By Michael Pravica, Ph.D.
As a
scientist deeply concerned for the welfare of all humanity, I was very pleased
that Russia has banned the importation of genetically modified crop seeds after
reviewing a recent French study that showed a strong potential cancer link in
mice when consuming Gentically Modified (GM or GMO) corn. Concerning the
epidemic of improperly and inadequately tested GM foods contaminating our
fields and food supply, we should all be deeply concerned about the hasty rush
to adopt GM crops without being fully aware of the longterm consequences to the
environment and society.
There
are a number of arguments made in support of GM-tainted food that I will
refute:
1.
Humans
have been "genetically modifying" food for millennia. This is not quite true. Humans have used
natural selection by e.g., planting only the seeds from plants with e.g. the
highest yields which results in the enhanced expression of desirable traits
(such as drought resistance or high energy content fruit/seeds) within the gene
pool. This is a far cry from physically interfering with the genotype of
organisms by directly inserting foreign DNA/RNA into the host organism's
DNA/RNA. This has unpredictable effects that permanently alter the phenotype of
the host organism. The properties of an organism are not just defined by the
sum total of its genes but by the complex interactions between the genes, the
locations of genes along each chromosome, and the proteins that they each
produce.
2.
GM
crops will aid in feeding the world's burgeoning population. As GM seeds are protected by patents,
they cost more and force farmers to be more dependent upon the purchase of
auxiliary materials (such as weed killers and fertilizer). The nations that are
suffering the most from skyrocketing birth rates are often the least able to
afford these seeds. Addressing overpopulation by poisoning people, rescinding
their ability to make their own food, and making them infertile is amoral. A
more civilized approach would entail improving the education and promulgation
of birth control. Also, the vast majority of food is wasted (some astonishing
40% in the US) in wealthy Western countries which are in fact suffering largely
from declining populations and reduced life expectancy due in part to their
poor, highly "refined" diets. By just reducing the food we waste, we
could easily help feed the world's starving populations.
3.
GM
crops save the farmer labor.
For mega farms, GM crops do help to eliminate the need to pull weeds and
eradicate pests. This "scorched earth" policy of destroying
everything but the "good" plants may work well for massive
agro-business as long as no weeds or pests develop resistance to the chemicals
designed to destroy them and as long as the plants don't need other beneficial
symbiotic organisms such as Rhizobia
that are destroyed with treatment. However, small farmers have for millennia
manually tended their fields to support their families and beyond, living in
harmony with Nature, without the need to apply toxic pesticides and fertilizer.
This only compromises Nature's ability to balance, cleanse, and heal itself.
4.
GM
food is safe - it has been thoroughly tested.
Problems associated with cancer/carcinogenic agents can take decades to
properly test. GM foods were rushed (even forced) through in a matter of years
which implies that all those who consume GM-related food are the guinea pigs in
a very complex experiment which has an unknown outcome. Along with this, many
of the toxic chemicals associated with GM crops that are used as feed may
concentrate in the animals which then may hurt humans when they end up on the
dinner plate.
Nature
has been creating and testing organisms in the field (via evolution) for
billions of years. It is the pinnacle of human arrogance and ignorance to
expect that scientists will "create" new genetically modified
organisms in mere decades successfully coexisting with natural crops and that
these brave new crops that will not be toxic to humans and other life forms
such as bees which are critical for pollination.
We are merely scratching the
surface in understanding the complex biochemical mechanisms associated with
organisms and Nature's natural checks and balances that assure relative
stability of the biosphere. Scientists have yet to create one living cell from
scratch. The methods that "create" GMOs take advantage of
poorly-understood machinery within the cell and therefore tinker with the
essence of life itself.
By mass planting GM crops, we are disrupting Nature on
a very rapid scale which may irreversibly alter our food chain as these crops
supplant traditional crops and/or cross-fertilize with them slowly homogenizing
the world's food supply with inferior/untested organisms. The problem with this
is that genetic diversity is strength and enables life forms to adapt to
ever-changing conditions in the environment. Homogenizing the world's food is
very dangerous from a strategic point of view as any novel virus, bacterium, or
newly-evolved insect may wipe out these crops very quickly which will almost
immediately affect our food supply.
Thus far, there has been precious little informed debate
within the corporate-controlled mainstream Western media (which largely
comprises scientifically-illiterate journalists) about the potential negative
effects of introducing little-understood genetically-modified organisms on a
large/corporate scale into Nature which has the potential to irreversibly alter
our food supply and exhaust and contaminate our soil to the point of
barrenness.
I, for example, have sent off a number of letters-to-the-editor to
mostly US newspapers about this critical issue to find none of them published.
When a professor of physics (the foundation of science) has difficulty
contributing to the scientific debate about GMOs due to censorship, politics is
trumping science.
What is also unfathomable is the massive efforts made by
corporate interests to prevent the labeling of genetically-modified foods here
in the US (e.g. Proposition 37 in California) and thus prevent US citizens from
making informed decisions on the foods that they consume. If corporate leaders
were so convinced about the safety and wholesomeness of the foods derived from
genetically-modified organisms, what are they so afraid of if these foods are
labeled as such?
I
would strongly encourage more peer-reviewed, independent and longer-term
research on the potential deleterious health effects of GM crops before fully
adopting them as a replacement for naturally-derived food sources.
In various
depictions of the Devil and other terrible creatures (such as the Minotaur,
Medusa or Harpies) among many faiths and cultures, they comprise bizarre mixes
of different animal species. It seems that even our ancestors were aware of the
dangers/negative consequences of playing God.
No comments:
Post a Comment