LLC, and Bayer CropScience.

    --
    Howdy howdy howdy
  219. Re:victory against science by EngnrFrmrlyKnownAsAC · · Score: 1

    Oops premature submit. I meant to mention I wholly support the idea of labeling not because I believe GMOs are evil or the make me "feel bad" but because of those other, demonstrated harms I mentioned:

    * Unfair patent litigation against farmers who crops were contaminated
    * Inevitable dilution of adjacent non-GMO crops
    * Acceleration of pesticide resistance

    Since the jury is, at least in my opinion, still out on the ultimate safety of these crops I don't bother claiming food safety as a primary reason for my supporting labels. It's not like adding that information would cause the economy to collapse; 60+ nations already require labeling.

    And though it's not related, I'd also support additional labeling for things like potassium, phosphorous, etc when there's a valid reason. Yes, even if it's only important for some minority of the population. It could even be compromised like, 'consumers can assume 0.5% of constituent X but higher levels must be on the label'.

    --
    Howdy howdy howdy
  220. Re:victory against science by EngnrFrmrlyKnownAsAC · · Score: 1

    Ugh, forgot /. strips carets. That last sentence wasn't very clear. Here:

    It could even be a compromise like, 'consumers can assume less than 0.5% of constituent X if not mentioned but higher levels must be on the label'.

    --
    Howdy howdy howdy
  221. Re:victory against science by kurzweilfreak · · Score: 1
    Corn with a peanut protein would only have that protein in it if it was specifically put there. If anyone was putting a peanut protein in it, there would only be a concern if the protein (actually the gene that creates the protein) being put in was one that actually caused an allergic reaction, which would be a pretty unlikely candidate for a transgenic. Peanuts don't cause allergic reactions because of their peanut essence, and a protein doesn't necessarily cause an allergic reaction just because it was produced in a peanut.

    Being a GMO food also doesn't magically induce some special extra mutation property into a plant either. A GMO plant wouldn't "diverge a great deal further" from a non-GMO unless you can propose a mechanism that would cause a higher rate of mutation due to transgene engineering.

    --

    kurzweil_freak

    5th Kyu Genbukan Ninpo/KJJR student

    Be the darkness that allows the light to shine.

  222. Re:victory against science by kurzweilfreak · · Score: 1

    Of course it was, that and the Pusztai affair are really the only studies that the anti-GMO propaganda machine have to continually trot out. It matters not that these were shown to be bunk, because they know people will typically believe what they read and not take the time to research the rest of the story, especially when it caters to their existing beliefs.

    --

    kurzweil_freak

    5th Kyu Genbukan Ninpo/KJJR student

    Be the darkness that allows the light to shine.

  223. Re:victory against science by kurzweilfreak · · Score: 1

    We have more than enough food. It's a distribution problem...

    I don't mean to sound like I disagree with you, but I hate hearing this arguement being made as a reason why GMO food is not needed. I wish I could remember who I originally heard express it, but I read a reply to this argument that went something like "so instead of just a distribution problem, you would rather it be both a distribution AND a supply problem?" I would rather only have to deal with one issue because of an excess of food than just barely being able to make it with the supply we have AND assholes stealing it all as well.

    Africa, for example, had more than enough food in the 1960s and 1970s

    This may be true, but does that take into account the population growth since then? I really don't know. According to this first link I found from Googling "world population 1970", the world population was roughly half what it is today. Whether or not our population should be increasing at that rate is a different argument, but it is the reality.

    --

    kurzweil_freak

    5th Kyu Genbukan Ninpo/KJJR student

    Be the darkness that allows the light to shine.

  224. Re:victory against science by sjames · · Score: 1

    Several (but naturally not all) proteins in peanuts are responsible for the allergies. If thorough testing was done to ensure that the plant produced had the desired trait and only the desired trait from the peanut, that would be one thing. However, testing seems to be sparse and GM varieties have a way of escaping.

    As for diverging, I mean they can stick arbitrary genes into the plant that could never get there by normal breeding in a single generation. For example, a fish gene (just try to cross a salmon with wheat in a single generation!).

    In fact, there is evidence that GM techniques do sometimes lead to unstable expression not only of the added gene but other genes in the plant.

  225. Re:victory against science by MobSwatter · · Score: 1

    Then you're arguing out of ignorance.

    Okay, sure, GMO foods - even the bugs won't touch it, and you want to feed it to people. What is next? When they can actually connect something wrong with it we'll just modify the human genome so that human physiology can tolerate it? Now that genetically modifying food is okay and we've modified human genome to tolerate it, we can modify it to be addictive too right? I was never sold on the idea of necessity of doing it in the first place.

  226. Re:victory against science by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    What is next?

    Hopefully, next you'll go do some research about why there is broad scientific consensus that GMOs are safe.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  227. Re:victory against science by MobSwatter · · Score: 1

    Actually, I don't think I need to research very damn far at all to see exactly how far business will put itself above health concerns, if you have any questions take a good look at reasoning for war in today's world. Big business has deep pockets, and all the more to pay a scientist to tell people it is safe. If someone were to pay a scientist to tell you it is safe to jump off a bridge would you do it? As the condition of the economy deteriorates, the price for making someone tell a lie gets cheaper, and from the scientists prospective facing coercion of some form for going "against the grain" I'd have to say makes it even cheaper. Think about it, how many folks though RSA security was safe?

  228. Re:victory against science by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    So, the scientific consensus is that GMOs are safe, but you disagree, not on a factual basis, but because you think (without evidence) that those scientists are being bribed? Do you always come to your searingly insightful conclusions this way?

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  229. Re:victory against science by MobSwatter · · Score: 1

    Hey why not, corporations pay off politicians all the time don't they? It's just the world we live in, if you don't see it then either you are the one naive or you simply refuse to. I'd like to see a study on the viability of corruption on your "scientific consensus".

  230. Re:victory against science by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    Hey why not, corporations pay off politicians all the time don't they?

    Sure, it's a reasonable hypothesis. Unfortunately your evidence is extremely thin, especially contrasted with the overwhelming scientific consensus on the matter.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  231. Re:victory against science by MobSwatter · · Score: 1

    Of course that aspect could be attributed to corporate policy that evidence not be left out laying around as that might just be a bit detrimental to profits, and/or a hand slap by the gobberment in the form of a fine. Regardless, I am not, nor will ever be an advocate of GMO for the simple reasoning that no good can come of man kind playing in life's kitchen. Add consideration of corporate greed? Forget it.

  232. Re:victory against science by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    Regardless, I am not, nor will ever be an advocate of GMO for the simple reasoning that no good can come of man kind playing in life's kitchen

    Blanket idiocy.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  233. Re:victory against science by MobSwatter · · Score: 1

    Well, either you respect life or you don't. Is it man's greed that makes you think that man is a better genetic engineer than millions of years of trial and error on part of good old mother nature? Or is it laziness or costs due to the insect issues driving such a dangerous approach? No matter, but I see to err on the side of caution in your book as a believer is to be of "Blanket idiocy". Suppose all I can say is happy bridge jumping, maybe they'll sell you one, or maybe some beach front property in Louisiana. As it becomes more difficult to avoid GMO in the stores, I'd expect more resistance.

  234. Re:victory against science by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    Well, either you respect life or you don't. Is it man's greed that makes you think that man is a better genetic engineer than millions of years of trial and error on part of good old mother nature?

    When you say it like that, I realize you are right. We should get rid of vaccines too, since they aren't natural. And houses, let's all sleep under the stars.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  235. Re:victory against science by MobSwatter · · Score: 1

    That might be almost as extreme as genetically modified food.

  236. Re:victory against science by quantaman · · Score: 1

    You didn't actually provide an argument. You made a broad observation (yes, drugs should elicit an effect) followed by a questionable assertion (aren't GMO crops supposedly distinguishably healthier?)

    Aside from Golden Rice I'm not aware of any claims of GMOs being healthier.

    'yet' was an allusion to potential but not-immediately-apparent, chronic or cumulative effects. I would bring up DDT/Agent Orange/... but those are very extreme examples and most definitely would/will feed trolls. More likely, if detrimental effects do appear, they won't be lethal, just suboptimal. Meanwhile, waiting won't do me any harm.

    DDT/Agent Orange are biologically active molecules, side effects are expected. I'd definitely be in favour of testing some GMO's that do have a potential to go wrong for longer periods, but the question has to be for what? If you don't have any idea of what you're testing for then how do you decide when you've tested enough? That's the issue, no one has been able to show how GMO's are a health risk.

    What we currently have is an absence of evidence, not evidence of absence.

    As you yourself said "More likely, if detrimental effects do appear, they won't be lethal, just suboptimal". Why do you think this? Because we have decades of evidence of nothing going wrong, this has ruled out the hypothesis of significant health effects for these crops. If the only risks you can present are claims of "suboptimal" health you're presenting a non-falsifiable hypothesis.

    --
    I stole this Sig
  237. Could be the Industry Selling Itself by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or it could be the industry is selling the public lies to keep truth about lack of positive results in science to backup thier claims including Golden Rice.

    http://www.counterpunch.org/2014/01/08/fakethrough-gmos-and-the-capitulation-of-science-journalism/

    But why ask for science proof, when repeating the propaganda just works.