Easter isn't meant to be the exact date Jesus died. It's the Sunday after Passover, which I think comes out to the first Sunday after the first full moon after the vernal equinox. Whether the church at any point used Easter as a way to smother Pagan holidays, I don't know, but when it is celebrated is biblically based.
Even if something was wrong with you, would eating genetically modified foods even come to mind as a possible cause? Part of the problem is that it would be difficult to identify GM food as the source of a problem even if it did cause one.
Personally, I think the "march of science" would be more advanced by fully exploring the consequences and benefits of this sort of technology rather than just assuming that because nothing's happened yet that nothing will.
Easter isn't meant to be the exact date Jesus died. It's the Sunday after Passover, which I think comes out to the first Sunday after the first full moon after the vernal equinox. Whether the church at any point used Easter as a way to smother Pagan holidays, I don't know, but when it is celebrated is biblically based.
Even if something was wrong with you, would eating genetically modified foods even come to mind as a possible cause? Part of the problem is that it would be difficult to identify GM food as the source of a problem even if it did cause one.
Personally, I think the "march of science" would be more advanced by fully exploring the consequences and benefits of this sort of technology rather than just assuming that because nothing's happened yet that nothing will.