GMO Experiment
Geneticist David Suzuki Says Humans “Are Part of a Massive
Experiment”
Multiple public figures, scientists and researchers have
been speaking out about GMOs for a number of years. For example, not long ago a
former Canadian Government Scientist at Agriculture Canada, Dr. Thierry Vrain
(one of many) spoke out against GMOs.
Another prominent public figure, Geneticist David Suzuki has
been a long time advocate against GMOs, and has been speaking out about how
they can be hazardous to human health as well as the environment. Below, I’ve
provided a video example of Suzuki explaining why he feels the way he does
about GMOs. Public figures with a wide audience can have a great impact on the
consciousness of the masses, they are great ‘tools’ for waking more people up
to the reality that GMOs can be harmful
to human health as well as the environment. It’s time to pay attention, do your
own research and to question what you’ve been told. We can no longer trust
branches of the government that deal with food and health, we must not take
their word for it, it’s better if you actually look into it yourself rather
than blindly believing what your are told.
It doesn’t seem to be much of a debate anymore, it’s clear
that GMOs can indeed be harmful to human health. There is a reason why a
majority of countries around the world have permanently banned GMOs, so what’s
taking North America so long? One reason might be the fact that biotech
corporations like Monsanto seem to be above the government and influence
policy, but thankfully these things are changing. Big Island, Hawaii has
recently banned all GMO products and bio-tech company products. Various bills
calling for moratoria on GE food include Vermont, North Dakota, Boulder,
Colorado, San Francisco and more.
This large movement against GMOs is not based on belief,
multiple researchers and scientists all around the world have shown that GMOs
can be harmful. Here is a study that shows how Bt toxins found in Monsanto
crops can be damaging to red blood cells, and potentially cause leukemia. Here
is another one that shows how GMO animal feed caused severe stomach
inflammation and enlarged uteri in pigs. There have been multiple studies
linking GMOs to cancer, and a range of other diseases. Scientists all over the
world have come together to show their support for the ban of GMOs.
Along with GMOs come the pesticides, which have been linked
to cancer, parkinson’s, autism and alzheimer’s, to name a few.
As you can see, alternative media outlets are not the only
ones doing their research. Most who investigate this topic, and do the research
for themselves will come to the same conclusions. This is what David Suzuki and
many others have done as well.
By slipping it into our food without our knowledge, without
any indication that there are genetically modified organisms in our food, we
are now unwittingly part of a massive experiment.
The FDA has said that genetically modified organisms are not
much different from regular food, so they’ll be treated in the same way. The
problem is this, geneticists follow the inheritance of genes, what
biotechnology allows us to do is to take this organism, and move it
horizontally into a totally unrelated species. Now David Suzuki doesn’t
normally mate with a carrot and exchange genes, what biotechnology allows us to
do is to switch genes from one to the other without regard to the biological
constraints. It’s very very bad science, we assume that the principals
governing the inheritance of genes vertically, applies when you move genes
laterally or horizontally. There’s absolutely no reason to make that
conclusion.
Below is an article written by David Suzuki and Faisal
Moola. At the beginning concerns with the 2010 release of the super-genetically
modified corn called ‘SmartStax,’ are mentioned which has now shown to be
harmful to human health and banned all over the world. This article was written
in 2009, but still has some good information.
By David Suzuki with Faisal Moola:
In gearing up for the 2010 release of its super-genetically
modified corn called ‘SmartStax’, agricultural-biotechnology giant Monsanto is
using an advertising slogan that asks, ‘Wouldn’t it be better?’ But can we do
better than nature, which has taken millennia to develop the plants we use for
food?We don’t really know. And that in itself is a problem. The corn, developed
by Monsanto with Dow AgroSciences, “stacks” eight genetically engineered
traits, six that allow it to ward off insects and two to make it resistant to
weed-killing chemicals, many of which are also trademarked by Monsanto. It’s
the first time a genetically engineered (GE) product has been marketed with
more than three traits.Canada approved the corn without assessing it for human
health or environmental risk, claiming that the eight traits have already been
cleared in other crop seeds — even though international food-safety guidelines
that Canada helped develop state that stacked traits should be subject to a
full safety assessment as they can lead to unintended consequences.
One problem is that we don’t know the unintended
consequences of genetically engineered or genetically modified (GM) foods.
Scientists may share consensus about issues like human-caused global warming,
but they don’t have the same level of certainty about the effects of
genetically modified organisms on environmental and human health!
A review of the science conducted under the International
Assessment of Agricultural Knowledge, Science and Technology for Development in
2008 concluded that “there are a limited number of properly designed and
independently peer-reviewed studies on human health” and that this and other observations
“create concern about the adequacy of testing methodologies for commercial GM
plants.”
Some have argued that we’ve been eating GM foods for years
with few observable negative consequences, but as we’ve seen with things like
trans fats, if often takes a while for us to recognize the health impacts. With
GM foods, concerns have been raised about possible effects on stomach bacteria
and resistance to antibiotics, as well as their role in allergic reactions. We
also need to understand more about their impact on other plants and animals.
Of course, these aren’t the only issues with GM crops.
Allowing agro-chemical companies to create GM seeds with few restrictions means
these companies could soon have a monopoly over agricultural production. And by
introducing SmartStax, we are giving agro-chemical companies the green light
not just to sell and expand the use of their “super crops” but also to sell and
expand the use of the pesticides these crops are designed to resist.
A continued reliance on these crops could also reduce the
variety of foods available, as well as the nutritive value of the foods
themselves.
There’s also a reason nature produces a variety of any kind
of plant species. It ensures that if disease or insects attack a plant, other
plant varieties will survive and evolve in its place. This is called
biodiversity.
Because we aren’t certain about the effects of GMOs, we must
consider one of the guiding principles in science, the precautionary principle.
Under this principle, if a policy or action could harm human health or the
environment, we must not proceed until we know for sure what the impact will
be. And it is up to those proposing the action or policy to prove that it is
not harmful.
That’s not to say that research into altering the genes in
plants that we use for food should be banned or that GM foods might not someday
be part of the solution to our food needs. We live in an age when our
technologies allow us to “bypass” the many steps taken by nature over millennia
to create food crops to now produce “super crops” that are meant to keep up
with an ever-changing human-centred environment.
A rapidly growing human population and deteriorating health
of our planet because of climate change and a rising number of natural
catastrophes, among other threats, are driving the way we target our efforts
and funding in plant, agricultural, and food sciences, often resulting in new
GM foods.
But we need more thorough scientific study on the impacts of
such crops on our environment and our health, through proper peer-reviewing and
unbiased processes. We must also demand that our governments become more
transparent when it comes to monitoring new GM crops that will eventually find
their ways in our bellies through the food chain.
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