
Genetically modified foods:
YES, you are already eating them.
NO, they are not safe to eat.
Did you know… since 1996 Americans have been eating genetically modified (GM) ingredients in most processed foods.
Did you know… GM plants, such as soybean, corn, cottonseed, and canola have had foreign genes forced into their DNA. And the inserted genes come from species, such as bacteria and viruses, that have never been in the human food supply.
Did you know… genetically modified organisms (GMOs) are not safe. They have been linked to thousands of toxic and allergic reactions, thousands of sick, sterile, and dead livestock, and damage to virtually every organ and system studied in lab animals.
Find out what the risks are and start protecting
yourself and your family today!
Why isn’t the FDA protecting us? In 1992, the Food and Drug Administration claimed that they had no information showing that GM foods were substantially different from conventionally grown foodsand therefore were safe to eat. But internal memos made public by a lawsuit reveal that their position was staged by political appointees under orders from the White House to promote GMOs. FDA scientists, on the other hand, warned that GMOs can create unpredictable, hard-to-detect side effects, including allergies, toxins, new diseases, and nutritional problems. They urged long-term safety studies, but were ignored. The FDA does not require any safety evaluations for GMOs.
Instead, biotech companies, who have been found guilty of hiding toxic effects of their chemical products, are now in charge of determining whether their GM foods are safe. (The FDA official in charge of creating this policy was Michael Taylor, Monsanto’s former attorney and later their vice president.)
Although these biotech companies participate in a voluntary consultation process with the FDA, it is a meaningless exercise. The summaries of the superficial research they submit cannot identify most of the health risks of GMOs.
Genetic modification is radically different from natural breeding. In contrast to the statements of biotech advocates, FDA scientists and others affirm that genetic modification is not just an extension of the conventional breeding techniques that have been used by farmers for millennia. Genetic engineering transfers genes across natural species barriers, using imprecise laboratory techniques that bear no resemblance to natural breeding.
| FYI - On May 19, 2009 The American Academy of Environmental Medicine called for an Immediate Moratorium on Genetically Modified Foods stating that “GM foods pose a serious health risk in the areas of toxicology, allergy and immune function, reproductive health, metabolic, physiologic and genetic health.” |
|
Furthermore, the technology is based on outdated concepts of how genes and cells work.
WIDESPREAD, UNPREDICTABLE CHANGES
Gene insertion is done either by shooting genes from a “gene gun” into a plate of cells or by using bacteria to invade the cell with foreign DNA. The altered cell is then cloned into a plant. These processes create massive collateral damage, causing mutations in hundreds or thousands of locations throughout the plant’s DNA. Natural genes can be deleted or permanently turned on or off, and hundreds may change their levels of expression. In addition:
• The inserted gene is often rearranged;
• It may transfer from the food into our body’s cells or into the DNA of bacteria inside us. (The only human feeding study ever conducted confirmed the GM soy genes do transfer into human gut bacteria, and continue to function.)
• The GM protein produced by the gene may have unintended properties or effects.
• Children face the greatest risk from GM foods because they are more susceptible to toxins, allergies, problems with milk and nutritional problems.
GM FOODS ON THE MARKET
The primary reason companies genetically engineer plants is to make them tolerant to their brand of herbicide. The four major GM plants, soy, corn, canola, and cotton, are designed to survive an otherwise deadly dose of weed killer. These crops have much higher residues of toxic herbicides. About 68% of GM crops are herbicide tolerant. The second GM trait is a built-in pesticide. A gene from the soil bacterium called Bt (for Bacillusthuringiensis) is inserted into corn and cotton DNA, where it secretes the insect-killing Bt -toxin in every cell. About 19% of GM crops produce their own pesticide. Another 13% produce a pesticide and are herbicide tolerant. There is also Hawaiian papaya and a small amount of zucchini and yellow crookneck squash, which are engineered to resist a plant virus.
(Thanks to: www.responsibletechnology.org for the information in this article)
SAY NO TO GMOs!
|
Genetically Modified Organism is the most common manipulated’ or even ‘mutated’ might also be appropriate!) acronyms GEO (Genetically Engineered Organism) are also used.
Genetic engineering is a radical new technology information across the protective species barrier Why be concerneD? One of many good laboratory-created mutations are unlabeled, virtually grocery shelves everywhere.
SAY NO TO GMOs! supports mandatory labeling, independent safety testing, more stringent regulation liability for damages resulting from the irresponsible GMOs to the food supply and environment.
|
| For more information: www.saynotogmos.org |
|
| MORE ARTICLES |
| NON-GMO SHOPPING GUIDE |
| NEW PRODUCTS AT LORI'S |
| BANG |
| JUST WHAT IS GMO? |
|