Have you seen this!?! Just shows who exactly holds the power in the US.

It is to be devoutly hoped! The GMO bubble does appear to be a bit deflated as people realise that it doesn't really deliver greater yields, better health, ends world hunger, etc, etc. The game was always about widely establishing these crops to the exclusion of non-GM varities before anyone noticed that what was being claimed for them was complete rot.contadina wrote: Let's hope the WikiLeaks confirmation of what many of us suspected will help Europe stand up to them again.
And so say all of us!contadina wrote:Let's hope the WikiLeaks confirmation of what many of us suspected will help Europe stand up to them again.
Nothing I've come across so far has not had some kind of downside attached. There was that rice that produced vitamin A that "could save a million children per year" but that was quickly exploded as a sort of GM Trojen horse, using an emotive issue to get GMOs widely accepted when alternatives (the cultivation of fruits such as apricots, veg such as sweet potato or - in an emergency - vitamin A suppliments) were easily and cheaply available.greenorelse wrote: Just to say I'm not biased, can anyone point me in the direction of a properly peer-reviewed assessment of a single GMO success? ie, one that has delivered a benefit other than monetary profit, one which didn't cause health problems?
And there's the problem, because it isn't no matter what is "proven" to the converse. Any company which spends millions on research showing that they can find no adverse effect is at a distinct advantage against agencies which don't have the equivalent number of millions to spend. They don't have to show "what if" scenarios. It's a well-known fact that a million spent proving what the researcher wanted to prove is worth SOOOOOOOOOO much more than a few thousand spent to provide evidence suggesting they were wrong.The Riff-Raff Element wrote:
Given their records, it really is encumbent on the biotech and food industries to prove their honourable intentions, not for us to prove the converse. So far they seem to be failing.
Well said Nomanda - sums up what its all aboutNomada wrote:I think the companies that produce these things are totally morally bankrupt from what I've seen and read about them. It's nothing to do with helping people, it's all about controlling food supplies, you've got control of that and you've got everyone by the b**ls
greenorelse wrote:I am 120% against GMOs.
Just to say I'm not biased, can anyone point me in the direction of a properly peer-reviewed assessment of a single GMO success? ie, one that has delivered a benefit other than monetary profit, one which didn't cause health problems?
Ah, but I'd say this is a little different.gregorach wrote:greenorelse wrote:I am 120% against GMOs.
Just to say I'm not biased, can anyone point me in the direction of a properly peer-reviewed assessment of a single GMO success? ie, one that has delivered a benefit other than monetary profit, one which didn't cause health problems?
This flood-tolerant rice might be one to watch. Non-commercial, developed by non-profits, breeds true, royalty-free licensing, etc, etc... What's not to like?