| 
WESSEX
Campaign to ban genetically engineered
food
What leading scientists and public
figures have said about the dangers of genetically
modified foods
(NLP WESSEX LOCAL
PAGE)
WILL
GENETICALLY ENGINEERED CROPS MEAN INFECTED FOOD, BODIES,
AND ECOSYSTEMS ?
(for
full details of the scientific case, including published
research, on the dangers of genetically modified foods
click here)
Medical
problems with genetically engineered insulin
Will GM crops deliver benefits to
farmers? - some realities behind biotechnology myths

Why genetic
engineering is not science based
World scientists issue call for ban on
GM environmental releases
The
safety of GE foods - Reasons to expect hazards and the
risk for their appearance
The
big lie - GM foods have been tested as safe - Mystery of
missing research
British Medical Association calls for
GMO moratorium - statement
Are GMOs essential for effective sustainable
agriculture in a hungry world?
Bogus
claims for 'golden eye' Vitamin A GM rice - Greenpeace
briefing
Feeding the world without GM foods - articles
NLP OECD
GM risks briefing paper
Fundamental
scientific conceptual errors in the
development of recombinant DNA technology
Corrupt Science-Business interface
Suppressing Dissent in Science With
GM Foods
(The internet
address of this page is http://www.btinternet.com/~nlpwessex/Documents/gmoquote.htm)
Health Statistics -
Lies, Damn Lies, and GM foods? - click here
Special risks
with field scale environmental releases of GMOs
Special risks from the Cauliflower
Mosaic Virus promoter in transgenic crops
Political
compliance V sound science - biotech debacle set to
unfold further?
Population
duped by genetic engineers
''We simply do
not have enough reliable scientific evidence on their
safety to be able to make a valid decision as to whether
there are potential health effects or not.''
Charles Saunders, chairman of the British
Medical Association's public health committee
"The perception that everything is totally
straightforward and safe is utterly naive. I don't think
we fully understand the dimensions of what we're getting
into."
Professor Philip James (author of the
"James" report on the structure and functions
of the proposed UK Food Standards Agency to oversee
national food safety standards), Director of the Rowett
Research Institute, Aberdeen, on genetically engineered
food.
Rowett
Research Institute
The
Foods Standards Agency
'Science'
magazine - Dec 2000 - GM risk-benefit analysis has not
been done
"There is... a need to
develop more effective and appropriate screening methods
to alert companies and government agencies to the
unexpected consequences of the often random insertion of
genetic traits into plants."
From Professor Philip James' evidence to the House of
Commons Select Committee on Science and Technology, March
1999.
GM
warning over dangerous chemicals entering food chain
USDA
has not done GMO risk assessments
"If one is going to
introduce a particular protein genetically one can look
at the structure of the protein and ask if we know that
this type of structure causes allergies. But if you say
the structure may be slightly modified in this particular
plant, how on earth are we going to assess whether that
is going to induce in a very small subsection of the
population an unknown allergenic response? I am not sure
how we are going to cope with that yet."
From Professor Philip James' evidence to
the House of Lords European Communities Committee,
January 1999
Scientists
don't have GM safety answers - Nature magazine
Soya
allergy rates skyrocket -- Monsanto's Roundup-Ready Soy
Blamed
Covered
up US study shows damage to rats from BST
Canadian
senate investigation into GM rBST cover-up
Fox BST suit
US
consumers union - Potential Public Health Impacts Of The
Use Of rbGH In Dairy Production
"The experts [at the Royal
Society of Canada] say this approach [of'substantial
equivalence'] is fatally flawed for genetically modified,
or GM, crops and exposes Canadians to several potential
healthrisks, including toxicity and allergic
reactions."
Toronto Star, 5 Feb 2000, on Royal
Society of Canada report on Biotechnology
Toronto
star on Royal Society of Canada Report
Download
full CRS report
Canadian
'U-turn' Exposes Poor GM Safety Testing in US - Aug 2000
"Biotechnology
relies to a large extent on our ability to introduce
foreign genes into cells. A major problem with present
day technology is the non-predictability of the
integration of such transgenes. DNA introduced into plant
cells mostly integrates at random, i.e. at
non-predetermined positions of the genome. The biological
process ultimately responsible for random integration is
known as illegitimate recombination. DNA integrated at
random frequently contains multiple copies and often
copies are scrambled. Multiple copies also often induce
gene silencing and hence instability in the expression of
the introduced genes. In addition, the DNA integrates at
loci of unknown stability and capacity for expression and
randomly integrated copies may induce unpredictable and
undesirable mutations in the host genome.....Although our
understanding of the general biology of recombination in
plants is constantly improving, we still lack the
knowledge for precision engineering of plants'
genes."
Study on behalf of the European
Commission on GM food safety from Université Blaise Pascal Aubière (FR),
Max-Planck-Institut für Züchtungsforschung Köln (DE),
University of Ghent (BE)
European Commission lacks
confidence in own GM safety tests - More Details
".....there is no precise
harmonisation of methodologies to assure the safety of
transgenic food products, it being difficult to use
traditional animal feeding studies for toxicological
assessments. This clearly raises biosafety issues for the
use of GM products in food. In vivo and in vitro
validated nutritional-toxicological testing procedures
are urgently required. .....if the testing procedure
investigated in this project does not allow assessment of
the toxicity of the gene products introduced into the
food product via the GM plants, the whole strategy for
the safety assessment of novel foods from GM plants will
need to be revised".
Study on behalf of the European
Commission on GM food safety from Institute of Food
Safety and Toxicology
Søborg, Denmark (DK)
European Commission lacks
confidence in own GM safety tests - More Details
"One of the key issues in
the risk assessment of GM crop plants is whether
unexpected hazardous metabolic perturbations (so-called
unintended effects) may have taken place in the organism
due to genetic modification, that could affect its food
or nutritional status. It is recognised that no adequate
and effective animal models to identify and trace the
sources of potential unintended effects are currently
available. The objective of this project is to develop
new methodologies that are of sufficient sensitivity and
specificity to assess risks from this possible food-borne
hazard. Implicit in this objective is the need to develop
new knowledge which will serve as a basis to understand
the implications of the genetic modification process on
metabolic pathways in plants. ........The project
is highly pertinent to EU legislation on Novel Foods and
GM food crops in particular. It is especially relevant to
underpin Community policies. The new methodology will
also be of use for the agro-food industry as it
contributes to a more informed awareness of the 'real
risks' related to GM foods by providing an objective
scientific data package directed towards a holistic view
of the genetic modification process."
Study on behalf of the European
Commission on GM food safety from State Institute for
Quality Control of Agricultural Products (RIKILT)
Wageningen, Netherlands
European Commission lacks
confidence in own GM safety tests - More Details
"We all wish there was a
test where you plug in a protein and out pops a 'yes' or
'no' answer."
Sue MacIntosh, a protein chemist with
biotechnology company AgrEvo, on the difficulties of
carrying out allergy testing on GM foods.
Scientists
call for tougher GM tests
'Substantial
Equivalence' - a flawed food safety system for GM crops
FDA
scientists question soy safety - but where is GM testing?
"Well, I agree with you in the sense that
when you use these methods you don't know what part of
the chromosome that the new gene is being introduced into
and that is, you know, what I would say is a drawback to
the technology."
Professor Bevan Mosely, former head of the Institute
of Food Research, Reading, and a current member of the
United Kingdom's Advisory Committee on Novel Foods and
Processes (ACNFP) responsible for reviewing the safety of
genetically modified foods, in a response to the question
- "So how can we know that something isn't
really going to go horrendously wrong?" - put
to him by Charles Colett of Radio Wey Valley, Hampshire,
United Kingdom, February 1998.
UK
soya allergies increase dramatically - GM soya is suspect
- March 99
Special risks with field scale
environmental releases of GMOs
"Potentially disastrous
effects may come from undetected harmful substances in
Genetically Modified Foods."
Dr Andrew Chesson, vice chairman of
European Commission scientific committee on animal
nutrition and formerly an ardent advocate of food
biotechnology (A year earlier Dr Chesson chaired the
audit committee which ruled there was no evidence to
support Dr Pusztai's claims on the toxicity of GM
potatoes).
Horizontal
GM crop gene transfer to bacteria in guts of bees
GM
cover ups - Pusztai interview in 'The Hindu'
"I personally think that the
chance of creating some novel food problems with the GM
product is there. I think it is unlikely but I
wouldn't put my hand on my heart and swear it was not
so."
Sir Robert May, President of the Royal Society (and Chief
Scientific Officer to the UK Government 1995-2000)
"These findings demonstrate
the fragmentary nature of current knowledge of genome
structure and function and regulation of gene expression
in general, and the limited understanding of several
physiological, ecological, agronomical and toxicological
aspects relevant to present-day and planned genetic
modifications of crops"
Plant Research
International (No. 12) 70 pp, 2000
"I don't think any of us
would disagree that, if an alternative exists to a GE
solution, it's to be preferred"
Mr Hodson QC acting on behalf of the Life
Sciences Network at the New Zealand Royal
Commission on Genetic Modification 8th Feb 2001,
p3480 or proceedings - line 2 http://www.gmcommission.govt.nz/inquiry/08FEB01.pdf
"The processes of genetic engineering and
traditional breeding are different, and according to the
technical experts in the agency, they lead to different
risks."
Dr. Linda Kahl US Food and Drug Agency
compliance officer - internal memorandum
Full
memorandum - click here
"A genetically engineered plant may
contain an identical profile of expected plant toxicant
levels (ie expected toxicants)
as is normally found in a closely related, natural plant.
However, gentically modified plants could also contain
unexpected high concentrations of plant toxicants. The
presence of high levels of toxicants in the bioengineered
plant food could occur by two or more mechanisms.........
The unexpected toxicants could be closely
related chemicals produced by common metabolic pathways
in the same plant genus/species; however, unexpected
toxicants could also be uniquely different chemicals that
are usually expressed in unrelated plants....
The task of assessing the presence or the
abscence of expected and unexpected toxicants in plants
and the control plant could be very difficult, because
thousands of plant biochemicals have been shown to have
toxic effects on animals and microorganisms."
Dr. Edwin J. Mathews Department of Health and Human
Services, Public Health Service US - memorandum to the
FDA Toxicology Section of the Biotechnology Working Group
Full
memorandum - click here
"At this time it is unlikely that
molecular and compositional analysis can reasonably
detect or predict all possible changes in toxicant levels
or the development of new toxic metabolites as a result
of gentic modifications introduced by the methods of
biotechnology."
Dr. Samuel I. Shibko Director of Division of
Toxicological Review and Evaluation, Department of Health
and Human Services, Public Health Service US - memorandum
to Dr. James Maryansksi, FDA Biotechnology Coordinator
Full
memorandum - click here
"There is a profound difference between
the types of unexpected effects from traditional breeding
and genetic engineering which is just glanced over in
this document.....
Unexpected Effects - This is the industry's
pet idea, namely that there are no unintended effects
that will raise the FDA's level of concern. But time and
time again, there is no data to backup their contention,
while the scientific literature does contain many
examples of naturally occurring pleitropic
[multi-response] effects. When the introduction of gene's
into [a] plant's genome randomly occurs, as in the case
of the current technology (but not traditional breeding)
it seems that many pleiotropic [multi-response] effects
will occur. Many of these effects might not be seen by
the breeder because of the more or less similar growing
conditions in the limited trials that are performed...
.......introduced proteins (enzymes) that
while acting on one specific, intended substrate to
produce a desired effect, will also affect other cellular
molecules, either as substrates, or by swamping the
plant's regulatory/metabolic system and depriving the
plant of resources needed for other things. It is not
prudent to rely on plant breeders always finding these
types of changes (especially when they are under pressure
to get a product out)."
Dr. Louis Priybl of the US Food and Drug Administation
Microbiology Group - internal memorandum on FDA GM food
safety testing policy document
Full
memorandum - click here
"In addition to the human food safety and
environmental concerns outlined in the appendices to the
Notice, CVM believes that animal feeds derived from
genetically modified plants present unique animal and
food safety concerens .....
Residues of plant constituents or toxicants in
meat and milk products may pose human food safety
problems. For example, increased levels of glucosinolates
or erusic acid in rapeseed may produce a residue problem
in edible products."
Dr. Gerald B. Guest, Director of the FDA Center for
Veterinary Medicine (CVM), to Dr. James Maryanski, FDA
Biotechnology Coordinator. Subject: "Regulation of
Transgenic PlantsFDA Draft Federal Register Notice
on Food Biotechnology."
Full
memorandum - click here
"The scientific case put forward for this
GM maize is not adequate. If the GM maize was approved
for commercial growing in the UK then people would be
justified in turning their back on consuming milk derived
from it. As a scientist I wouldn't drink milk from cows
fed GM maize with the present state of knowledge."
Professor Bob Orskov, director of the International
Feed Resource Unit in Aberdeen, Scotland at UK MAFF
hearings in London, October 2000, concerning proposals to
allow Aventis's GM forage maize, Chardon LL onto the
National Seed List.
Transgenic
Animal Feed Could Affect Dairy Products
"As hon. Members have said, some of the
new [genetically engineered] wonder drugs have been
accepted, and I think rightly so. There is some
comfort in the regulatory process for medicine which,
I admit, is not in place for food and agriculture."
Jeff Rooker, Minister of State for Food Safety, House
of Commons, July 30 1998
Medical
problems and fatalities with genetically engineered
insulin
Six
Gene Therapy Deaths Kept From NIH
GE
insulin class action suit
"Why don't we require a pharmaceutical
type analysis of the safety of these foods with proper
trials?"
Jack Cunningham, UK cabinet minister with overall
responsibility for biotechnology, raising a variety of
issues in relation to GM crops and food in a leaked
internal memo to one of his civil servants, February 1999
Ministers
'ignoring public' on GM food
"Almost everything we
grow, everything we eat is the root result of human
intervention, human breeding and so on. But this is
unnatural in a different sort of way from the kinds of
breeding programs that have characterized humanity for
ten thousand years....
So the question which people
have, I believe, not only a right but a duty to ask, is
how wisely will we use these unprecedented new powers? What
are the risks associated with doing something this new
and this profound at the very wellsprings of life? How
are they going to be managed? How will we have credible
oversight? How will we have credible and effective
monitoring of the introduction of this technology?
Certainly, humanity's record for using technology wisely,
sensitive to its potential effects on society, on people,
on environment is, at best, mixed and hardly
encouraging....
We have not yet identified, yet
alone cloned, the gene for wisdom, and some skepticism
about our ability to manage powerful new technologies is
appropriate.... "
Robert Shapiro,Chief Executive of
Monsanto - speech on genetic engineering presented at
State of the World Forum, Fairmont Hotel, San Francisco,
CA , October 27, 1998
FBI find illegal GMOs in US animal feed
allegations
Fraud and corruption in US gm approvals system
US Government
deception about GMOs exposed - Feb 2000
Scientists
'asked to fix results for backer' - Daily Telegraph - Feb
2000
Monsanto
and the regulators - Ecologist magazine
"But we realize that with
any new and powerful technology with unknown, and to some
degree unknowable - by definition - effects, then there
necessarily will be an appropriate level at least, and
maybe even more than that, of
public debate and public interest."
Bob Shapiro, Chief Executive of Monsanto,
admitting that the effects of genetic engineering are
unknown and "to some degree" unknowable (SWF
News interview, San Francisco, 27 October 1998).
Meningitis
fear over GM food
US NLP presents 500,000 signature petition to
Congress on transgenic foods - June 99
New GM warning over danger chemicals entering
food chain
"We're in
a crisis position where we know the weaknesses of the
genetic concept, but we don't know how to incorporate it
into a more complete understanding. Monsanto knows this.
DuPont knows this. Novartis knows this. They all know
what I know. But they don't want to look at it
because it's too complicated and it's going to cost too
much to figure it out."
Richard Strohman,
Professor Emeritus, Department of Molecular and Cell
Biology, University of California, Berkeley
Full article
"We don't know
shit about biology."
Craig Venter, the scientist whose company completed
the sequencing of the human genome in 2000 ("Decoding
the genome" Ralph Brave, Jan. 9, 2001)
"In everyday language the talk is about a
gene for this and a gene for that. We are now finding
that that is rarely so. The number of genes that work in
that way can almost be counted on your fingers, because
we are just not hard-wired in that way."....
(Times, MONDAY FEBRUARY 12 2001)
"Probably the greatest threat from genetically
altered crops is the insertion of modified virus and
insect virus genes into crops. It has been shown in the
laboratory that genetic recombination
will create highly virulent new viruses from such
constructions. Certainly the widely used cauliflower
mosaic virus [CaMV] is a potentially dangerous gene. It
is a pararetrovirus meaning that it multiplies by making
DNA from RNA messages. It is very similar to the
Hepatitis B virus and related to HIV."
Dr. Joseph Cummins, professor emeritus in genetics
from the university of West-Ontario
More on the CaMV
promoter
The
use of the Cauliflower Mosaic viral promoter (CaMV 35S) ,
Joseph Cummins
Professor
Cummins - more on viral recombination effects in
transgenic plants
The Virus
Hazard
"At present, the success of
transgene expression is variable, and many transformation
experiments have to be carried out in order to isolate a
small number of useful lines. Many factors can
influence the behaviour of foreign DNA when it integrates
into the plant genome. Such factors include the
position of integration, possible rearrangements of the
exogenous DNA by recombination,
and the activation of endogenous plant defence systems
that have evolved to suppress the activity of 'invading'
DNA. (Fig.17)..."
"Fig.17
Transgene rearrangements often occur at regions rich in
DNA secondary structure, such as the CAMV 35S promoter,
which can form the cruciform structure shown above.
This allows recombination
to occur, as shown by the green arrow."
John Innes Centre and Sainsbury
Laboratory Annual Report 1998/99, p22 -23
More on the CaMV
promoter
"A recent study of
transgenic rice carried out at the John Innes Institute
supports previous evidence that there is a 'recombination
hotspot' in the CaMV 35S promoter. A recombination
hotspot is a site prone to recombination, ie, breaking
and joining with other DNA. Furthermore, some of the recombination
events are 'illegitimate' or nonhomologous, and do not
require substantial similarity in nucleic acid base
sequence.
The results show that the CaMV
promoter is very likely to recombine with other DNA in
the host genome, including dormant viral DNA, as well as
with other viruses in the host cell. Transgenic lines
containing CaMV promoters, which includes practically all
that have been released, are therefore prone to
instability due to rearrangements, and also have the
potential to create new viruses or other invasive genetic
elements.
Such elements cannot be contained
or controlled once they have entered the wider
environment. It is now indisputable that recombination
events will take place at the CaMV promoter in the
current generation of transgenic plants. The continued
release of such transgenic plants is unwarranted
especially in the light of the new findings."
Angela Ryan, Molecular Biologist,
Institute of Science in Society and Biology Department,
Open University, on work carried out by the John Innes
Centre on the Cauliflower Mosaic Virus promoter used in
most transgenic plants and published in The
Plant Journal 17(6), pp 591-601 (March, 1999).
More on the CaMV
promoter
Viral
danger from GM crops confirmed - John Innes Study details
Cauliflower Mosaic
Viral Promoter A Recipe for Disaster? Microbial
Ecology in Health and Disease 1999 ; 11 (4).
"Clearly the assumption that
a transformed crop is exactly the sum of the original
crop and the introduced gene is not acceptable. RDNA
techniques are profoundly different from traditional
breeding methods and are well known to cause unexpected
metabolic perturbations. The principle of
substantial equivalence is not scientifically
justifiable; hence we can make no a
priori assumption of the safety of any rDNA
manipulation."
From 'The Promise of Plant
Biotechnology - The Threat of Genetically
Modified Organisms', article by Patrick Brown,
Professor of Pomology and Director of International
Programs, College of Agriculture & Environmental
Science, University of California, Davis: http://www.lifesciencenz.com/repository/external_news_material/promise_opponent.htm
.
"Next time you hear a scientist asserting
that gene splicing is safe, remind yourself that there is
no scientific evidence for that statement. We are
profoundly ignorant about what we are doing to the code
that generates all life. And unfortunately some
scientists, including those entrusted with public safety,
are willing to lie".
Donella H. Meadows is an adjunct professor of
environmental studies at Dartmouth College.
"A review of existing scientific
literature reveals that key experiments on both the
environmental risks and benefits are lacking....Our
inability to accurately predict ecological consequences,
especially longterm, higher order interactions, increases
the uncertainty associated with a risk assessment and may
require modifications in our risk management
strategies."
L. L. Wolfenbarger 1 and P. R. Phifer 2, SCIENCE VOL
290 15 DECEMBER 2000 2088093
Lethal
effects of bt corn on Monarch Butterfly
"The basic features of
general risk assessment of GMOs are understandably
different from those associated with chemicals.
Genetically modified organisms are living organisms and
therefore, unlike chemicals that may become diluted, GMOs
have the potential to disperse to new habitats, colonize
those sites, and multiply. Their novel activities,
including the production of metabolic products, enzymes
and toxins will occur as long as the GMOs remain
metabolically active. Once established, living organisms
cannot be recalled."
Seidler RJ, Watrud LS & George SE -
1998. Assessing risks to ecosystems and human health from
genetically modified organisms. In "Handbook of
environmental risk assessment and management"
Editors: Calow, P. Publisher: Blackwell Science Ltd
Oxford, UK. pp. 110-146.
"...the public are ahead of many
scientists and policy advisors in their instinctive
feeling for a need to act in a precautionary way."
The Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC)
(funded by the UK government), report on "The politics of GM food: Risk, science &
public trust"
Economic and Science Research Council - THE GM
FOOD MESS
"There is already a crisis of credibility
for policy makers. There should be no hidden agendas.
There should be clear and specific reasons for policy
being made behind closed doors. In Britain we have the
opposite. In my view that is the wrong way round. We need
to change the culture. The policy makers got it wrong. GM
food is a socially sensitive technology. It is
significantly out of step with public opinion, or has
become so."
Professor John Durrant, head of science communication
at the Science Museum, speaking at the OECD conference in
Edinburgh on GM food safety, February 2000.
How US put pressure on Blair over GM food - see
fourth item
"This [genetic engineering]
is a matter far too important to be left solely in the
hands of the scientific and medical communities. The
belief that
science always moves forward represents
a form of laissez-faire nonsense dismally reminiscent of
the credo that American business if left to itself will
solve everybody's problems. Just as the success of a
corporate body in making money need not set the human
condition ahead, neither does every scientific advance
automatically make our lives more 'meaningful'."
Dr. James D. Watson, co-discoverer of the
double helix structure of DNA and Nobel Laureate
"The genetic modification of food is
intrinsically dangerous. It involves making irreversible
changes in a random manner to a complex level of life
about which little is known. It is inevitable that this
hit-and-miss approach will lead to disasters. It must
disrupt the natural intelligence of the plant or animal
to which it is applied, and lead to health-damaging
side-effects."
Dr Geoffrey Clements, leader of the Natural Law Party,
UK.
Tryptophan
toxicity incident - $2 billion in claims for deaths and
disease
"If you look at the simple principle of
genetic modification it spells ecological disaster. There
are no ways of quantifying the risks......The solution is
simply to ban the use of genetic modification in
food."
Dr Harash Narang, microbiologist and senior research
associate at the University of Leeds, who originally
caused a scientific and political storm by claiming a
link between mad cow disease and CJD in humans.
GE crops with
Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) genes suspected to disturb
soil ecology
"Swapping genes between organisms can
produce unknown toxic effects and allergies that are most
likely to affect children"
Dr Vyvyan Howard: expert in infant toxico-pathology at
Liverpool, University Hospital, UK
UK
soya allergies increase dramatically - GM soya is suspect
- March 99
"We believe the time has come for
the technology to be assessed on how safe it is for the
environment and for sustainable farming. The
current research is not designed to evaluate risk,
only to find out how to make it work."
Dr Neil Macgregor, a soil microbiologist, is an
academic member of the Soil & Earth Sciences
group in the Institute of Natural Resources, Massey
University, New Zealand.
"I definitely think we need more
knowledge before we make the same mistakes with GM
foods that we made with penicillin - and I most
clearly think we should stop doing this until we know
more about it,"
Steven Jones, professor of genetics at
University College, London
"The issues have simply not been
addressed and I think that's what is profoundly
unsatisfactory. The fundamental problem of the way
in which GM foods have been approved is that they
haven't really been tested properly at all. All that has
happened is something which I would characterise as an
exercise in wishful thinking."
Dr. Erik Millstone, Sussex University, on the
inadequacies of GM food testing interviewed in a Channel
4 report on the "substanial equivalence"
proceedure for GM foods which the program claimed is a
testing system agreed in a backroom deal between
governments and companies designed to get GM products
onto the market quickly and cheaply.
'Substantial
Equivalence' - a flawed food safety system for GM crops
Monsanto
employees and government regulatory agencies employees
are the same people!
"A further area of concern has to do with
plants that are modified to contain genes from viral
pathogens of crops which might exchange these genes with
other viral pathogens, creating entirely new viral
strains with unknown properties. An epidemic of African
Cassava Mosaic Virus currently devastating the cassava
crop in East Africa has been shown to be the result of
natural recombination. Researchers need to make sure that
viral genes added to a plant to confer resistance do not
also lead to the creation of new viruses..."
"...The question of allergic reactions to
new proteins is more theoretical [than the creation of
antibiotic resistance]. It comes, of course, from
transplanted genes producing proteins in the plants which
may cause allergic reactions in people eating the food.
There is a lot of rhetoric about allergies, but there
appears to be a real rise in the number of allergic
reactions in industrialized countries. The extent and the
etiology are the subject of heated debate amongst
specialists. Is it possible that new plant varieties
could create new allergies or exacerbate existing ones?
Of course."
Professor Gordon Conway, President of the Rockefeller
Foundation and former vice-chancellor of the University
of Sussex
Viral
danger from GM crops confirmed - John Innes Study details
"An ecosystem, you can always intervene
and change something in it, but there's no way of
knowing what all the downstream effects will be or how it
might affect the environment. We have such a
miserably poor understanding of how the organism develops
from its DNA that I would be surprised if we don't get
one rude shock after another."
Professor Richard Lewontin, Professor of Genetics,
Harvard University
Impact
of bt varieties on Monarch butterflies - University of
Iowa
"Genetic modification of food is a
dangerous game of ecological roulette. To take one
example, I'm sure there will be a significant increase in
deaths from certain types of cancer. If that is the only
adverse effect we will have been lucky.
We simply cannot predict the ecological
effects of genetic modification. GM forces
evolution to take place in one generation rather than
hundreds.
Manipulating DNA creates a new substance and
it may not behave in the same ways as the origninal
version. And existing tests, which only detect
already-known toxins, may not reveal man-made ones.
We simply do not know what we are doing."
Samuel Epstein, M.D., Professor of Environmental
Medicine at the University of Illinois School of Public
Health and Chairman of the Cancer Prevention Coalition
Substantial
equivalence versus scientific safety assessment of
genetically engineered food - at a glance summary.
"
GM crops really do carry
theoretical dangers that could be ironed out, given time,
but will not because the companies that develop them
cannot afford to wait.
it is entirely unsurprising that GM
crops could be toxic. Most domestic crops have poisonous
relatives (potatoes and tomatoes belonging to the
nightshade family, Solanaceae)
or are descended from poisonous ancestors (potatoes,
tomatoes, parsnips etc). The modern crops may still
contain the genes that make the toxins: not lost, but
merely dampened down. Most genes are pleiotropic - they
have many different and often unrelated effects. Many
genes affect the function of other genes.
Thus an alien gene parachuted by genetic
engineering into the genome of a potato or a tomato could
well reawaken the ancient genes of toxicity. Now and
again we should expect this. We can test to see if this
has happened but we cannot do this in one generation.
Genes combine through sexual reproduction; a gene that
has no effect in one combination may make itself felt in
another. We would need to breed a GM crop for many
crosses before we plumb the possibilities of any freshly
introduced gene. How long would this take? How long can a
company wait for returns on its investment? The pressure
to cut corners is constant and inevitable
"
Colin Tudge, Research Fellow, London School of
Economics
The approval of
Monsanto's Roundup Ready Soy as a food not based on
reliable scientific evidence.
"[Most scientists] warn that it is likely
to be impossible to enforce [labelling] laws once many
[GM] food products enter food processing systems... I
don't think many scientists would oppose labelling of
something clearly modified, but the problem arises in the
use of overseas ingredients which may have been
modified."
Sir John Scott, President of the Royal Society, New
Zealand
Labelling
laws fail to protect consumers from gm ingredients - Feb
99
"We dont know what genetic
abnormalities might be incorporated into the genome [the
individuals DNA]. Im more worried about
humans than about the environment, to be honest. One of
the problems is that because its a long-term thing,
you need to do long-term experiments."
Gordon McVie, head of the Cancer Research Campaign.
"I see worries in the fact that we have
the power to manipulate genes in ways that would be
improbable or impossible through conventional evolution.
We shouldnt be complacent in thinking that we can
predict the results."
Colin Blakemore, Waynflete professor of physiology at
Oxford University and President of the British
Association for the Advancement of Science.
"Evolutionary history should provide the
primary basis for assessing biological integrity".
Paul Angermeier & James Karr, "Biological
Integrity vs. Biological Diversity...Protecting biotic
resources", BioScience, vol. 44 #10, Nov. 1994
"If it is left to me, I would certainly not eat
it. We are putting new things into food which have not
been eaten before. The effects on the immune system are
not easily predictable and I challenge anyone who will
say that the effects are predictable."
Professor Arpad Pusztai, of the Food, Gut, and
Microbial Interactions Group, Rowett Research Institute,
on the health risks associated with genetically
engineered food.
And on the ability of the regulatory system to cope
with prospect of the arrival of large numbers of GM
crops:
"Once the floodgate was opened, it's almost
impossible. A committee cannot deal with it."
DrPusztai
gave his now famous "World in Action" Granda TV
interview in August 1998 revealing toxic effects on rats
fed genetically modified potatoes, immediately after
which he was suspended by his employer, the Rowett
Research Institute, and forbiden to discuss the subject
in public.
Pusztai
report on GM potatoes
Pusztai
commentary on debate following publication of his work in
the Lancet
Suppression
of dissent in science - Research in Social Problems and
Public Policy, Vol 7
Over half a year later Dr Pusztai commented further on
this situation in an interview with the Indpendent on
Sunday newspaper, the day before giving evidence to a
House of Commons Select Committee on the nature and
implications of his research on genetically modified
pototoes:
"I believe in the technology. But it is
too new for us to be absolutely sure that what we are
doing is right. But I can say from my experience if
anyone dares to say anything even slightly
contra-indicative, they are vilified and totally
destroyed."
No faith in
GM approvals system
GM
safety research stokes new row
The
New Thought Police Suppressing Dissent in Science
And a later comment:
"The biotech companies are
not charitable institutions which could not save the
world population from starvation even if they wanted to
because the Third World cannot afford their very
expensive and potentially destructive GM technology
driven by the profit motive. Unfortunately, in this world
of ours most people, politicians and industrialists only
notice the consequences of economic, ecological and
health problems created by human greed when they turn
into disasters. Let us hope that when such a disaster
resulting from genetic modification will surely come, it
will be small enough that humanity will still be able to
recover from it. Dr. Arpad Pusztai
"We are at the bottom of a
very steep learning curve of research. We're only in the
foothills."
David Horton, Editor of the Lancet,
explaining his decision to publish Dr Pusztai's research
on GM potatoes, acknowledging that despite the
controversy there was genuine scientific difference of
opinion, and highlighting how little work has been done
on the health implications of GM foods prior to their
introduction.
Research
that sparked GM safety concerns published in Lancet
"It's hard to have an educated debate because
it's happening so quickly....that it is overwhelming even
scientists."
Juan Enriquez, researcher at Harvard University's
David Rockefeller Center.
"The fact is, it is virtually impossible to even
conceive of a testing procedure to assess the health
effects of genetically engineered foods when introduced
into the food chain, nor is there any valid nutritional
or public interest reason for their introduction."
Professor Richard Lacey, microbiologist, medical
doctor, and Professor of Food Safety at Leeds University,
world famous for his accurate prediction of the dangers
of " Mad cow disease". Professor Lacey has
spoken out strongly against the introduction of
genetically engineered foods, because of 'the essentially
unlimited health risks'
Substantial
equivalence versus scientific safety assessment of
genetically engineered food - at a glance summary.
And additionally with reference to the BSE crisis,
"We know to our cost that an organism
which was utterly unknown to science 30 years ago, the
prion, is capable of jumping from species to species, and
changing its own physical characteristics each time it
crosses the barrier. This shows that it is
impossible to forsee what dangers lie in store... If we
continue to create new life forms artificially, we lay
ourselves open to the possibility of similar
unimaginable dangers."
New
Scientist - BSE's hidden horror
"Over the last fifteen years, I and other
scientists have put the FDA on notice about the potential
dangers of genetically engineered foods. Instead of
responsible regulation we have seen bureaucratic bungling
and obfuscation that have left public health and the
environment at risk."
Dr. Philip Regal, Professor of Ecology, Evolution, and
Behavior at the University of Minnesota and an
internationally recognised plant expert, on the decision
(May 1998) by concerned scientists and consumers to sue
the US Federal Department of Agriculture (FDA) for
failing to protect public health and provide consumers
with relevant information about GM foods.
"... it is my considered judgement that
the evidence to date, in its entirety, indicates there
are scientifically justified concerns about the safety of
genetically engineered foods and that some of them could
be quite dangerous. Further, in the absence of reliable
toxicological tests, it is not possible to determine
which of these new foods are dangerous and which are
not."
Philip J. Regal, Ph.D. Professor in the College of
Biological Sciences, University of Minnesota, USA;
internationally renowned expert on the genetics of
plants. (From a declaration submitted to the U.S.
District Court for the District of Columbia, 28 May,
1999, Alliance for Bio-Integrity, et al. versus Shalala,
et al.)
Details
of FDA lawsuit launched May 1998
More
information on the work of Professor Regal
The
Ecologist - Revolving Doors: Monsanto and the Regulators
"Assurances of safety based on an absence
of documented human health problems are not going to
convince that many people. The general public understands
how hard it is for medical epidemiologists to trace the
causes of ill health. They know the causes of some of our
major diseases are still not known with any certainty and
most are convinced that diet affects health in
extraordinarily complex ways.
The industry and government are going to have
to invest in some careful, detailed safety and
nutritional testing in laboratory animals and humans. If
a series of "worst case" scenario studies
conducted by respected, independent scientists
consistently back up "substantial equivalence"
findings, food safety controversies will subside, if no
newproblems emerge. If new research does point to
unforeseen problems, the biotech industry will be in for
a rough ride....."
Dr Charles Benbrook, private consultant on integrated
pest management and former Director of the Agriculture
Department of the US Academy of Sciences - paper
presented 6 September 2000 to a meeting of the
Association of Formulation Chemists in Orlando
questioning the need for GMOs in world agriculture and
the ability of industry and farmers to deploy them
responsibly.
More of Dr Benbrook's comments
including full paper - click here
"Swapping genes between organisms can
produce unknown toxic effects and allergies that are
most likely to affect children".
Dr Vyvyan Howard: expert in infant toxico-pathology at
Liverpool University Hospital,
UK
"There is no process - across all US
federal agencies - to evaluate the hazards of GE
organisms as we have for chemicals. For chemicals,
we have formal risk assessment guidelines; science
policies; conferences where scientific issues are
debated. That's not the case with GE......
In the US each risk assessment for GE
organisms is done on an ad hoc basis by different
scientists in different departments of different
agencies....There is rarely any formal peer review.
When peer review panels are put together, they are not
necessarily unbiased. They can be filled with GE
proponents or confined to questions which avoid the
important issues, so that a predetermined decision can be
justified.
This technology is being promoted, in the face
of concerns by respectable scientists and in the face of
data to the contrary, by the very agencies which are
supposed to be protecting human health and the
environment. The bottom line in my view is that we are
confronted with the most powerful technology the world
has ever known, and it is being rapidly deployed with
almost no thought whatsoever to its consequences."
US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) toxicologist,
Suzanne Wuerthele.
The
Revolving Door between biotechnolgy companies and
government regulators
"The FDA has placed the interest of a handful of
biotechnology companies ahead of their responsibility to
protect public health. By failing to require testing and
labelling of genetically engineered foods, the agency has
made consumers unknowing guinea pigs for potentially
harmful, unregulated food substances."
Andrew Kimbrell, Executive Director of the
International Center for Technology Assessment (CTA),
commenting on the same FDA court action.
International
Center for Technology Assessment
Andrew
Kimbrell interview on the hazards of human and animal
cloning
Ministers
'ignoring public' on GM fooD - UK
"[Genetic Engineering's]
ambition is to replace nature's wisdom with people's
cleverness, to treat nature not as a model and mentor but
as a set of limits to be evaded when inconvenient, not to
study nature but to re-structure it. The transformation
of plant genetics is being accelerated from the measured
pace of biological evolution to the speed of the next
quarter's earnings report".
Amery Lobbins, author of 'The Next
Industrial Revolution'
"Monsanto should not have to
vouchsafe the safety of biotech food. Our interest is in
selling as much of it as possible. Assuring its safety is
the F.D.A's [Food and Drug Administration] job."
Phil Angell, Monsanto's director of
corporate communications, in an interview with the New
York Times Sunday Magazine
Buried
Data in Monsanto's Study on Roundup Ready Soybeans
"Ultimately, it is the food
producer who is responsible for assuring safety."
FDA Federal Register, "Statement of
Policy: Foods Derived from New Plant Varieties".
"I was recently on a TV talk
show where I debated the safety of genetically modified
food with someone representing the Food Technology
Association. I began with a brief statement on the
hazards of rBGH, the synthetic bovine-growth hormone that
is now present in nearly all U.S. dairy products. I
described how, in 1989, someone dropped off at my office
a batch of documents that had been stolen from the Food
and Drug Administration's files on Monsanto, the company
that manufactures rBGH. Included was a Monsanto
document from 1987 indicating that the company was fully
aware of rBGH's danger and was conspiring with the FDA to
suppress information critical to veterinary and public
health.....
I've now come to believe that we
need Nuremberg-type trials to hold industries accountable
for these sorts of public-health crimes. The tobacco
industry would be one example, but there is a wide range
of other industries whose executives we need to begin
holding accountable. Scientists, too. There are a vast
number of indentured scientists in this country willing
to jump through any hoop for the sake of profit. In
addition, we need to bring to account regulatory
officials and members of expert advisory committees and
all the people who are supposed to be overseeing public
health but are instead facilitating the poisoning of the
American people, and, in fact, the people of the world. I
am dead serious about this....
If we are able to assemble a
collection of distinguished jurists and focus the world's
attention on war crimes in remote Kosovo, how is it that
we can do nothing similar about the massive, premeditated
withholding of information on carcinogens by major
multinational corporations?"
From: 'An Epidemic of Deception: Why
We Can't Trust The Cancer Establishment', An
Interview With Dr Samuel Epstein by Derrick Jensen,
originally published in The Sun [not the UK one!], March
2000. In 1996, Epstein represented the European
Union at World Trade Organization talks about the use of
genetically engineered hormones in meat production. He is
currently professor emeritus of environmental and
occupational medicine at the University of Illinois
School of Public Health in Chicago.
The
FDA Again Ignores Its Own Warnings - irradiated food
According to an article by Indian
environmentalist Vandana Shiva since water is as central
to food production as seed is, and without water life is
not possible, Monsanto is now trying to establish its
control over water. As part of this strategy during 1999,
Monsanto plans to launch a new water business, starting
with India and Mexico since both these countries are
facing water shortages.
"....we believe that
discontinuities (either major policy changes or major
trendline breaks in resource quality or quantity) are
likely, particularly in the area of water and we will be
well-positioned via these businesses to profit even more
significantly when these discontinuities occur....
These pressures and the world's
desire to prevent the consequences of these pressures, if
unabated, will create vast economic opportunity....
"
Robert Farley of Monsanto, THE HINDU,
Saturday, May 1, 1999
"[The release of novel GM rape plants] may pose
unique risks to human health and the environment, which
could include toxicity and allergenicity to humans, gene
transfer to other oilseed rape crops, and effects on
other species."
UK junior environment minister Angela Eagle's warning
to MPs, which was reported in Farmers Weekly 23rd January
1998 as being in conflict with the Government's own
advisory committees on GMOs.
GM
OSR cross pollination found up to 2.5 km away - Scottish
Crop Research Institute
"There are a lot of people in Europe in favour
of biotechnology, who are prepared to take risks, but a
considerable number are resistant and see no benefits.
Many people see biotech taking us into the realm of
unknown dangers. ...This is a Pandora's box and a lot of
people wonder whether it's worth opening it."
George Gaskell, professor of social psychology at the
London School of Economics
"Biotech companies claim their methods
are precise and sophisticated. In fact, there is a random
element in gene insertion methods. Genetic research shows
that many weaknesses in plants, animals and humans have
their origin in tiny imperfections in the genetic code.
Therefore, side-effects and accidents are inevitable, and
scientists have assessed the risks from GM-foods and
crops as unlimited."
Inose, T. (1995) International Journal of Food Science
Technology 30:141
"If it's safe, then prove it."
Editorial headline on genetically engineered foods,
New Scientist 4th January 1997
Media
cover up on gmo cancer threat
"Eventually we are going to have some problems .
I don't think the risks are being taken seriously or
addressed seriously by the system we have now."
Dr. Allison A. Snow, plant ecologist at Ohio State
University
"Information provided to governments and food
suppliers by the biotechnology industry is not fully
representative of the technical limitations of genetic
engineering, and therefore does not give a complete
picture of the potential dangers in its use."
"Once released into the environment,
unlike a BSE epidemic or chemical spill, genetic mistakes
cannot be contained, recalled or cleaned up, but will be
passed on to all future generations indefinitely".
Dr Michael Antoniou, senior lecturer in molecular
pathology from Guy's, King's and St Thomas's Medical
School, Guy's Hospital, London; biotechnology advisor to
the farming and food industries; and chief biotechnology
advisor to the Natural Law Party
Dr
Antoniou on Genetic Engineering
NLP
wins vital soyabean genetics case against major Dutch
retailers
Dr Antoniou on GM crops
"The process of genetic engineering always
involves the risk of altering the genetics and cellular
functioning of a food organism in unanticipated ways.
These unanticipated alterations can result in GE foods
being allergenic, toxic, or reduced in nutritional
value".
Professor John Fagan, award-winning Geneticist,
Maharishi University of Management, Iowa, USA.
Dr
Fagan on the dangers of genetically modified food
"Millions of ordinary people are very worried
about genetically modified foods and I am one of
them....With genetically modified foods I believe we have
reached the thin edge of the wedge, we are messing with
the building blocks of life and it's scary."
Malcom Walker, Chairman and Chief Executive of Iceland
Foods, 26th December 1996
Iceland
Foods ban GMOs
French
supermarket boycotts suppliers who do not label GM foods
"The huge arrogance of the companies developing
GMO crops and their determination to destroy the line of
accountability which links the developer to the product
is breath-taking. When something goes wrong, as it
inevitably will, there will be a great benefit to those
who have taken a stance against genetically modified
organisms."
Jonathan Porritt, patron of The Soil Association
Illegal
GM soya beans planted in Brazil
US
imports illegal GM maize into Europe
Mistake
leads to unauthorised release on GM oilseed rape in
Swedish trials
Monsanto
sends genetically modified sugar beet to Dutch sugar
refinery by mistake
Biotech company releases unapproved
genetically modified plant material into Canadian
environment
"It is clear to me
everywhere in the world that scientists do not make
policy decisions. If we treat science as something that
provides absolute truth and perfect answers, then I think
we are stretching to its limits its role which is
essential in the policy making process."
Tassos Haniotis, agriculture counselor
for the European Commission
"There are still hungry
people in Ethiopia, but they are hungry because they have
no money, no longer because there is no food to buy
....we strongly resent the abuse of our poverty to sway
the interests of the European public."
Tewolde Berhan Gebre Egziabher of the
Institute of Sustainable Development in Addis Ababa, in
response to a comment in late 1997 by a British scientist
who claimed that those who want GMOs banned are
undermining the position of starving people in Ethiopia.
GM
technology will damage third world farming - Christian
Aid
GM
could 'impoverish poor farmers'
FAMINE
SOLUTION CLAIMS BY GM FIRMS EXPOSED
The
corporate takeover of corn in SE Asia
Bogus
claims for 'golden eye' Vitamin A GM rice - Greenpeace
briefing
Letter
in Independent - No Need for GM Rice
"...farmers are likely to be
weaned from pesticides to be force fed biotech seeds, in
other words, taken off one treadmill and set on a new
one!"
"The trend towards a
quasi-monopolization of funding in agricultural
development into a narrow set of technologies is
dangerous and irresponsible. Also, too many hopes and
expectations are being entrusted in these technologies,
to the detriment of more conventional and proven
technologies and approaches that have been very
successful and which potential lies mostly unused in the
developing countries.
It is only too obvious to
concerned scientists, farmers and citizens alike that we
are about to repeat, step by step, the mistakes of the
insecticide era, even before it is behind us. I would
even argue that these new miracle technologies are mostly
not necessary, let alone desirable, to solve the world's
food security problem. I am not denying that in some
instances they may be of use in increasing the qualities
and agronomic characteristics of food crop varieties, but
these improvements must remain a within family or genus
'engineering' affair, that merely speeds up nature's own
evolutionary path."
Hans R.Herren, Director General, The International Centre of
Insect Physiology and Ecology Nairobi, Kenya, and
winner of the 1995 World Food Prize
Maarten J. Chrispeels, Member of the National
Academy of Sciences, Division of Biology Unive of
California San Diego, California 92093, Plant Physiology,
September 2000, Vol. 124, pp. 3ñ6 http://www.plantphysiol.org
© 2000 American Society of Plant Physiologists:
" Crop improvement through biotechnology need not
be equated with transgenic plants. For example,
marker-assisted breeding is a powerful biotechnology that
can find widespread application with the crops of the
poor. Detailed linkage maps of these crops will be
tremendously useful...........Agricultural research has
to start with studying farming practices ... .......The
major objective has to be the productivity and
profitability of smallholder farms with synergy between
food crops, cash crops, livestock, agroforestry, and
aquaculture with integrated management of soil, water,
and nutrients (Serageldin, 1999). This goal and the
process for achieving it are more important than the
introduction of GM crops."
As this very interesting report from
India demonstrates it is becoming increasingly clear that
once they have open access to the facts people in
developing countries reject the use of GMOs in global
agriculture. This report on Dr Tom Wakeford's
citizens jury project in India, which sat for over four
days and heard from the Indian government and GM giant
Monsanto before giving their verdict on GM crops, can be
downloaded as a pdf file from Action Aid via http://www.actionaid.org/about_us/pub.html
"While Mr Blair and his
advisors still maintain that we need to develop this
technology to help the poor and hungry it is an
illustration of the arrogance with which they habitually
view the world that they have failed to ask the people
who really matter.
We have started a process that needs to be repeated
globally so that the western political and scientific
elite can no longer misrepresent their needs."
Dr Tom Wakeford, University of East London
"This is the start of the
new colonialism. It is an issue of control and national
sovereignty. To achieve this the TNCs [Trans National
Corporations] want to ensure that the people are
de-skilled and that the great body of agricultural
knowledge and skill, that has been built up over
millennia, is lost."
P.V. Satheesh, of the Deccan Development
Society
"Monsanto claims in its
letter to me that there is no difference between ordinary
soya beans and what it calls round-up soya beans, and
therefore that they should not be segregated. I maintain
that members of the public who notice what is going on
simply do not believe that, and will increasingly demand
to know what is in the food they eat - roundup or
otherwise... the Government and the EU should resist the
power of the giant food companies in the United States,
which are effectively dictating what we must eat, without
giving any convincing estimates of the long-term
effects."
Colin Pickthall, Member of Parliament for West
Lancashire, speaking in the House of Commons, 13th
December 1996
Canadian
Government report on toxic effects of BST
Canadian
government scientists claim BST approval coercion
BST
background
Milk
composition of cows fed on gm soya changes
Leaked
document on biotechnology industry public relations
strategy
"At the moment, as is so often the case with
technology, we seem to spend most of our time
establishing what is technically possible, and then a
little time trying to establish whether or not it is
something we should be doing in the first place."
HRH the Prince of Wales on genetically engineered food
19th September 1996
Royal
support for genetic food withdrawal
"rBGH poses an even greater risk to human health
than ever considered. The FDA and Monsanto have a lot to
answer for. Given the cancer risks, and other health
concerns, why is rBGH milk still on the market?"
Samuel Epstein, M.D., Professor of Environmental
Medicine at the University of Illinois School of Public
Health and Chairman of the Cancer Prevention Coalition,
author of report which concludes that milk from cows in
the US injected with recombinant bovine growth hormone
(rBGH) increases risks of breast and colon cancers in
humans.
BST
(rBGH) cancer link
BST
background
genetically
engineered Bovine Growth Hormone scandal
"...the allergic potential of these newly
introduced microbial proteins is uncertain, unpredictable
and untestable,..."
Warning from The New England Journal of Medicine in
1996 against the use of micro-organisms rather than food
plants as gene donors
"Such intervention must not be confused with
previous intrusions upon the natural order of living
organisms; animal and plant breeding, for example; or the
artificial induction of mutations, as with X-rays. All
such earlier procedures worked within single or closely
related species. The hub of the new technology is to move
genes back and forth, not only across species lines, but
across any boundaries that now divide living
organisms.The results will be essentially new organisms.
Self-perpetuating and hence permanent. Once created, they
cannot be recalled.
Up to now living organisms have evolved very slowly,
and new forms have had plenty of time to settle in. Now
whole proteins will be transposed overnight into wholly
new associations, with consequences no one can foretell,
either for the host organism or their neighbors. It is
all too big and is happening too fast. So this, the
central problem, remains almost unconsidered. It presents
probably the largest ethical problem that science has
ever had to face. Our morality up to now has been to go
ahead without restriction to learn all that we can about
nature. Restructuring nature was not part of the bargain.
For going ahead in this direction may be not only unwise
but dangerous. Potentially, it could breed new animal and
plant diseases, new sources of cancer, novel
epidemics."
Dr. George Wald, the professor emeritus in biology
from Harvard and Nobel laureate in medicine
BST
link to prostate cancer
"Its never been easy to safely introduce
genes into cells
.It has involved attaching genes
to viruses with possible harmful side effects. Getting
the gene - once its in the cell - into the right
place, then finally getting it to behave itself - to
produce the right amount of material in the cell, to
produce it at the right time during a persons
lifetime, in developmental stages and then making
absolutely sure that the gene, because its not in
its usual place, doesnt interfere with any other
genes that are near to it - we havent really made
much progress in any of these phases yet."
Professor Weatherall, Regis Professor of Medicine at
Oxford University speaking on BBC Radio 4 Medicine Now,
27 August 1996 on the experimental nature of genetic
engineering
Medical
problems and fatalities with genetically engineered
insulin
Gene
Therapy Death Raises Questions
Gene
Therapy Death Puzzles Scientists, Regulators
Hundreds
of gene therapy experiments failed
"My worry is that other advances in science may
result in other means of mass destruction, maybe more
readily available even than nuclear weapons. Genetic
engineering is quite a possible area, because of these
dreadful developments that are taking place there."
Joseph Rotblat, the British physicist who won the 1995
Nobel Prize after years of battling against nuclear
weapons
Viral
risk from GMOs
"Gene technology is driven by bad science. It
may well ruin our food supply, destroy biodiversity and
unleash pandemics of antibiotic resistant infectious
diseases."
Dr Mae-Wan Ho, head of the Bio-Electrodynamics
laboratory at the Open University in Milton Keynes, UK
The
hazards of genetically modified foods by Dr Mae-Wan Ho
"We do not believe that such companies or gene
technologies will help our farmers to produce the food
that is needed in the 21st century. On the contrary, we
think it will destroy the diversity, the local knowledge
and the sustainable agricultural systems that our farmers
have developed for millennia and that it will thus
undermine our capacity to feed ourselves."
Statement by 24 leading African
agriculturalists and environmental scientists
representing their countries at the UN in response to
claims by Monsanto that GM crops will help feed the
world's growing population.
World
hunger myths
FAO report reveals
GM crops not needed to feed the world
Christian
Aid - comment on limitations and problems of GM Vitamin A
rice
A
Blind Approach to Blindness Prevention - genetically
engineered 'golden rice' - Vandana Shiva
British
scientists - Organic farming can 'feed the world'
Thailand
To Ban Altered Seeds
Food
security, protecting the environment and reducing poverty
in the developing world - no role for GM
Are GMOs
essential for effective sustainable agriculture in a
hungry world?
The Golden Rice - An Exercise in How Not to Do
Science
Feeding the world without GM foods - articles
"History has many records of crimes
against humanity, which were also justified by dominant
commercial interests and governments of the day. Despite
protests from citizens, social justice for the common
good was eroded in favour of private profits. Today,
patenting of life forms and the genetic engineering which
it stimulates, is being justified on the grounds that it
will benefit society, especially the poor, by providing
better and more food and medicine. But in fact, by
monopolising the 'raw' biological materials, the
development of other options is deliberately blocked.
Farmers therefore, become totally dependent on the
corporations for seeds".
Prof. Wangari Mathai of the Green Belt Movement Kenya
"We were the experts. We didn't have many of the
answers ... Rather than explain that to a general public
it was thought better to give the impression that we had
everything under control, which we didn't and which we
never have."
Jim Hope, a scientist at the Neuropathogenics Unit,
Edinburgh, on the earlier BSE crisis.
Scientists
warned of BSE human health risks eight years before CJD
link established, BBC report - February 1998
"There is still no positive proof of a
causal relation between the use of thalidomide during
pregnancy and malformations in the new-born."
Frank Getman, President Merrill Company, Feb 2nd 1961
Reducing Food Poverty
with Sustainable Agriculture: A Summary of New Evidence -
University of Essex - 2001
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