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Are GMOs bad for you?

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Replies

  • debrakgoogins
    debrakgoogins Posts: 2,033 Member
    Considering it requires you to study biology, chemistry, genetics, and the actual GMO processes, I would say I have a more educated view on them than most who have replied here. My certification in commercial/agricultural pesticide application also helps me understand it better.

    I have a degree in Horticulture. I also have a degree in Operations and Project Management. I am 11 courses away from my masters degree in Sustainability and Environmental Compliance. I might have a more educated view that you. Everything I have studied has reinforced that GMOs are not the enemy they are made out to be. Mind you, I AM an environmentalist. If I found non-biased (not sponsored by non-GMO proponents) research that GMOs were harmful in the long term, I wouldn't eat GMO products. I eat them. I feel based on personal and educational research that I and my family are safer eating GMOs than food laden with chemical pesticides.
  • nvmomketo
    nvmomketo Posts: 12,019 Member
    Considering it requires you to study biology, chemistry, genetics, and the actual GMO processes, I would say I have a more educated view on them than most who have replied here. My certification in commercial/agricultural pesticide application also helps me understand it better.

    I have a degree in Horticulture. I also have a degree in Operations and Project Management. I am 11 courses away from my masters degree in Sustainability and Environmental Compliance. I might have a more educated view that you. Everything I have studied has reinforced that GMOs are not the enemy they are made out to be. Mind you, I AM an environmentalist. If I found non-biased (not sponsored by non-GMO proponents) research that GMOs were harmful in the long term, I wouldn't eat GMO products. I eat them. I feel based on personal and educational research that I and my family are safer eating GMOs than food laden with chemical pesticides.

    Aren't some GMOs designed to withstand those chemical pesticides? Like round up ready crops?
  • debrakgoogins
    debrakgoogins Posts: 2,033 Member
    edited July 2018
    nvmomketo wrote: »
    Aren't some GMOs designed to withstand those chemical pesticides? Like round up ready crops?

    There are some. They do exactly what they are engineered to do. They are genetically, NOT CHEMICALLY, engineered. GMO is nothing new. The famous sweet pea experiment is the first scientifically documented GMO - it just didn't have a fancy name then.

    Maybe it would be better for me to say that I don't purposefully avoid GMO foods but I also don't seek them out. This isn't because of the GMO factor but more because I support local farmers and purchase from farmers markets and meat growers.
  • Josh_Friedman
    Josh_Friedman Posts: 112 Member
    GMOs themselves are safe. The Pilgrims technically used GMOs. The danger is that the most common use for GMOs is to make crops more resistant to pesticides. Opponents of GMOs are right for the wrong reasons
  • johnslater461
    johnslater461 Posts: 449 Member
    GMOs themselves are safe. The Pilgrims technically used GMOs. The danger is that the most common use for GMOs is to make crops more resistant to pesticides. Opponents of GMOs are right for the wrong reasons

    Glyphosate is far less toxic than many organic pesticides.
  • nvmomketo
    nvmomketo Posts: 12,019 Member
    nvmomketo wrote: »
    Considering it requires you to study biology, chemistry, genetics, and the actual GMO processes, I would say I have a more educated view on them than most who have replied here. My certification in commercial/agricultural pesticide application also helps me understand it better.

    I have a degree in Horticulture. I also have a degree in Operations and Project Management. I am 11 courses away from my masters degree in Sustainability and Environmental Compliance. I might have a more educated view that you. Everything I have studied has reinforced that GMOs are not the enemy they are made out to be. Mind you, I AM an environmentalist. If I found non-biased (not sponsored by non-GMO proponents) research that GMOs were harmful in the long term, I wouldn't eat GMO products. I eat them. I feel based on personal and educational research that I and my family are safer eating GMOs than food laden with chemical pesticides.

    Aren't some GMOs designed to withstand those chemical pesticides? Like round up ready crops?

    Why are you afraid of roundup?

    oh003d8kefoo.png

    The RfD is determined by using what’s called the “toxicological end point” or the “NOEL” (No Observable Effect Limit) for the most sensitive mammalian toxicological study. The EPA uses an uncertainly factor of 100 in deriving it (which is pretty high in order to be conservative) so as to ensure the sufficiency of the RfD, and based on the assumption that certain segments of the human population could be as much as 100 times more sensitive than the species represented by the toxicology tests. In rat studies on glyphosate, doses of up to 31 mg/kg/day were administered with no observable adverse effects at all, and dog studies have gone as high as 500 mg/kg/day with no negative effects.

    The EPA’s assumption about how much people would eat was very conservative. In order to insure you don’t get over 2 mg per kg per day they use a “worst case” dietary risk model of an individual eating a lifetime of food derived entirely from glyphosate-sprayed fields with residues at their maximum levels.

    ...

    You weigh 70 kg or 154 lbs.

    To get 2 mg per kg you would need to get 140 mg of glyphosate residue.

    So you would need to eat 200 * 140, or 28,000 grams of this 5 ppm produce to get to the 2 mg per kg per day level.

    There are 28 grams in an ounce, so that’s 1,000 ounces.

    There are 16 oz in a pound, so you would need to eat 62 lbs of produce.

    We’re talking about EACH DAY here, and even if you managed that, that would only get you to a level that is 100 times less then the NOEL level in the most sensitive species tested.





    http://www.crediblehulk.org/index.php/2015/06/02/glyphosate-toxicity-looking-past-the-hyperbole-and-sorting-through-the-facts-by-credible-hulk/

    I'm not so much afraid as cautious. It's something I think can't hurt to avoid. I think it is probably dose dependent and more is not better.

    My uncle, who lived on a roundup ready farm died of brain cancer. So has all of his siblings except two: one died of pancreatic cancer and one is still cancer free. I admit that I wonder about the effect that living on that farm had on them. I don't blame roundup (sprayed from planes) but I wonder if it played a role.
  • jgnatca
    jgnatca Posts: 14,464 Member
    Thank you for laying that out, @mangrothian . My "training" in pesticides comes from running a file room for our department of the Environment. My background has turned me in to a jack of all trades, of sorts. It is a pleasure to see a master at work.
  • nvmomketo
    nvmomketo Posts: 12,019 Member
    @mangrothian
    I'm not trolling, but I'm going to be blunt: if you want to avoid glyphosate due to toxicity, then you might as well not eat any fruits or vegetables ever, organic or conventional (whether the foods themselves be GE or not). Don't drink coffee either; it's more toxic than the pesticide levels you get from your fruit and veg over the year.

    Yeah, I'm sort of on my way there. LOL
  • mangrothian
    mangrothian Posts: 1,351 Member
    nvmomketo wrote: »
    @mangrothian
    I'm not trolling, but I'm going to be blunt: if you want to avoid glyphosate due to toxicity, then you might as well not eat any fruits or vegetables ever, organic or conventional (whether the foods themselves be GE or not). Don't drink coffee either; it's more toxic than the pesticide levels you get from your fruit and veg over the year.

    Yeah, I'm sort of on my way there. LOL

    Heh, I figured with your username.

    Then how about the question I posed? There’s a reason I put (not just crop) in there. What about GE lab grown meat? They’re not quite there yet, but I’m sure it’ll eventually get to the point where it’ll be more environmentally friendly to do so. When the time comes that you can get keto-specific meat grown with the perfect protein-to-fat ratio, will you switch?
  • nvmomketo
    nvmomketo Posts: 12,019 Member
    edited July 2018
    nvmomketo wrote: »
    @mangrothian
    I'm not trolling, but I'm going to be blunt: if you want to avoid glyphosate due to toxicity, then you might as well not eat any fruits or vegetables ever, organic or conventional (whether the foods themselves be GE or not). Don't drink coffee either; it's more toxic than the pesticide levels you get from your fruit and veg over the year.

    Yeah, I'm sort of on my way there. LOL

    Heh, I figured with your username.

    Then how about the question I posed? There’s a reason I put (not just crop) in there. What about GE lab grown meat? They’re not quite there yet, but I’m sure it’ll eventually get to the point where it’ll be more environmentally friendly to do so. When the time comes that you can get keto-specific meat grown with the perfect protein-to-fat ratio, will you switch?

    :):lol:
    I dont want to. TBH, the idea of it kind of turns my stomach. If forced to I would, but if I had the choice I would not.
  • jgnatca
    jgnatca Posts: 14,464 Member
    Another generation bought their meat live, to make sure it was disease free and non-contaminated. Our processed, plucked, and wrapped up meats would have disgusted them.
  • nvmomketo
    nvmomketo Posts: 12,019 Member
    jgnatca wrote: »
    Another generation bought their meat live, to make sure it was disease free and non-contaminated. Our processed, plucked, and wrapped up meats would have disgusted them.

    Possibly. But I've butchered hundreds of chickens and dozens of ruminants, so I'm just happy that someone else did the work for me when I buy my meat. ;)
  • Derpes
    Derpes Posts: 2,033 Member
    No, nor are carbs!
  • jgnatca
    jgnatca Posts: 14,464 Member
    My point is, not too long ago prepackaged meat was "disgusting" because of the fears of contamination. Modern technologies have put those fears to rest, so packaged meat is now "normal".

    Engineered meat is very new, and comes with a built in "ew" factor. I can see a day however, where people will consider a little gristle or skin on their meat to be disgusting, and prefer "grown" meat over slaughtered. Never mind the ethical considerations.
  • snickerscharlie
    snickerscharlie Posts: 8,578 Member
    edited August 2018
    Aaron_K123 wrote: »

    Now if we can stop waving our degree-dicks around and just back up what we are saying with information or statements that the general readership can understand I think that'd be appreciated by everyone else. Pardon my language but it is just gross to just throw up your education and point to it like that is your argument and then act all smug about it.

    This. ^^^

    And thank you.

  • AnvilHead
    AnvilHead Posts: 18,343 Member
    edited August 2018
    Aaron_K123 wrote: »

    Now if we can stop waving our degree-dicks around and just back up what we are saying with information or statements that the general readership can understand I think that'd be appreciated by everyone else. Pardon my language but it is just gross to just throw up your education and point to it like that is your argument and then act all smug about it.

    This. ^^^

    And thank you.

    ^^ Seconded.

    Well said, Aaron. As always, you provide valuable insight and knowledge. Thank you.
  • nvmomketo
    nvmomketo Posts: 12,019 Member
    jgnatca wrote: »
    My point is, not too long ago prepackaged meat was "disgusting" because of the fears of contamination. Modern technologies have put those fears to rest, so packaged meat is now "normal".

    Engineered meat is very new, and comes with a built in "ew" factor. I can see a day however, where people will consider a little gristle or skin on their meat to be disgusting, and prefer "grown" meat over slaughtered. Never mind the ethical considerations.

    You might be right. Time will tell.
  • tbright1965
    tbright1965 Posts: 852 Member
    Logic and reason, now cut that out. It's not allowed at MFP.
    Aaron_K123 wrote: »

    If credentials are important to you then I have a Ph.D. in molecular biology, I have genetically engineered products myself which have gone into human clinical trials. I am familiar with the tecniques and have at least read up on the ones that the public happens to hate on (ie Monsanto ones such as the introduction of a bacterial shikimate pathway shunt to crops (ie round-up ready) and the one that induced production of an delta-endotoxin in crop plants (BT) neither of which are actually dangerous to humans although one might argue from an enviornmentalist or coroporate power perspective I suppose.

    The important point here though is that genetic engineering is just a tool, you cannot evaluate the safety profile of a product solely based on what tools were used in its production. It would be like deciding that you were really concerned about the safety of a specific product that was built using a hammer and therefore cautioned everyone about the potential dangers of hammer-made products. There is nothing inherently dangerous about genetic engineering or products that are made in part utilizing genetically engineering...I think that is the most salient point. The anti-GMO movement is classic fear mongering relying on the old trope of "well we can't know for sure if it is safe" which is a empty statement given it could be said about literally anything and still arguably be true.

    Now if we can stop waving our degree-dicks around and just back up what we are saying with information or statements that the general readership can understand I think that'd be appreciated by everyone else. Pardon my language but it is just gross to just throw up your education and point to it like that is your argument and then act all smug about it.

  • shaf238
    shaf238 Posts: 4,022 Member
    I read this as "GNOs" as in girls night out and was thinking, no they're great!
  • mangrothian
    mangrothian Posts: 1,351 Member
    Aaron_K123 wrote: »

    Lets say there was a human disease out there that was caused by the lack of production of a particular protein that circulates in the blood. Humans that didn't produce this protein had to do severe dietary restrictions or face debilitating conditions or even death. Even with the dietary restrictions life was likely to be shortened and come with some debilitating issues.

    Clearly if we could just provide these people with the protein they were missing as an injectable they could just inject it regularly and lead a fairly normal life. But how do you get enough of the protein to do that...you can't exactly practically harvest it from humans themselves? Perhaps a closely related species like a farm animal like pigs you could harvest a related protein from their blood and try that. It might work but in a lot of cases it might cause an antibody response as it is a foreign protein and even if it works it would require a lot of animal product which would be quite expensive to produce.

    What if, instead, we could take the genetic code for the human protein and put it into bacteria so that the bacteria produced the protein. We could then grow the bacteria very cheaply in huge vats and then harvest and purify the human protein from that. Then we could produce the actual human protein rather than an animal surrogate and we could mass produce it cheaply to be able to supply everyone who suffered from the disease. Of course there would be high standards for purity of the purified protein product and formulation of the injectable and of course there would be the standard clinical tests for safety and efficacy. Would that type of thing be worth trying? Would that sort of product be okay or would that also be too dangerous to even attempt?

    What if I told you what I just described wasn't a hypothetical...I was describing the production of insulin for the treatment of diabetes.

    But harvesting tonnes of pig pancreas' is so much more natural and must be better for me then the ebil GMOs! :D But if you go to my website, I have an all vegan, raw, organic juicing diet plan that will reverse your diabetes in 6 weeks! Sooner if you buy my supplements!

    It peeves me to no end that most of the fear of GE products is created just so people can sell a product. Whether that product is a diet plan, an organic potato or a political agenda doesn't matter.

    In the end, the only way I see a GMO being bad for you is if Jurassic world came to life. I don't want an Indominus Rex rolling around my neighbourhood.
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