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Thread: GMO - Monsanto - Genetically Modified/Engineered Food!

  1. #1
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    GMO - Monsanto - Genetically Modified/Engineered Food!


    A variety of genetically modified corn that was approved for human consumption in 2006 caused signs of liver and kidney toxicity as well as hormonal changes in rats in a study performed by researchers from the independent Committee for Independent Research and Genetic Engineering at the University of Caen in France.

    What you need to know - Conventional View
    • The corn in question, MON863, is made by the Monsanto Company and approved for use in Australia, Canada, China, the European Union, Japan, Mexico, the Philippines, and the United States. It has had a gene inserted from the bacteria Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt), which causes the plant's cells to produce a pesticide.

    • Researchers fed rats either unmodified corn or diets containing 11 or 30 percent MON863 for 90 days. The rats who ate modified corn were found to exhibit signs of liver and kidney toxicity, as well as signs of hormonal changes.

    • Male rats lost an average of 3.3 percent of their body weight, and their excretion of phosphorus and sodium decreased. Female rats gained an average of 3.7 percent of their body weight, while their triglyceride levels increased by 24 to 40 percent.

    • The mechanism that causes the toxicity is not yet known, but the researchers say there is evidence that the Bt toxin may cause the perforation of blood cells. They expressed concern that the methods used by Monsanto in initial tests of the corn were statistically flawed and called their own tests "the best mammalian toxicity tests available."

    • Greenpeace responded to the study by calling for an immediate recall of all MON863 corn and the reassessment of all genetically modified foods currently approved for the market.

    • Quote: "Our counter-evaluation shows that there are signs of toxicity, and nobody can say scientifically and seriously the consumption of the transgenic maize MON863 is safe and good for health." - Lead Author Gilles Eric Seralini

    What you need to know - Alternative View
    Statements and opinions by Mike Adams, author of Grocery Warning: How to identify and avoid dangerous food ingredients

    • It seems that the more these GM foods are tested, the more frightening the implications seem to be for human health. When companies like Monsanto do their own in-house testing, results are mysteriously favorable in nearly all cases, but when independent labs run their own tests, the results are downright shocking.

    • I find it interesting that the FDA believes U.S. consumers should not be allowed to know which foods are genetically modified and which aren't. The push for honest labeling of GM foods has been blockaded by corporate interests and corrupt federal regulators.

    Resources you need to know
    The Campaign for labeling of GM foods: http://www.thecampaign.org

    Bottom line
    • A variety of genetically modified corn was found to cause signs of hormonal changes and liver and kidney toxicity in rats.

  2. #2
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    I wonder if the contaminated wheat glutin was actually GM?

  3. #3
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    Quote Originally Posted by crossfire View Post
    I wonder if the contaminated wheat glutin was actually GM?
    It could be, and frightfully, could be a test for something much more sinister to come!

  4. #4
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    This is more than outrageous and frightening. I'm trying to find a master list of all GM/GE food/crops etc. If anyone gets to it before I do, please post it here.


    GM or GE Foods

    What is Genetic Engineering?

    Genetic Engineering (GE) is a radical new technology that manipulates the genes and DNA - the building blocks of all living things. Unlike traditional breeding, genetic engineering creates new life forms that would never occur in nature, creating new and unpredictable health and environmental risks. To create GE crops, genes from bacteria, viruses, plants, animals and even humans have been inserted into plants like soybeans, corn, canola, and cotton. Multinational chemical companies like Monsanto have taken our staple crops and altered them in order to patent and profit from them by increasing their chemical and seed sales and gaining control over farmers and the food chain itself. The same companies that brought us DDT, PCBs and Agent Orange now expect us to trust them with our food supply.

    GE Crops: Giving Pollution a Life of its Own

    Because they are living organisms, GE crops can multiply, spread and reproduce indefinitely and at will. Once released, genetically engineered organisms can never be recalled, so their effects are irreversible. GE pollen and seeds can contaminate farms and wilderness, creating uncontrollable "super weeds" and threatening the veriatal purity of our crops. We have already seen this genetic contamination of corn in Mexico, the center of diversity for corn varieties.

    The Genetic Experiment with our food

    Chances are you have already eaten Genetically Engineered (GE) ingredients. Without warning or notice you have been included in a dangerous experiment on our food.

    Thousands of products on the shelves of your local supermarket contain GE ingredients ö foods from crops that have not evolved in any natural environment, from crops that have never before been part of the human diet.

    Look at the ingredient list on any of the packaged foods in the supermarket. You are almost certain to find ingredients made from corn, soy, canola or cottonseed oil. These ingredients commonly come from plants that have been genetically altered and are being grown on millions of acres in the United States. For example, soy ingredients like lecithin, soy oil, and soy protein are found in 60- to 70 percent of all processed foods.

    Yet you won't find "genetically engineered" on the label of any products containing GE ingredients. The supermarkets don't want you to know that their products are an experiment unique in human history ö an experiment that doctors and scientists around the world are warning may not be safe.

    Multiple Risks and Little Testing

    Unlike traditional crop or animal breeding, genetic engineering enables scientists to cross genes from bacteria, viruses, and even humans into plants and animals. Never before have scientists been able to break the species barrier. Strawberries and flounder could never breed on their own, but with genetic engineering, fish genes have been spliced into strawberries. There have been no long-term studies on what impact these crops may have on the environment, but scientists are already finding signs of trouble:

    Environmental Risks
    • Biological Pollution: Unlike chemicals that are released into the environment, genetically engineered organisms are living things that will reproduce and spread uncontrollably and at will, with little possibility of containment or clean-up.

    • Increased Pesticide Use: Most GE crops have been designed to withstand herbicides. Studies show that farmers who grow GE soybeans use 2-5 times more herbicides than farmers who grow natural soy varieties.
    • Superweeds: Other studies have shown that GE crops can cross-pollinate with related weeds, resulting in "superweeds" that become difficult to control. Canadian canola growers have found weeds in their fields resistant to Round-Up and Liberty herbicides, forcing the growers to use more potent toxic herbicides.

    • Threatening organic farming: GE insect resistant crops could create ãsuperbugsä who will build up a tolerance to a fundamental pest control tool used by organic farmers; the loss of this tool would be devastating to the safest, most environmentally friendly food production we have.


    The Health Risks

    The genetic engineering industry claims that no one has been harmed by eating GE foods. But without labeling of GE ingredients, there is no way to track any harm. Doctors and scientists warn that there is not enough evidence to insure that these foods are safe in the human diet. Medical experts, including over 2,000 doctors and health professionals in Germany and the British Medical Association, have questioned the safety of GE foods. In fact, there is ample evidence of risk:
    • Allergies: By inserting foreign DNA into common foods, without adequate safety testing, the biotech industry is introducing possible new food allergens.

    • Antibiotic Resistance: The rise of diseases that are resistant to treatment with common antibiotics is already a serious medical concern. Doctors warn that the current use of antibiotic resistance genes in GE crops may add to this risk.


    In short, Genetic Engineering is an unpredictable technology that, for the sake of corporate profits, puts our environment and health at risk.

    Do unto Others as you would have them do unto you



  5. #5
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    TAKE a LOOK at THIS!!

    Below you'll find what I've found so far on all the food categories that contain GM or GE ingredients.....hold on to your seatbelts!

    ****************************************

    Baby Food:

    GENETICALLY ENGINEERED INGREDIENTS


    Nabisco
    (Phillip Morris) Arrowroot Teething Biscuits

    Infant formula Carnation Infant Formulas
    (Nestle) AlSoy Good Start Follow-Up Follow-Up Soy

    Enfamil Infant Formulas
    (Mead Johnson) Enfamil with Iron Enfamil Low Iron Enfamil A.R. Enfamil Nutramigen Enfamil Lacto Free Enfamil 22 Enfamil Next step (soy and milk-based varieties) Enfamil Pro-Soybee

    Isomil Infant Formulas
    (Abbot Labs) Isomil Soy Isomil Soy for Diarrhea

    Similac
    (Abbot Labs) Similac Lactose Free Similac with Iron Similac Low Iron Similac Alimentum
    ----------------------------------

    Baking:

    GENETICALLY ENGINEERED INGREDIENTS


    baking mixes

    Aunt Jemima
    (Quaker) Complete Pancake & Waffle Mix Buttermilk Pancake & Waffle Mix Cornbread Mix Easy Mix Coffee Cake

    Betty Crocker
    (General Mills) Pie Crust Mix Original Pancake Mix Complete Pancake Mix Buttermilk Complete Pancake Mix Muffin Mixes Banana Nut Lemon Poppy Seed Blueberry Wild Blueberry Chocolate Chip Apple Streusel Quick Bread Mixes

    * Banana
    * Cinnamon Streusel
    * Lemon Poppy Seed
    * Cranberry Orange
    * Gingerbread

    * Cookie Mixes
    o Chocolate Chip
    o Double Chocolate Chunk
    o Sugar
    o Peanut Butter


    Bisquik
    (Betty Crocker/General Mills)
    * Original
    * Reduced Fat
    * Shake 'n Pour Pancake Mix
    * Shake 'n Pour Buttermilk Pancake Mix
    * Shake 'n Pour Blueberry Pancake Mix

    Duncan Hines
    (Aurora Foods)
    * Muffin Mixes
    * Kellogg's All-Bran Apple Cinnamon
    * Kellogg's All-Bran Blueberry
    * Blueberry
    * Blueberry Crumb
    * Chocolate Chip

    Hungry Jack
    (Pillsbury)
    * Buttermilk Pancake Mix
    * Extra Light & Fluffy Pancake Mix (all varieties)

    Jiffy
    * Corn Muffin Mix
    * Blueberry Muffin Mix
    * Raspberry Muffin Mix
    * Pie Crust Mix

    Mrs. Butterworths
    (Aurora Foods)
    * Complete Pancake Mix
    * Buttermilk Pancake Mix

    Pepperidge Farms
    (Campbell's)
    * Buttermilk Pancake Mix

    Pillsbury
    * Quick Bread & Muffin Mixes
    * Blueberry
    * Chocolate Chip
    * Banana
    * Cranberry
    * Lemon Poppyseed
    * Nut
    * Hot Roll Mix
    * Gingerbread

    baking needs

    Bakers
    (Kraft/Phillip Morris)
    * Unsweetened Chocolate
    * Semi-Sweet Chocolate
    * German Sweet Chocolate
    * White Chocolate

    Hershey's
    * Semi-Sweet Baking Chips
    * Milk Chocolate Chips
    * Mini Kisses

    Nestle
    * Toll House Semi-Sweet Chocolate Chips
    * Milk Chocolate Chips
    * White Chocolate
    * Butterscotch Chips
    * Semi-Sweet Chocolate Baking Bars

    ---------------------------------------

    Bread:

    GENETICALLY ENGINEERED INGREDIENTS


    Holsum
    (Interstate Bakeries) Holsum Thin Sliced Roman Meal 12 Grain Round Top Home Pride Buttertop White Buttertop Wheat

    Pepperidge Farms
    (Campbell's) Cinnamon Swirl Light Oatmeal Light Wheat 100% Whole Wheat Hearty Slices 7 Grain 9 Grain Crunchy Oat Whole Wheat Light Side Oatmeal Wheat 7 Grain Soft Dinner Rolls Club Rolls Sandwich Buns Hoagie Rolls

    Thomas'
    (Bestfoods) English Muffins

    * Original
    * Cinnamon Raisin
    * Honey Wheat
    * Oat Bran
    * Blueberry
    * Maple French Toast

    * Toast-r-Cakes Blueberry
    * Toast-r-Cakes Corn Muffins

    Wonder
    (Interstate Bakeries)
    * White Sandwich Bread
    * Country Grain
    * Buttermilk
    * Thin Sandwich
    * Light Wheat
    * 100% Stoneground Wheat
    * Fat Free Multigrain
    * Premium Potato
    * Beefsteak Rye
    * Wonder Hamburger Buns

    --------------------------------------

    Cereal

    GENETICALLY ENGINEERED INGREDIENTS


    General Mills Cheerios Wheaties Total Corn Chex Lucky Charms Trix Kix Golden Grahams Cinnamon Grahams Count Chocula Honey Nut Chex Frosted Cheerios Apple Cinnamon Cheerios Multi-Grain Cheerios Frosted Wheaties Brown Sugar & Oat Total Basic 4 Reeses Puffs French Toast Crunch

    Kellogg's Frosted Flakes Corn Flakes Special K Raisin Bran Rice Krispies Corn Pops Product 19 Smacks Froot Loops Marshmallow Blasted Fruit Loops Apple Jacks Crispix Smart Start All-Bran Complete Wheat Bran Complete Oat Bran Just Right Fruit & Nut Honey Crunch Corn Flakes Raisin Bran Crunch Cracklin' Oat Bran Country Inn Specialties
    (all varieties)

    Mothers Cereals
    (Quaker) Toasted Oat Bran Peanut Butter Bumpers Groovy Grahams Harvest Oat Flakes Harvest Oat Flakes w/Apples & Almonds Honey Round Ups

    Post
    (Kraft-Phillip Morris) Raisin Bran Bran Flakes Grape Nut Flakes Grape Nut O's Fruit & Fibre date, raisin and walnut Fruit & Fibre peach, raisin and almond Honey Bunch of Oats Honey Nut Shredded Wheat Honey Comb Golden Crisp Waffle Crisp Cocoa Pebbles Cinna-Crunch Pebbles Fruity Pebbles Alpha-Bits Post Selects Cranberry Almond Post Selects Banana Nut Crunch Post Selects Blueberry Morning Post Selects Great Grains

    Quaker Life Cinnamon Life 100% Natural Granola Toasted Oatmeal Toasted Oatmeal Honey Nut Oat Bran Cap'n Crunch Cap'n Crunch Peanut Butter Crunch Cap'n Crunch Crunchling Berries

    ------------------------------------------

    Chocolate:
    OMG It's even in chocolate and my one of my favorites - Toblerone!!!!!!

    GENETICALLY ENGINEERED INGREDIENTS


    candy

    Cadbury
    (Cadbury/Hershey's) Mounds Almond Joy York Peppermint Patty Dairy Milk Roast Almond Fruit & Nut

    Hershey's Kit-Kat Reese's Peanut Butter Cups Mr. Goodbar Special Dark Milk Chocolate Kisses Symphony

    Kraft
    (Kraft/Phillip Morris) Toblerone
    (all varieties)

    Mars M&M
    (all varieties) Snickers Three Musketeers Milky Way Twix

    Nestle Crunch Milk Chocolate Chunky Butterfinger 100 Grand

    drink mixes and dessert toppings

    Carnation
    (Nestle) Hot Cocoa Mixes: Rich Chocolate Double Chocolate Milk Chocolate Marshmallow Madness Mini Marshmallow No Sugar

    Hershey's Chocolate Syrup Special Dark Chocolate Syrup Strawberry Syrup

    Nestle Nesquik Strawberry Nesquik

    Swiss Miss
    (ConAgra) Hot Cocoa Mixes: Chocolate Sensation Milk Chocolate Marshmallow Lovers Marshmallow Lovers Fat Free No Sugar Added

    --------------------------

    Condiments:

    GENETICALLY ENGINEERED INGREDIENTS

    Del Monte
    (Nabisco/Phillip Morris) Ketchup

    Heinz Ketchup
    (regular & no salt) Chili Sauce Cocktail Sauce Heinz 57 Steak Sauce

    Hellman's
    (Bestfoods) Real Mayonnaise Light Mayonnaise Low-Fat Mayonnaise

    Hunt's
    (ConAgra) Ketchup
    (regular & no salt)

    KC Masterpiece
    (Clorox) Original BBQ sauce Garlic & Herb Marinade Honey Teriyaki Marinade

    Kraft
    (Kraft/Phillip Morris) Miracle Whip
    (all varieties) Kraft Mayonnaise
    (all) Thick & Spicy BBQ sauces
    (all varieties) Char Grill BBQ sauce Honey Hickory BBQ sauce

    Nabisco
    (Nabiso/Phillip Morris) A-1 Steak Sauce

    Open Pit
    (Vlasic/Campbells) BBQ sauces
    (all)

    salsa

    Chi-Chi's
    (Hormel) Fiesta Salsa
    (all varieties)

    Old El Paso
    (Pillsbury) Thick & Chunky Salsa Garden Pepper Salsa Taco Sauce Picante Sauce

    Ortega
    (Nestle) Taco Sauce Salsa Prima Homestyle Salsa Prima Roasted Garlic Salsa Prima 3 Bell Pepper Thick & Chunky Salsa

    Pace
    (Campbells) Chunky Salsa Picante Sauce

    Tostitos Salsa
    (Frito-Lay/Pepsi) All Natural All Natural Thick & Chunky Roasted Garlic Restaurant Style

    ---------------------------------------------

    Frozen Dinners:


    GENETICALLY ENGINEERED INGREDIENTS


    Banquet
    (ConAgra) Pot Pies
    (all varieties) Fried Chicken Salisbury Steak Chicken Nugget Meal Pepperoni Pizza Meal

    Budget Gourmet
    (Heinz) Roast Beef Supreme Beef Stroganoff Three Cheese Lasagne Chicken Oriental & Vegeatble Fettuccini Primavera

    Green Giant
    # (Pillsbury) Rice Pilaf with Chicken Flavored Sauce
    # Rice Medley with Beef Flavored Sauce
    # Primavera Pasta
    # Pasta Accents Creamy Cheddar
    Create-a-Meals

    * Parmesan Herb Chicken
    * Cheesy Pasta and Vegetable
    * Beef Noodle
    * Sweet & Sour
    * Mushroom Wine Chicken



    Healthy Choice
    (ConAgra)

    * Stuffed Pasta Shells
    * Chicken Parmagiana
    * Country Breaded Chicken
    * Roast Chicken Breast
    * Beef Pot Roast
    * Chicken & Corn Bread
    * Cheese & Chicken Tortellini
    * Lemon Pepper Fish
    * Shrimp & Vegetable
    * Macaroni & Cheese

    Kid Cuisine
    (ConAgra)
    * Chicken Nugget Meal
    * Fried Chicken
    * Taco Roll Up
    * Corn Dog
    * Cheese Pizza
    * Fish Stix
    * Macaroni & Cheese

    Lean Cuisine
    (Stouffer's/Nestle)

    Skillet Sensations
    o Chicken & Vegetable
    o Broccoli & Beef
    o Homestyle Beef
    o Teriyaki Chicken
    o Chicken Alfredo
    o Garlic Chicken
    o Roast Turkey
    Hearty Portions
    o Chicken Florentine
    o Beef Stroganoff
    o Cheese & Spinach Manicotti
    o Salisbury Steak
    CafŽ Classics
    o Baked Fish
    o Baked Chicken
    o Chicken a L'Orange
    o Chicken Parmesan
    o Meatloaf with Whipped Potatoes
    Everyday Favorites
    o Chicken Fettuccini
    o Chicken Pie
    o Angel Hair Pasta
    o Three Bean Chili with Rice
    o Macaroni & Cheese


    Marie Callenders
    (ConAgra)
    * Chicken Pot Pie
    * Lasagna & Meat Sauce
    * Turkey & Gravy
    * Meat Loaf & Gravy
    * Country Fried Chicken & Gravy
    * Fettuccini with Broccoli & Cheddar
    * Roast Beef with Mashed Potatoes
    * Country Fried Pork Chop with Gravy
    * Chicken Cordon Bleu

    Ore-Ida Frozen Potatoes
    (Heinz)
    * Fast Fries
    * Steak fries
    * Zesties
    * Shoestrings
    * Hash Browns
    * Tater Tots
    * Potato Wedges
    * Crispy Crunchies

    Rosetto Frozen Pasta
    (Heinz)
    * Cheese Ravioli
    * Beef Ravioli
    * Italian Sausage Ravioli
    * Eight Cheese Stuffed Shells
    * Eight Cheese Broccoli Stuffed Shells

    Stouffer's
    (Nestle)

    Family Style Favorites
    o Macaroni & Cheese
    o Stuffed Peppers
    o Broccoli au Gratin
    o Meat Loaf in Gravy
    o Green Bean & Mushroom Casserole
    Homestyle
    o Meatloaf
    o Salisbury Steak
    o Chicken Breast in Gravy
    Hearty Portions
    o Salisbury Steak
    o Chicken Fettucini
    o Meatloaf with Mashed Potatoes
    o Chicken Pot Pie


    Swanson
    (Vlasic/Campbells)
    * Meat Loaf
    * Fish & Chips
    * Salisbury Steak
    * Chicken Nuggets
    * Hungry Man
    o Fried Chicken
    o Roast Chicken
    o Fisherman's Platter
    o Pork Rib


    Voila!
    (Bird's Eye/Agri-Link Foods)
    * Chicken Voila! Alfredo
    * Chicken Voila! Garlic
    * Chicken Voila! Pesto
    * Chicken Voila! Three Cheese
    * Steak Voila! Beef Sirloin
    * Shrimp Voila! Garlic


    Weight Watchers
    (Heinz)

    Smart Ones
    o Fiesta Chicken
    o Basil Chicken
    o Ravioli Florentine
    o Fajita Chicken
    o Roasted Vegetable Primavera

    -----------------------------------------

    Meal & Sauce Mixes

    GENETICALLY ENGINEERED INGREDIENTS


    Betty Crocker
    # (General Mills) Garden Vegetable Pilaf
    # Creamy Herb Risotto
    # Garlic Alfredo Fettuccini
    Bowl Appetit

    * Cheddar Broccoli
    * Macaroni & Cheese
    * Pasta Alfredo



    Knorr
    (Bestfoods)

    * Mushroom Risotto Italian Rice
    * Broccoli au Gratin Risotto
    * Vegetable Primavera Risotto
    * Risotto Milanese
    * Original Pilf
    * Chicken Pilaf
    * Rotini with 4 Cheese
    * Bow Tie Pasta with Chicken & Vegetable
    * Penne with Sun-Dried Tomato
    * Fettuccini with Alfredo
    * Classic Sauce Packets
    o Hollandaise
    o BŽarnaise
    o White
    o Brown
    o Lemon Herb
    o Mushroom Brown
    o Onion
    o Roasted Chicken
    o Roasted Pork
    o Roasted Turkey
    * Pasta Sauce Packets
    o Alfredo
    o Four Cheese
    o Carbonara
    o Pesto
    o Garlic Herb


    Lipton
    (Unilever)
    * Rice & Sauce Packets
    o Chicken Broccoli
    o Cheddar Broccoli
    o Beef Flavor
    o Spanish
    o Chicken Flavor
    o Creamy Chicken
    o Mushroom
    * Sizzle & Stir Skillet Supers
    o Lemon Garlic Chicken & Rice
    o Spanish Chicken & Rice
    o Herb Chicken & Bowties
    o Cheddar Chicken & Shells


    Near East
    (Quaker)
    * Spicy Tomato Pasta Mix
    * Roasted Garlic & Olive Oil Pasta Mix
    * Falafel Mix
    * Lentil Pilaf
    * Couscous
    * Tomato Lentil
    * Parmesan
    * Toasted Pinenut
    * Herb Chicken
    * Broccoli & Cheese
    * Curry

    Pasta Roni
    (Quaker)
    * Fettuccini Alfredo
    * Garlic Alfredo
    * Angel Hair Pasta with Herbs
    * Angel Hair Pasta with Parmesan Cheese
    * Angel Hair Pasta with Tomato Parmesan
    * Angel Hair Pasta Primavera
    * Garlic & Olive Oil with Vermicelli

    Rice-a-Roni
    (Quaker)
    * Rice Pilaf
    * Beef
    * Chicken
    * Fried Rice
    * Chicken & Broccoli
    * Long Grain & Wild Rice
    * Broccoli au Gratin

    Uncle Ben's
    (Mars)
    * Long Grain & Wild Rice
    (Original & with Garlic)
    * Brown & Wild Rice Mushroom
    * Country Inn Mexican Fiesta
    * Country Inn Oriental Fried Rice
    * Country Inn Chicken & Vegetable
    * Country Inn Chicken & Broccoli
    * Natural Select Chicken & Herb
    * Natural Select Tomato & Basil
    * Chef's Recipe Chicken & Vegetable Pilaf
    * Chef's Recipe Beans & Rice
    * Chef's Recipe Broccoli Rice

    -------------------------------------------

    Snack Foods:

    GENETICALLY ENGINEERED INGREDIENTS


    Act II Microwave Popcorn
    (ConAgra) Butter Extreme Butter Corn on the Cob

    Frito-Lay*
    (PepsiCo) Lays Potato Chips
    (all varieties) Ruffles Potato Chips
    (all) Doritos Corn Chips
    (all) Tostitos Corn Chips
    (all) Fritos Corn Chips
    (all) Cheetos
    (all) Rold Gold Pretzels
    (all) Cracker Jack Popcorn

    Healthy Choice Microwave Popcorn
    (ConAgra) Organic Corn
    (soy/canola oils)

    Mothers Corn Cakes
    (Quaker) Butter Pop

    Orville Redenbacher Microwave Popcorn
    (ConAgra) Original Homestyle Butter Smart Pop Pour Over

    Orville Redenbacher Popcorn Cakes Chocolate Caramel

    Orville Redenbacher Mini Popcorn Cakes Butter Peanut Caramel Chocolate Peanut

    Pop Secret Microwave Popcorn
    (Betty Crocker/General Mills) Natural Homestyle Jumbo Pop Extra Butter Light 94% Fat Free Butter

    Pringles
    (Procter & Gamble) Original Low Fat Pizza-licious Sour Cream & Onion Salt & Vinegar Cheezeums

    Quaker Rice Cakes Peanut Butter Chocolate Crunch Cinnamon Streusel Mini Chocolate Ranch Sour Cream & Onion Apple Cinnamon Caramel Corn



    Quaker Corn Cakes

    * White Cheddar
    * Caramel Corn
    * Strawberry Crunch
    * Caramel Chocolate Chip

    *Frito has informed its corn and potato suppliers that the company wishes to avoid GE crops, but acknowledges that canola or other oils and ingredients in its products may be from GE sources

    --------------------------------------

    Soda and Juices:

    GENETICALLY ENGINEERED INGREDIENTS


    sodas

    Coca Cola Coca Cola Sprite Cherry Coke Barq's Root Beer Minute Maid Orange Minute Maid Grape Surge Ultra

    PepsiCo Pepsi Slice Wild Cherry Pepsi Mug Root Beer Mountain Dew

    Cadbury/Schweppes 7-Up Dr. Pepper A & W Root Beer Sunkist Orange Schweppes Ginger Ale

    juice drinks

    Capri Sun juices
    (Kraft/Phillip Morris) Red Berry Surfer Cooler Splash Cooler Wild Cherry Strawberry Kiwi Fruit Punch Pacific Cooler Strawberry Orange Grape

    Fruitopia
    (Coca Cola) Grape Beyond Berry Lemonade Fruit Integration Kiwiberry Ruckus Strawberry Passion Tremendously Tangerine

    Fruit Works
    (PepsiCo) Strawberry Melon Peach Papaya Pink Lemonade Apple Raspberry

    Gatorade
    (Quaker) Lemon Lime Orange Fruitpunch Fierce Grape Frost Riptide Rush

    Hawaiian Punch
    (Procter & Gamble) Tropical Fruit Grape Geyser Fruit Juicy Red Strawberry Surfin

    Hi-C
    (Coca Cola) Pink Lemonade Watermelon Rapids Boppin' Berry Tropical Punch Smashin' Wildberry Blue Cooler Blue Moon Berry Orange Cherry

    Kool Aid
    (Kraft/Phillip Morris) Blastin' Berry Cherry Bluemoon Berry Kickin' Kiwi Lime Tropical Punch Wild Berry Tea

    Ocean Spray Cranberry Juice Cocktail Cranapple CranGrape CranRaspberry CranStrawberry CranMango

    Squeeze It
    (Betty Crocker/General Mills) Rockin' Red Puncher Chucklin' Cherry Mystery 2000

    Sunny Delight
    (Procter & Gamble) Sunny Delight Original Sunny Delight With Calcium Citrus Punch Sunny Delight California Style Citrus Punch

    Tang juices
    (Kraft/Phillip Morris) Orange Uproar Fruit Frenzy Berry Panic

    Tropicana Twisters
    (PepsiCo) Grape Berry Apple Raspberry Blackberry Cherry Berry Cranberry Raspberry Strawberry Pink Grapefruit Tropical Strawberry Orange Cranberry Orange Strawberry Banana

    V-8
    (Campbells) V8 Tomato Juices
    (all varieties) Strawberry Kiwi Strawberry Banana Fruit Medley Berry Blend Citrus Blend Apple Medley Tropical Blend Island Blend

    -------------------------------------

    Soup:

    GENETICALLY ENGINEERED INGREDIENTS


    Campbell's Tomato Chicken Noodle Cream of Chicken Cream of Mushroom Cream of Celery Cream of Broccoli Cheddar Cheese Green Pea Healthy Request

    * Chicken Noodle
    * Cream of Chicken
    * Cream of Mushroom
    * Cream of Celery

    * Campbell's Select
    o Roasted Chicken with Rice
    o Grilled Chicken with Sundried Tomatoes
    o Chicken Rice
    o Vegetable Beef
    * Chunky
    o Beef with Rice
    o Hearty Chicken & Vegetable
    o Pepper Steak
    o Baked Potato with Steak & Cheese
    o New England Clam Chowder
    * Soup to Go
    o Chicken Noodle
    o Chicken Rice
    o Garden Vegetable
    o Vegetable Beef & Rice
    * Simply Home
    o Chicken Noodle
    o Chicken Rice
    o Garden Vegetable
    o Vegetable Beef with Pasta


    Healthy Choice
    (ConAgra)
    * Country Vegetable
    * Fiesta Chicken
    * Bean & Pasta
    * Chicken Noodle
    * Chicken with Rice
    * Minestrone

    Pepperidge Farms
    (Campbell's)
    * Corn Chowder
    * Lobster Bisque
    * Chicken & Wild Rice
    * New England Clam Chowder
    * Crab Soup

    Progresso
    (Pillsbury)
    * Tomato Basil
    * Chicken Noodle
    * Chicken & Wild Rice
    * Chicken Barley
    * Lentil
    * New England Clam Chowder
    * Zesty Herb Tomato
    * Roasted Chicken with Rotini
    * Fat Free Minestrone
    * Fat Free Chicken Noodle
    * Fat Free Lentil
    * Fat Free Roast Chicken

    -------------------------------------------------

    Tomato Sauces:


    GENETICALLY ENGINEERED INGREDIENTS


    Del Monte
    (Nabisco/Phillip Morris) Tomato Sauce

    Five Brothers Pasta Sauces
    (Lipton/Unilever) Summer Vegetable Five Cheese Roasted Garlic & Onion Tomato & Basil

    Healthy Choice Pasta Sauces
    (ConAgra) Traditional Garlic & Herb Sun-Dried Tomato & Herb

    Hunts
    (ConAgra) Traditional Spaghetti Sauce Four Cheese Spaghetti Sauce Tomato Sauce Tomato Paste

    Prego Pasta Sauces
    (Campbells) Tomato, Basil & Garlic Fresh Mushroom Ricotta Parmesan Meat Flavored Roasted Garlic & Herb Three Cheese Mini-Meatball Chicken with Parmesan

    Ragu Sauces (Lipton/Unilever) Old World Traditional Old World with Meat Old World Marinara Old World with Mushrooms Ragu Robusto Parmesan & Romano Ragu Robusto Roasted Garlic Ragu Robusto Sweet Italian Sausage Ragu Robusto Six Cheese Ragu Robusto Tomato, Olive Oil & Garlic Ragu Robusto Classic Italian Meat Chunky Garden Style Super Garlic Chunky Garden Style Garden Combo Chunky Garden Style Tomato, Garlic & Onion Chunky Garden Style Tomato, Basil & Italian Cheese Pizza Quick Traditional

    ----------------------------------------

    For a more complete list go HERE

    Do unto Others as you would have them do unto you



  6. #6
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    Is there a web site with the original report that I could see. I would love to print it out and give it to a farmer close by who plants corn.

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    AW-W-W-W ALPHA...........SAY IT AIN'T SO!!!!





    Quote Originally Posted by Alpha View Post
    TAKE a LOOK at THIS!!

    Below you'll find what I've found so far on all the food categories that contain GM or GE ingredients.....hold on to your seatbelts!

    For a more complete list go HERE

  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by snowbird View Post
    AW-W-W-W ALPHA...........SAY IT AIN'T SO!!!!
    I wish it wasn't snowbird.

    The only thing I didn't like about that site is that it doesn't say what type of GE/GM ingredients are in these products.

    Lets do some more digging and then

    Do unto Others as you would have them do unto you



  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by Alpha View Post
    I wish it wasn't snowbird.

    The only thing I didn't like about that site is that it doesn't say what type of GE/GM ingredients are in these products.

    Lets do some more digging and then
    A link to some very bad effects from GM soy is at http://www.foodconsumer.org/cgi-bin/...iew.cgi/6/1828
    We're all butterflies flapping our wings and changing the world.

  10. #10
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    Holly Deyo took the time to collect some recipes ... Thank the powers of spirit for that. I even sent her a few pages of unusual recipes back in 1997.
    “It does not require many words to speak the truth.”
    Chief Joesph

  11. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by lastconundrum View Post
    A link to some very bad effects from GM soy [U]is at http://www.foodconsumer.org/cgi-bin/...iew.cgi/6/1828
    Thank you last....very frightening indeed.

    Hope you don't mind, however I'm going to cut and paste this article before it disappears, so we don't lose it...links seem to do that

    Please feel free to post articles here; our bandwidth is o.k. for now

    ******************************************

    Most offspring died when mother rats ate GM soy diet
    By Jeffrey M. Smith, author of Seeds of Deception
    Nov 1, 2005, 09:58

    The Russian scientist planned a simple experiment to see if eating genetically modified (GM) soy might influence offspring. What she got, however, was an astounding result that may threaten a multi-billion dollar industry.

    Irina Ermakova, a leading scientist at the Institute of Higher Nervous Activity and Neurophysiology of the Russian Academy of Sciences (RAS), added GM soy flour (5-7 grams) to the diet of female rats. Other females were fed non-GM soy or no soy at all. The experimental diet began two weeks before the rats conceived and continued through pregnancy and nursing.

    Ermakova's first surprise came when her pregnant rats started giving birth. Some pups from GM-fed mothers were quite a bit smaller. After 2 weeks, 36% of them weighed less than 20 grams compared to about 6% from the other groups (see photo below).

    Photo of two rats from the Russian study, showing stunted growth - the larger rat, 19 days old, is from the control group; the smaller rat, 20 days old, is from the "GM soy" group.
    But the real shock came when the rats started dying. Within three weeks, 25 of the 45 (55.6%) rats from the GM soy group died compared to only 3 of 33 (9%) from the non-GM soy group and 3 of 44 (6.8%) from the non-soy controls.

    Ermakova preserved several major organs from the mother rats and offspring, drew up designs for a detailed organ analysis, created plans to repeat and expand the feeding trial, and promptly ran out of research money. The $70,000 needed was not expected to arrive for a year. Therefore, when she was invited to present her research at a symposium organized by the National Association for Genetic Security, Ermakova wrote 'PRELIMINARY STUDIES' on the top of her paper. She presented it on October 10, 2005 at a session devoted to the risks of GM food.

    Her findings are hardly welcome by an industry already steeped in controversy.


    GM Soy's Divisive Past

    The soy she was testing was Monsanto's Roundup Ready variety. Its DNA has bacterial genes added that allow the soy plant to survive applications of Monsanto's 'Roundup' brand herbicide. About 85% of the soy gown in the US is Roundup Ready. Since soy derivatives, including oil, flour and lecithin, are found in the majority of processed foods sold in the US, many Americans eat ingredients derived from Roundup Ready soy everyday.

    The FDA does not require any safety tests on genetically modified foods. If Monsanto or other biotech companies declare their foods safe, the agency has no further questions. The rationale for this hands-off position is a sentence in the FDA's 1992 policy that states, "The agency is not aware of any information showing that foods derived by these new methods differ from other foods in any meaningful or uniform way."[1] The statement, it turns out, was deceptive. Documents made public from a lawsuit years later revealed that the FDA's own experts agreed that GM foods are different and might lead to hard-to-detect allergens, toxins, new diseases or nutritional problems. They had urged their superiors to require long-term safety studies, but were ignored. The person in charge of FDA policy was, conveniently, Monsanto's former attorney (and later their vice president). One FDA microbiologist described the GM food policy as "just a political document" without scientific basis, and warned that industry would "not do the tests that they would normally do" since the FDA didn't require any.[2] He was correct.

    There have been less than 20 published, peer-reviewed animal feeding safety studies and no human clinical trials' in spite of the fact that millions of people eat GM soy, corn, cotton, or canola daily. There are no adequate tests on "biochemistry, immunology, tissue pathology, gut function, liver function and kidney function,"[3] and animal feeding studies are too short to adequately test for cancer, reproductive problems, or effects in the next generation. This makes Ermakova's research particularly significant. It's the first of its kind.

    Past Studies Show Significant Effects

    Other studies on Roundup Ready soy also raise serious questions. Research on the liver, the body's major de-toxifier, showed that rats fed GM soy developed misshapen nuclei and other cellular anomalies.[4] This indicates increased metabolic activity, probably resulting from a major insult to that organ. Rats also showed changes in the pancreas, including a huge drop in the production of a major enzyme (alpha-amylase),[5] which could inhibit digestion. Cooked GM soy contains about twice the amount of soy lectin, which can also block nutrient assimilation.[6] And one study showed that GM soy has 12-14% less isoflavones, which are touted as cancer fighting.[7]

    An animal feeding study published by Monsanto showed no apparent problems with GM soy,[8] but their research has been severely criticized as rigged to avoid finding problems.[9] Monsanto used mature animals instead of young, more sensitive ones, diluted their GM soy up to 12-fold, used too much protein, never weighed the organs, and had huge variations in starting weights. The study's nutrient comparison between GM and non-GM soy revealed significant differences in the ash, fat, and carbohydrate content, lower levels of protein, a fatty acid, and phenylalanine. Monsanto researchers had actually omitted the most incriminating nutritional differences, which were later discovered and made public. For example, the published paper showed a 27% increase in a known allergen, trypsin inhibitor, while the recovered data raised that to a 3-fold or 7-fold increase, after the soy was cooked. This might explain why soy allergies in the UK skyrocketed by 50% soon after GM soy was introduced.

    The gene that is inserted into GM soy produces a protein with two sections that are identical to known allergens. This might also account for the increased allergy rate. Furthermore, the only human feeding trial ever conducted confirmed that this inserted gene transfers into the DNA of bacteria inside the intestines. This means that long after you decide to stop eating GM soy, your own gut bacteria may still be producing this potentially allergenic protein inside your digestive tract.

    The migration of genes might influence offspring. German scientists found fragments of the DNA fed to pregnant mice in the brains of their newborn.[10] Fragments of genetically modified DNA were also found in the blood, spleen, liver and kidneys of piglets that were fed GM corn.[11] It was not clear if the GM genes actually entered the DNA of the animal, but scientists speculate that if it were to integrate into the sex organ cells, it might impact offspring.

    The health of newborns might also be affected by toxins, allergens, or anti-nutrients in the mother's diet. These may be created in GM crops, due to unpredictable alterations in their DNA. The process of gene insertion can delete one or more of the DNA's own natural genes, scramble them, turn them off, or permanently turn them on. It can also change the expression levels of hundreds of genes. And growing the transformed cell into a GM plant through a process called tissue culture can create hundreds or thousands of additional mutations throughout the DNA.

    Most of these possibilities have not been properly evaluated in Roundup Ready soy. We don't know how many mutations or altered gene expressions are found in its DNA. Years after it was marketed, however, scientists did discover a section of natural soy DNA that was scrambled[12] and two additional fragments of the foreign gene that had escaped Monsanto's detection.

    Those familiar with the body of GM safety studies are often astounded by their superficiality. Moreover, several scientists who discovered incriminating evidence or even expressed concerns about the technology have been fired, threatened, stripped of responsibilities, or censured.[13] And when problems do arise, they are not followed up. For example, animals fed GM crops developed potentially precancerous cell growth, smaller brains, livers and testicles, damaged immune systems, bigger livers, partial atrophy of the liver, lesions in the livers, stomachs, and kidneys, inflammation of the kidneys, problems with their blood cells, higher blood sugar levels, and unexplained increases in the death rate. (See Spilling the Beans, August 2004.) None have been adequately followed-up or accounted for.

    Ermakova's research, however, will likely change that. That's because her study is easy to repeat and its results are so extreme. A 55.6% mortality rate is enormous and very worrisome. Repeating the study is the only reasonable option.

    American Academy of Environmental Medicine Urges NIH to Follow Up Study

    I presented Dr. Ermakova's findings, with her permission, at the annual conference of the American Academy of Environmental Medicine (AAEM) in Tucson on October 27, 2005. In response, the AAEM board passed a resolution asking the US National Institutes of Health (NIH) to sponsor an immediate, independent follow-up of the study. Dr. Jim Willoughby, the Academy's president, said, "Genetically modified soy, corn, canola, and cottonseed oil are being consumed daily by a significant proportion of our population. We need rigorous, independent and long-term studies to evaluate if these foods put the population at risk."

    Unfortunately, there is a feature about GM crops that makes even follow-up studies a problem. In 2003, a French laboratory analyzed the inserted genes in five GM varieties, including Roundup Ready soybeans.[14] In each case, the genetic sequence was different than that which had been described by the biotech companies years earlier. Had all the companies made a mistake? That's unlikely. Rather, the inserted genes probably rearranged over time. A Brussels lab confirmed that the genetic sequences were different than what was originally listed. But the sequences discovered in Brussels didn't all match those found by the French.[15] This suggests that the inserted genes are unstable and can change in different ways. It also means that they are creating new proteins' ones that were never intended or tested. The Roundup Ready soybeans used in the Russian test may therefore be quite different from the Roundup Ready soybeans used in follow-up studies.

    Unstable genes make accurate safety testing impossible. It also may explain some of the many problems reported about GM foods. For example, nearly 25 farmers in the US and Canada say that certain GM corn varieties caused their pigs to become sterile, have false pregnancies, or give birth to bags of water. A farmer in Germany claims that a certain variety of GM corn killed 12 of his cows and caused others to fall sick. And Filipinos living next to a GM cornfield developed skin, respiratory, and intestinal symptoms and fever, while the corn was pollinating. The mysterious symptoms returned the following year, also during pollination, and blood tests on 39 of the Filipinos showed an immune response to the Bt toxin created by the GM corn.

    These problems may be due to particular GM varieties, or they may result from a GM crop that has 'gone bad' due to genetic rearrangements. Even GM plants with identical gene sequences, however, might act differently. The amount of Bt toxin in the Philippine corn study described above, for example, varied considerably from kernel to kernel, even in the same plant.[16]

    With billions of dollars invested in GM foods, no adverse finding has yet been sufficient to reverse the industry's growth in the US. It may take some dramatic, indisputable, and life-threatening discovery. That is why Ermakova's findings are so important. If the study holds up, it may topple the GM food industry.

    I urge the NIH to agree to the AAEM's request, and fund an immediate, independent follow-up study. If NIH funding is not forthcoming, our Institute for Responsible Technology will try to raise the money. This is not the time to wait. There is too much at stake.

    ****************************************

    For other links/pics provided in this article, please go to the URL lastconundrum posted in the original post!

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  12. #12
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    Monsanto Whistleblower Says Genetically Engineered Crops May Cause Disease

    by Jeffrey M. Smith

    Global Research, November 19, 2006

    Monsanto was quite happy to recruit young Kirk Azevedo to sell their genetically engineered cotton. Kirk had grown up on a California farm and had worked in several jobs monitoring and testing pesticides and herbicides. Kirk was bright, ambitious, handsome and idealistic—the perfect candidate to project the company’s “Save the world through genetic engineering” image.

    It was that image, in fact, that convinced Kirk to take the job in 1996. “When I was contacted by the headhunter from Monsanto, I began to study the company, namely the work of their CEO, Robert Shapiro.” Kirk was thoroughly impressed with Shapiro’s promise of a golden future through genetically modified (GM) crops. “He described how we would reduce the in-process waste from manufacturing, turn our fields into factories and produce anything from lifesaving drugs to insect-resistant plants. It was fascinating to me.” Kirk thought, “Here we go. I can do something to help the world and make it a better place.”

    He left his job and accepted a position at Monsanto, rising quickly to become the facilitator for GM cotton sales in California and Arizona. He would often repeat Shapiro’s vision to customers, researchers, even fellow employees. After about three months, he visited Monsanto’s St. Louis headquarters for the first time for new employee training. There too, he took the opportunity to let his colleagues know how enthusiastic he was about Monsanto’s technology that was going to reduce waste, decrease poverty and help the world. Soon after the meeting, however, his world was shaken.

    “A vice president pulled me aside,” recalled Kirk. “He told me something like, ‘Wait a second. What Robert Shapiro says is one thing. But what we do is something else. We are here to make money. He is the front man who tells a story. We don’t even understand what he is saying.’”

    Kirk felt let down. “I went in there with the idea of helping and healing and came out with ‘Oh, I guess it is just another profit-oriented company.’” He returned to California, still holding out hopes that the new technology could make a difference.

    Possible Toxins in GM Plants

    Kirk was developing the market in the West for two types of GM cotton. Bt cotton was engineered with a gene from a soil bacterium, Bacillus thuringiensis. Organic farmers use the natural form of the bacterium as an insecticide, spraying it occasionally during times of high pest infestation. Monsanto engineers, however, isolated and then altered the gene that produces the Bt-toxin, and inserted it into the DNA of the cotton plant. Now every cell of their Bt cotton produces a toxic protein. The other variety was Roundup Ready® cotton. It contains another bacterial gene that enables the plant to survive an otherwise toxic dose of Monsanto’s Roundup® herbicide. Since the patent on Roundup’s main active ingredient, glyphosate, was due to expire in 2000, the company was planning to sell Roundup Ready seeds that were bundled with their Roundup herbicide, effectively extending their brand’s dominance in the herbicide market.

    In the summer of 1997, Kirk spoke with a Monsanto scientist who was doing some tests on Roundup Ready cotton. Using a “Western blot” analysis, the scientist was able to identify different proteins by their molecular weight. He told Kirk that the GM cotton not only contained the intended protein produced by the Roundup Ready gene, but also extra proteins that were not normally produced in the plant. These unknown proteins had been created during the gene insertion process.

    Gene insertion was done using a gene gun (particle bombardment). Kirk, who has an undergraduate degree in biochemistry, understood this to be “a kind of barbaric and messy method of genetic engineering, where you use a gun-like apparatus to bombard the plant tissue with genes that are wrapped around tiny gold particles.” He knew that particle bombardment can cause unpredictable changes and mutations in the DNA, which might result in new types of proteins.

    The scientist dismissed these newly created proteins in the cotton plant as unimportant background noise, but Kirk wasn’t convinced. Proteins can have allergenic or toxic properties, but no one at Monsanto had done a safety assessment on them. “I was afraid at that time that some of these proteins may be toxic.” He was particularly concerned that the rogue proteins “might possibly lead to mad cow or some other prion-type diseases.”

    Kirk had just been studying mad cow disease (bovine spongiform encephalopathy) and its human counterpart, Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD). These fatal diseases had been tracked to a class of proteins called prions. Short for “proteinaceous infectious particles,” prions are improperly folded proteins, which cause other healthy proteins to also become misfolded. Over time, they cause holes in the brain, severe dysfunction and death. Prions survive cooking and are believed to be transmittable to humans who eat meat from infected “mad” cows. The disease may incubate undetected for about 2 to 8 years in cows and up to 30 years in humans.

    When Kirk tried to share his concerns with the scientist, he realized, “He had no idea what I was talking about; he had not even heard of prions. And this was at a time when Europe had a great concern about mad cow disease and it was just before the Nobel prize was won by Stanley Prusiner for his discovery of prion proteins.” Kirk said “These Monsanto scientists are very knowledge about traditional products, like chemicals, herbicides and pesticides, but they don’t understand the possible harmful outcomes of genetic engineering, such as pathophysiology or prion proteins. So I am explaining to him about the potential untoward effects of these foreign proteins, but he just did not understand.”

    Endangering the Food Supply

    At this time, Roundup Ready cotton varieties were just being introduced into other regions but were still being field-tested in California. California varieties had not yet been commercialized. But Kirk came to find out that Monsanto was feeding the cotton plants used in its test plots to cattle.

    “I had great issue with this,” he said. “I had worked for Abbot Laboratories doing research, doing test plots using Bt sprays from bacteria. We would never take a test plot and put into the food supply, even with somewhat benign chemistries. We would always destroy the test plot material and not let anything into the food supply. Now we entered into a new era of genetic engineering. The standard was not the same as with pesticides. It was much lower, even though it probably should have been much higher.”

    Kirk complained to the Ph.D. in charge of the test plot about feeding the experimental plants to cows. He explained that unknown proteins, including prions, might even effect humans who consume the cow’s milk and meat. The scientist replied, “Well that’s what we’re doing everywhere else and that’s what we’re doing here.” He refused to destroy the plants.

    Kirk got a bit frantic. He started talking to others in the company. “I approached pretty much everyone on my team in Monsanto.” He was unable to get anyone interested. In fact, he said, “Once they understood my perspective, I was somewhat ostracized. It seemed as if once I started questioning things, people wanted to keep their distance from me. I lost the cooperation with other team members. Anything that interfered with advancing the commercialization of this technology was going to be pushed aside.”

    He then approached California Agriculture Commissioners. “These local Ag commissioners are traditionally responsible for test plots and to make sure test plot designs protect people and the environment.” But Kirk got nowhere. “Once again, even at the Ag commissioner level, they were dealing with a new technology that was beyond their comprehension. They did not really grasp what untoward effects might be created by the genetic engineering process itself.”

    Kirk continued to try to blow the whistle on what he thought could be devastating to the health of consumers. “I spoke to many Ag commissioners. I spoke to people at the University of California. I found no one who would even get it, or even get the connection that proteins might be pathogenic, or that there might be untoward effects associated with these foreign proteins that we knew we were producing. They didn’t even want to talk about it really. You’d kind of see a blank stare when speaking to them on this level. That led me to say I am not going to be part of this company anymore. I’m not going to be part of this disaster, from a moral perspective.”

    Kirk gave his two-week notice. In early January 1998, he finished his last day of work in the morning and in the afternoon started his first day at chiropractic college. He was still determined to make a positive difference for the world, but with a radically changed approach.

    While in school, he continued to research prion disease and its possible connection with GM crops. What he read then and what is known now about prions has not alleviated his concerns. He says, “The protein that manifests as mad cow disease takes about five years. With humans, however, that time line is anywhere from 10-30 years. We were talking about 1997 and today is 2006. We still don’t know if there is anything going to happen to us from our being used as test subjects.”

    Update

    It turns out that the damage done to DNA due to the process of creating a genetically modified organism is far more extensive than previously thought.[1] GM crops routinely create unintended proteins, alter existing protein levels or even change the components and shape of the protein that is created by the inserted gene. Kirk’s concerns about a GM crop producing a harmful misfolded protein remain well-founded, and have been echoed by scientists as one of the many possible dangers that are not being evaluated by the biotech industry’s superficial safety assessments.

    GM cotton has provided ample reports of unpredicted side-effects. In April 2006, more than 70 Indian shepherds reported that 25% of their herds died within 5-7 days of continuous grazing on Bt cotton plants.[2] Hundreds of Indian agricultural laborers reported allergic reactions from Bt cotton. Some cotton harvesters have been hospitalized and many laborers in cotton gin factories take antihistamines each day before work.[3]

    The cotton’s agronomic performance is also erratic. When Monsanto’s GM cotton varieties were first introduced in the US, tens of thousands of acres suffered deformed roots and other unexpected problems. Monsanto paid out millions in settlements.[4] When Bt cotton was tested in Indonesia, widespread pest infestation and drought damage forced withdrawal of the crop, despite the fact that Monsanto had been bribing at least 140 individuals for years, trying to gain approval.[5] In India, inconsistent performance has resulted in more than $80 million dollars in losses in each of two states.[6] Thousands of indebted Bt cotton farmers have committed suicide. In Vidarbha, in north east Maharashtra, from June through August 2006, farmers committed suicide at a rate of about one every eight hours.[7] (The list of adverse reactions reported from other GM crops, in lab animals, livestock and humans, is considerably longer.)

    Kirk’s concern about GM crop test plots also continues to remain valid. The industry has been consistently inept at controlling the spread of unapproved varieties. On August 18, 2006, for example, the USDA announced that unapproved GM long grain rice, which was last field tested by Bayer CropScience in 2001, had contaminated the US rice crop[8] (probably for the past 5 years). Japan responded by suspending long grain rice imports and the EU will now only accept shipments that are tested and certified GM-free. Similarly, in March 2005, the US government admitted that an unapproved corn variety had escaped from Syngenta’s field trials four years earlier and had contaminated US corn.[9] By year’s end, Japan had rejected at least 14 shipments containing the illegal corn. Other field trialed crops have been mixed with commercial varieties, consumed by farmers, stolen, even given away by government agencies and universities who had accidentally mixed seed varieties.

    Some contamination from field trials may last for centuries. That may be the fate of a variety of unapproved Roundup Ready grass which, according to reports made public in August 2006, had escaped into the wild from an Oregon test plot years earlier. Pollen had crossed with other varieties and wind had dispersed seeds. Scientists believe that the variety will cross pollinate with other grass varieties and may contaminate the commercial grass seed supply—70 percent of which is grown in Oregon.

    Even GM crops with known poisons are being grown outdoors without adequate safeguards for health and the environment. A corn engineered to produce pharmaceutical medicines, for example, contaminated corn and soybean fields in Iowa and Nebraska in 2002.[10] On August 10, 2006, a federal judge ruled that the drug-producing GM crops grown in Hawaii violated both the Endangered Species Act and the National Environmental Policy Act.[11]

    A December 29, 2005 report by the USDA office of Inspector General, blasted the agriculture department for its abysmal oversight of GM field trials, particularly for the high risk drug producing crops.[12] And a January 2004 report by the National Research Council also called upon the government to strengthen its oversight, but acknowledged that there is no way to guarantee that field trialed crops will not pollute the environment.[13]

    With the US government failing to prevent GM contamination, and with state governments and agriculture commissioners unwilling to challenge the dictates of the biotech industry, some California counties decided to enact regulations of their own. California’s diverse agriculture is particularly vulnerable and thousands of field trials on not-yet-approved GM crops have already taken place there. If contamination were discovered, it could easily devastate an industry. Four counties have enacted moratoria or bans on the planting of GM crops, including both approved and unapproved varieties. This follows the actions of more than 4500 jurisdictions in Europe and dozens of nations, states and regions on all continents, which have sought to restrict planting of GM crops to protect their health, environment and agriculture.

    Ironically, California’s assembly, which has done nothing to protect the state from possible losses due to GM crop contamination, passed a bill on August 24, 2006 that prohibits other counties and cities from creating GM free zones. The senate is expected to vote on the issue by the end of their session on August 31st (see http://www.calgefree.org/preemption.shtml). It is yet another example of how the biotech industry has been able to push their agenda onto US consumers, without regard to health and environmental safeguards. No doubt that their lobbyists, anxious to have this bill pass, told legislators that GM crops are needed to stop poverty and feed a hungry world.

    [Update 9/1/06: The California Senate session ended without senators voting on the bill to prevent local jurisdictions from creating GM-Free zones. For the time being at least, California counties and cities may still enact GM-Free zones. Click here to read the full press release.]

    Jeffrey Smith’s forthcoming book, Genetic Roulette, documents more than 60 health risks of GM foods in easy-to-read two-page spreads, and demonstrates how current safety assessments are not competent to protect consumers from the dangers. His previous book, Seeds of Deception (www.seedsofdeception.com), is the world’s best-selling book on the subject. He is available for media at info@seedsofdeception.com. Dr. Kirk Azevedo has a chiropractic office in Cambria, California. Press may reach him at (805) 927-1055 or at drkirk@charter.net.

    [1] JR Latham et al., “The Mutational Consequences of Plant Transformation,” The Journal of Biomedicine and Biotechnology, Vol 2006 Article ID 25376 Pages 1-7, DOI 10.1155/JBB/2006/25376; for a more in-depth discussion, see also Allison Wilson et al., “Genome Scrambling -Myth or Reality? Transformation-Induced Mutations in Transgenic Crop Plants, Technical Report - October 2004, www.econexus.info.

    [2] Mortality in Sheep Flocks after Grazing on Bt Cotton Fields – Warangal District, Andhra Pradesh. Report of the Preliminary Assessment April 2006, http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=6494

    [3]Ashish Gupta, et. al., Impact of Bt Cotton on Farmers’ Health (in Barwani and Dhar District of Madhya Pradesh), Investigation Report, Oct - Dec 2005

    [4] See for example, Monsanto Cited In Crop Losses New York Times, June 16, 1998 , http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpag...5C0A96E958260; and Greenpeace http://archive.greenpeace.org/geneng...o/intrgmo5.htm

    [5] Antje Lorch, Monsanto Bribes in Indonesia, Monsanto Fined For Bribing Indonesian Officials to Avoid Environmental Studies for Bt Cotton, ifrik 1sep2005, http://www.mindfully.org/GE/2005/Mon...esia1sep05.htm

    [6] Bt Cotton - No Respite for Andhra Pradesh Farmers More than 400 crores' worth losses for Bt Cotton farmers in Kharif 2005 Centre for Sustainable Agriculture: Press Release, March 29, 2006 http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=6393; see also November 14, 2005 article in www.NewKerala.comregarding Madhya Pradesh.

    [7] Jaideep Hardikar, One suicide every 8 hours, Daily News & Analysis (India), August 26, 2006 http://www.dnaindia.com/report.asp?NewsID=1049554

    [8] Rick Weiss, U.S. Rice Supply Contaminated, Genetically Altered Variety Is Found in Long-Grain Rice, Washington Post, August 19, 2006

    [9]Jeffrey Smith, US Government and Biotech Firm Deceive Public on GM Corn Mix-up, Spilling the Beans, April 2005

    [10] See for example, Christopher Doering, ProdiGene to spend millions on bio-corn tainting, Reuters News Service, USA: December 9, 2002
    [11] See www.centerforfoodsafety.org

    [12]Office of Inspector General, USDA, Audit Report Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service Controls Over Issuance of Genetically Engineered Organism Release Permits, December 2005 http://www.thecampaign.org/USDA_IG_1205.pdf

    [1 3] Justin Gillis, Genetically Modified Organisms Not Easily Contained; National Research Council Panel Urges More Work to Protect Against Contamination of Food Supply, Washington Post, Jan 21, 2004

    Global Research Articles by Jeffrey M. Smith

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  13. #13
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    Folks, also see related threads:

    What Shall We Eat?

    The What and Why of Bees?

    Do unto Others as you would have them do unto you



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