By Jeffrey Smith
Arpad Pusztai
Biologist Arpad Pusztai had more than 300 articles and 12 books to his credit and was the world’s top expert in his field.
But when he accidentally discovered that genetically modified (GM)
foods are dangerous, he became the biotech industry’s bad-boy poster
child, setting an example for other scientists thinking about blowing
the whistle.
The results of Pusztai’s work were supposed to become the required testing protocols for all of Europe. But when he fed supposedly harmless GM potatoes to rats, things didn’t go as planned. Within just 10 days, the animals developed potentially pre-cancerous
cell growth, smaller brains, livers, and testicles, partially atrophied
livers, and damaged immune systems. Moreover, the cause was almost
certainly side effects from the process of genetic engineering
itself. In other words, the GM foods on the market, which are created
from the same process, might have similar affects on humans.
With permission from his director, Pusztai was interviewed on TV and
expressed his concerns about GM foods. He became a hero at his institute
-- for two days. Then came the phone calls from the pro-GMO prime minister’s office to
the institute’s director. The next morning, Pusztai was fired. He was
silenced with threats of a lawsuit, his team was dismantled, and the
protocols never implemented. His Institute, the biotech industry, and
the UK government, together launched a smear campaign to destroy
Pusztai’s reputation.
Eventually, an invitation to speak before Parliament lifted his gag order and his research was published in the prestigious Lancet. No similar in-depth studies have yet tested the GM foods eaten every day by Americans.
Irina Ermakova
Irina Ermakova, a senior scientist at the Russian National Academy of
Sciences, was shocked to discover that more than half of the baby rats
in her experiment died within three weeks. She had fed the mothers GM
soy flour purchased at a supermarket. The babies from mothers fed
natural non-GMO soy, however, only suffered a 10% death rate. She
repeated her experiment three times with similar results.
Dr. Ermakova reported her preliminary findings at a conference in
October 2005, asking the scientific community to replicate her study.
Instead, she was attacked and vilified. Her boss told her to stop doing
anymore GM food research. Samples were stolen from her lab, and a paper
was even set fire on her desk. One of her colleagues tried to comfort
her by saying, “Maybe the GM soy will solve the overpopulation problem.”
Of the mostly spurious criticisms leveled at Ermakova, one was
significant enough to raise doubts about the cause of the deaths. She
did not conduct a biochemical analysis of the feed. Without it, we don’t
know if some rogue toxin had contaminated the soy flour. But more
recent events suggest that whatever caused the high infant mortality was
not unique to her one bag of GM flour.
In November 2005, the supplier of rat food to the laboratory where Ermakova worked began using GM soy in the formulation. All the rats were now eating it. After two months, Ermakova asked other scientists about the infant mortality rate in their experiments. It had skyrocketed to over 55 percent.
It’s been four years since these findings were reported. No one has
yet repeated Ermakova’s study, even though it would cost just a few
thousand dollars.
Andrés Carrasco
Embryologist Andrés Carrasco told a leading Buenos Aires newspaper
about the results of his research into Roundup, the herbicide sold in
conjunction with Monsanto’s genetically engineered Roundup Ready crops.
Dr. Carrasco, who works in Argentina’s Ministry of Science, said his
studies of amphibians suggest that the herbicide could cause defects in
the brain, intestines, and hearts of fetuses. Moreover, the amount of
Roundup used on GM soy fields was as much as 1,500 times greater than
that which created the defects.
Tragically, his research had been inspired by the experience of
desperate peasant and indigenous communities who were suffering from
exposure to toxic herbicides used on the GM soy fields throughout
Argentina.
According to an article in Grain, the biotech industry
“mounted an unprecedented attack on Carrasco, ridiculing his research
and even issuing personal threats.” In addition, four men arrived
unannounced at his laboratory and were extremely aggressive, attempting
to interrogate Carrasco and obtain details of his study. “It was a
violent, disproportionate, dirty reaction,” he said. “I hadn’t even
discovered anything new, only confirmed conclusions that others had
reached.”
Argentina’s Association of Environmental Lawyers filed a petition
calling for a ban on Roundup, and the Ministry of Defense banned GM soy
from its fields.
Judy Carman
Epidemiologist Judy Carman used to investigate outbreaks of disease
for a state government in Australia. She knows that health problems
associated with GM foods might be impossible to track or take decades to
discover. Moreover, the superficial, short-term animal feeding studies
usually do not evaluate “biochemistry, immunology, tissue pathology, gut
function, liver function, and kidney function” and are too short to
test for cancer or reproductive or child health.
Dr. Carman has critiqued the GMO approval process on behalf of the
Public Health Association of Australia and speaks openly about her
concerns. As a result, she is repeatedly attacked. Pro-GM scientists
threatened disciplinary action through her Vice-Chancellor, and
circulated a defamatory letter to government and university officials.
Carman was awarded a grant by the Western Australia government to
conduct some of the few long-term animal feeding studies on GMOs.
Apparently concerned about what she might find, GMO advocates wrote
letters to the government demanding that the grant be withdrawn. One
scientist tried to convince the Western Australia Agriculture minister
that sufficient safety research had been conducted and he should
therefore cancel the grant.
As his evidence, however, he presented a report summarizing only 60
GMO animal feeding studies -- an infinitesimal amount of research to
justify exposing the entire population to GM foods.
A closer investigation, however, revealed that most of the 60 were
not safety studies at all. They were production studies, measuring, for
example, the animals’ carcass weight. Only 9 contained data applicable
to human health. And 6 of the 9 showed adverse effects in animals that
ate GM feed!
Furthermore, there were several other studies with adverse findings
that were mysteriously missing from the compilation. Carman points out
that the report “does not support claims that GM crops are safe to eat.
On the contrary, it provides evidence that GM crops may be harmful to
health.”
When the Western Government refused to withdraw the grant, opponents
successfully interfered with Carman’s relationship with the university
where she was to do the research.
Terje Traavik
Prominent virologist Terje Traavik presented preliminary data at a
February 2004 meeting at the UN Biosafety Protocol Conference, showing
that:
- Filipinos living next to a GM cornfield developed serious symptoms while the corn was pollinating;
- Genetic material inserted into GM crops transferred to rat organs after a single meal; and
- Key safety assumptions about genetically engineered viruses were
overturned, calling into question the safety of using these viruses in
vaccines.
The biotech industry mercilessly attacked Dr. Traavik. Their excuse?
-- he presented unpublished work. But presenting preliminary data at
professional conferences is a long tradition in science, something that
the biotech industry itself relied on in 1999 to try to counter the
evidence that butterflies were endangered by GM corn.
Ironically, three years after attacking Traavik, the same biotech proponents sharply criticized a peer-reviewed publication for not
citing unpublished data that had been presented at a conference. The
paper shows how the runoff of GM Bt corn into streams can kill the
“caddis fly,” which may seriously upset marine ecosystems. The study set
off a storm of attacks against its author, ecologist Emma
Rosi-Marshall, which Nature described in a September 2009 article as a “hail of abuse.”
Companies Prevent Studies on Their GM Crops
When Ohio State University plant ecologist Allison Snow discovered
problematic side effects in GM sunflowers, Pioneer Hi-Bred International
and Dow AgroSciences blocked further research by withholding GM seeds
and genes.
After Marc Lappé and Britt Bailey found significant reductions in
cancer-fighting isoflavones in Monsanto’s GM soybeans, the seed seller,
Hartz, told them they could no longer provide samples.
Research by a plant geneticist at a leading US university was also
thwarted when two companies refused him GM corn. In fact, almost no
independent studies are conducted that might find problems. According to
a scathing opinion piece in an August 2009 Scientific American,
“Agritech companies have given themselves veto power over the
work of independent researchers ... Only studies that the seed companies
have approved ever see the light of a peer-reviewed journal.”
A group of 24 corn insect scientists protested this restriction in a
letter submitted to the Environmental Protection Agency. They warned
that the inability to access GM seeds from biotech companies means there
can be no truly independent research on the critical questions. The
scientists, of course, withheld their identities for fear of reprisals
from the companies.
Restricted access is not limited to the US. When a Japanese scientist
wanted to conduct animal feeding studies on the GM soybeans under
review in Japan, both the government and the bean’s maker DuPont refused
to give him any samples. Hungarian Professor Bela Darvas discovered
that Monsanto’s GM corn hurt endangered species in his country. Monsanto
immediately shut off his supplies.
Dr. Darvas later gave a speech on his preliminary findings and
discovered that a false and incriminating report about his research was
circulating. He traced it to a Monsanto public relations employee, who
claimed it mysteriously appeared on her desk -- so she faxed it out.
GMO Contamination: Don’t Ask and Definitely Don’t Tell
In
2005, a scientist had gathered seed samples from all over Turkey to
evaluate the extent of contamination by GM varieties. According to the Turkish Daily News, just before her testing was complete, she was reassigned to another department and access to her lab was denied.
The unexpected transfer may have saved this Turkish scientist from an
even worse fate, had she discovered and reported contamination.
Ask Ignacio Chapela, a microbial ecologist from UC Berkeley. In 2001,
he discovered that the indigenous corn varieties in Mexico -- the
source of the world’s genetic diversity for corn—had become contaminated
through cross pollination with GM varieties.
The government had a ban against GM corn to prevent just this
possibility, but apparently US corn imported for food had been planted
nonetheless.
Dr. Chapela submitted the finding to Nature, and as a
courtesy that he later regretted, informed the Mexican government about
the pending publication. He was called in to meet with a furious
Director of the Commission of Biosafety and GMOs. Chapela’s confirmation
of contamination would hinder introduction of GM corn. Therefore the
government’s top biotech man demanded that he withdraw his article.
According to Chapela, the official intimidated and threatened him, even
implying, “We know where your children go to school.”
When a traumatized Chapela still did not back down, the Underminister
for Agriculture later sent him a fax claiming that because of his
scientific paper, Chapela would be held personally responsible for all
damages caused to agriculture and to the economy in general.
The day Chapela’s paper was published, Mary Murphy and Andura
Smetacek began posting messages to a biotechnology listserve called
AgBioWorld, distributed to more than 3,000 scientists. They falsely
claimed that Chapela was biased, that his paper had not been
peer-reviewed, that Chapela was “first and foremost an activist,” and
his research was published in collusion with environmentalists. Soon,
hundreds of other messages appeared, repeating or embellishing the
accusations. The listserve launched a petition and besieged Nature with a worldwide campaign demanding retraction.
UC Berkeley also received letters from all over the world trying to
convince them not to grant Chapela tenure. He had overwhelming support
by his college and department, but the international biotech lobby was
too much. Chapela’s tenure was denied. After he filed a lawsuit, the
university eventually reversed its decision.
When investigators later analyzed the email characteristics sent by
agitators Mary Murphy and Andura Smetacek, the two turned out not to be
the average citizens they claimed. According to the Guardian,
both were fabricated names used by a public relations firm that worked
for Monsanto. Some of Smetacek’s emails also had the internet protocol
address of gatekeeper2.monsanto.com -- the server owned by Monsanto.
Science and Debate is Silenced
The attacks on scientists have taken its toll. According to Dr.
Chapela, there is a de facto ban on scientists “asking certain questions
and finding certain results.” He says, “It’s very hard for us to
publish in this field. People are scared.” He told Nature that young people “are not going into this field precisely because they are discouraged by what they see.”
New Zealand Parliament member Sue Kedgley told a Royal Commission in
2001: “Personally I have been contacted by telephone and e-mail by a
number of scientists who have serious concerns about aspects of the
research that is taking place ... and the increasingly close ties that
are developing between science and commerce, but who are convinced that
if they express these fears publicly ... or even if they asked the
awkward and difficult questions, they will be eased out of their
institution.”
University of Minnesota biologist Phil Regal testified before the
same Commission, “I think the people who boost genetic engineering are
going to have to do a mea culpa and ask for forgiveness, like the Pope
did on the inquisition.” Sue Kedgley has a different idea. She
recommends we “set up human clinical trials using volunteers of
genetically engineered scientists and their families, because I think
they are so convinced of the safety of the products that they are
creating and I’m sure they would very readily volunteer to become part
of a human clinical trial.”
To learn more about the health dangers of GMOs, and what you can do
to help end the genetic engineering of our food supply, visit www.ResponsibleTechnology.org.
To learn how to choose healthier non-GMO brands, visit www.NonGMOShoppingGuide.com.
About the Author
International bestselling author and filmmaker Jeffrey Smith is
the leading spokesperson on the health dangers of genetically modified
(GM) foods. His first book, Seeds of Deception, is the world’s bestselling and #1 rated book on the topic. His second, Genetic Roulette: The Documented Health Risks of Genetically Engineered Foods, provides overwhelming evidence that GMOs are unsafe and should never have been introduced.
Mr. Smith is the executive director of the Institute for Responsible Technology, whose Campaign for Healthier Eating in America is designed to create the tipping point of consumer rejection of GMOs, forcing them out of our food supply.
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