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Friends,
They were able to foist these toxic chemicals on us, in the beginning, without long term testing. Now, when it has been proven a serious public health hazard, that danger is used as a reason for unleashing the next big untested danger. The difference is that this one will spread to our entire ecosystem without anyone actually choosing to do it.
Comments?
Walt
Thanks, Misty.
This is an example of how a well-heeled and organized system will continue
pecking away at the public's rights to know products are safe, BEFORE they
are put on the market, until they get their way.
God help us all!
Walt
----- Original Message -----
In Reply to: Permanently fouling our nest. (Archive in Genetically engineered foods.) posted by Walt Stoll on February 28, 2003 at 06:13:20:
Quoting:
Once they monitor the deaths of thousands of people who turn out to be one of those "other species," can they issue a recall for genetically modified organisms blowing in the wind?
We're in BIG trouble.
In Reply to: Permanently fouling our nest. (Archive in Genetically engineered foods.) posted by Walt Stoll on February 28, 2003 at 06:13:20:
Besides cross-pollination (messing up organic crops, for example), which is a HUGE issue, a major concern is what else these "genetic instructions" accomplish- specifically, within the human body. Of major concern to some are the endocrine disruptors commonly used as pesticides.
From:
To:
Sent: Thursday, February 27, 2003 10:39 AM
Subject: [searching-alternatives] In Key Test, U.S. Allows Sale of
Genetically Engineered Corn
> Comments?
> Misty
> http://www.searching-alternatives.com
>
> In Key Test, U.S. Allows Sale of Genetically Engineered Corn
>
> By Justin Gillis
> Washington Post Staff Writer
> Wednesday, February 26, 2003; Page A01
>
> Monsanto Co. won government approval yesterday to sell genetically
> altered corn designed to combat the most significant pest in the
> largest crop grown in the United States, setting up a major test of
> whether the plant biotechnology industry can deliver on its long-
> standing promise to reduce the use of chemical pesticides.
>
> The new corn is genetically engineered to resist corn rootworm
> disease. That problem, which plagues farmers nationwide, is the
> biggest single reason they apply toxic pesticides to their fields.
> Monsanto, of St. Louis, estimates that the corn could eventually be
> grown on 12 million acres, or 15 percent of the nation's cornfields.
>
> In granting permission, the Environmental Protection Agency
> acknowledged that some environmental questions remain but declared
> that on balance the corn appears to offer more benefits than risks.
>
> "What this decision means is that the environment will have
> literally millions of pounds of very toxic pesticides not being
> used," said Stephen Johnson, the assistant EPA administrator in
> charge of pesticide regulation.
>
> People would be unlikely to eat much, if any, of the new corn. Like
> most corn grown in North America, the new crop is likely to be used
> overwhelmingly as animal feed, so people would eat it only
> indirectly -- as poultry, beef or other meat. But a small amount
> might be turned into products such as corn syrup, a sweetener.
>
> The approval is a victory for Monsanto, a company struggling to gain
> public acceptance of gene-altered crops. "This is a new tool to help
> farmers fight insects," said Robb Fraley, Monsanto's chief
> technology officer. "But the real beneficiary is the public, which
> is getting a more sustainable agricultural system. This will allow
> growers to be better stewards of the land."
>
> For years, the backers of agricultural biotechnology, which involves
> inserting new genes into plants to confer traits such as improved
> insect or weed resistance, have claimed that their techniques hold
> the potential to replace toxic herbicides and insecticides with more
> benign control methods.
>
> But big reductions in chemical use have been achieved only with gene-
> altered cotton. For genetically engineered crops grown as human food
> or animal feed, the data have been far murkier. Corn rootworm,
> nicknamed the "billion-dollar bug" because it costs farmers nearly
> $1 billion a year in lost yields and control expenses, is such a
> huge agricultural problem that the new gene-altered corn is likely
> to serve as the definitive test of whether big chemical reductions
> can be achieved in a food crop.
>
> "This is a blockbuster," said Gregory Jaffe, director of
> biotechnology programs at the Center for Science in the Public
> Interest, a Washington consumer group that favors the use of
> agricultural biotechnology under tightly regulated conditions. "It's
> the first product to come down the line in a while that really could
> cut insecticide use and help the environment."
>
> Jaffe and representatives of some other watchdog groups, however,
> expressed disappointment that the EPA had yielded to Monsanto on one
> key issue.
>
> Most members of a scientific advisory panel had urged the EPA to
> require farmers to plant sizable "refuges," or strips of
> conventional corn, around the genetically altered crops to provide
> food for the rootworm and slow the pests' ability to develop a
> resistance to the new corn variety. Panel members wanted the EPA to
> require that 50 percent of a farmer's cornfield be planted as
> refuges, while Monsanto pushed for 20 percent, similar to
> requirements already in place for other crops. The EPA sided with
> Monsanto.
>
> "What we have here is companies doing as they usually do: profiting
> in the short term" even if it shortens the life of the product, said
> Jane Rissler, senior staff scientist at the Union of Concerned
> Scientists, a Washington group.
>
> Johnson, of the EPA, rejected criticism on the issue, noting that
> the 20 percent requirement will be in effect for only three years
> while the resistance issue is studied further. New plans may be put
> in place if resistance proves to be a problem, Johnson said.
>
> Corn rootworm is the common name for the larval stage of four
> species of beetles that grow in fields throughout the United States.
> The immature beetles feed on the roots of corn plants, sometimes
> damaging them so much that the plants blow over in storms or yield
> little corn.
>
> To create resistant corn, Monsanto, through molecular engineering,
> inserted a gene that contains instructions for making a protein
> toxic to most varieties of the worms, but one that can be easily
> digested by people or other mammals. The new crop does pose
> theoretical risks to some other species, including beneficial
> insects, and the EPA said it would monitor that issue.
>
> Monsanto hopes to put limited supplies of the new corn on the market
> for the 2003 growing season, but the corn is not expected to gain
> wide use until 2004, when additional seed becomes available. The
> company intends to cross the new corn with an older gene-altered
> corn designed to resist a lesser worm, the European corn borer. And,
> in a first, Monsanto will create a variety with three genetic
> modifications: the two anti-worm proteins plus a gene that helps
> farmers fight weeds.
>
> This latter variety, designed to solve virtually all common problems
> that farmers confront in growing corn, may serve as the first real
> test of whether large-scale, industrialized agriculture is possible
> in the United States without significant use of toxic chemicals.
>
> http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A2177-2003Feb25.html
>
Follow Ups:
Re: Permanently fouling our nest. (Archive in Genetically engineered foods.)
Posted by peterb on February 28, 2003 at 22:16:50:
"The new crop does pose theoretical risks to some other species, including beneficial insects, and the EPA said it would monitor that issue."
Follow Ups:
Re: Permanently fouling our nest. (Archive in Genetically engineered foods.)
Posted by H on March 03, 2003 at 14:36:40:
Follow Ups:
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