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WH Relents and Allows the FDA To Proceed with Genetically Modified Salmon


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2012 Dec 21, 4:03am   63,622 views  235 comments

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http://www.slate.com/blogs/the_slatest/2012/12/21/genetically_modified_salmon_white_house_had_blocked_fda_but_now_approval.html

White House Relents and Allows the FDA To Proceed with Genetically Modified Salmon

The Food and Drug Administration today released an electronic version of its environmental assessment for a genetically modified salmon developed by AquaBounty Technologies—effectively giving its preliminary seal of approval on the first transgenic animal to be considered for federal approval.

#environment

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81   rdm   2012 Dec 28, 1:55am  

donjumpsuit says

Wheat. The basis of all breads, pizza's, pastas, cakes, and cookies. The prime evil of our health and waist lines in today's society is a purely GENETICALLY ENGINEERED crop.

But this misses the point of why there is concern with GMO's. As I said in previous post crop selection has been going on for thousands of years controlled hybridization on a high level probably for 80 to 100 years. The laboratory insertion of genes from divergent species into crop plants is relatively recent and could in no way occur n nature. Wheat may not have existed in nature but it is certainly possible for it to have arisen naturally. Same with corn. People have "genetically selected" not "genetically engineered" these crops into existence over thousands of years. Therein is the difference and "possible" reason for concern

donjumpsuit says

70% of the corn and soy in this country are GMO, separating them at this point isn't an option,

I actually think the percentage may be higher but I disagree that it is not possible to separate the two. It is not only possible but is happening. I am involved in farming (indirectly) and used to farm. There was an .80 premium per bushel being paid for non gmo soybeans (last fall), so there is a demand for conventionally grown non gmo crops

donjumpsuit says

but don't blame GMO's. We know exactly what we are doing with GMO's, it couldn't be more straight forward.

This type of scientific hubris doesn't sit very well with me. I am not opposed to GMO's but to think you know all the answers and ramifications of their introduction is just... irrational.

82   121212   2012 Dec 28, 2:10am  

Your scientists cling to a tree's, it's why they are paid by institutions

They are not here to provide you with health related information.

They are not here to care about your health. They are here to make money for their masters.

People are getting sicker and sicker from eating food. WHY!

Diabetes, Allergies, Wheat Allergies and worse, to suggest there is no health issues related to crops and GMO is pathetic.

Scientists are taking over from farmers , who do you trust?

83   121212   2012 Dec 28, 2:14am  

over 90% Soy is GMO

There is way to much GMO CORN in the food CHAIN. Way to much CORN in the food chain used as feed for FISH!!! CORN IS Used for EVERYTHING!

When will you scientist admit that!

84   121212   2012 Dec 28, 2:16am  

donjumpsuit says

If you think we aren't doing OK, then blame hamburgers, wireless communications, electronics, chemicals in everyday plastics and cosmetics, pharmaceuticals that we pee into our toilets and remain in our watersupply, but don't blame GMO's. We know exactly what we are doing with GMO's, it couldn't be more straight forward.

Don't mind the man behind the sheets.

Yes, typical, as long as you have a job you can blame everyone else.

Yes there are many toxins in our lives, stop putting them there!

86   121212   2012 Dec 28, 2:19am  

donjumpsuit says

As a scientist speaking. Nobody is trying to hide technology (GMO) from you.

Monsanto, Monsanto, Monsanto

87   121212   2012 Dec 28, 2:22am  

donjumpsuit says

4. "Round-UP is Monsantos evil little Herbicide drug that is killing us and everything around us."

First of all, yes. Monsanto patented Round-UP, and "Round-Up ready crops". They do work in combination. Secondly, ROUND UP AND BT CORN are two separate technologies!

Speaking of Glyphosphate (RoundUp), this is one of the most safest herbicide on the market

B U L L S H I T!

http://www.globalresearch.ca/stench-of-eu-corruption-in-monsanto-gmo-whitewash/5316294

Cancer of Corruption, Seeds of Destruction: The Monsanto GMO Whitewash

Their findings were more than alarming. The Seralini study concluded, “In females, all treated groups died 2–3 times more than controls, and more rapidly. This difference was visible in 3 male groups fed GMOs…Females developed large mammary tumors almost always more often than and before controls; the pituitary was the second most disabled organ; the sex hormonal balance was modified by GMO and Roundup treatments. In treated males, liver congestions and necrosis were 2.5–5.5 times higher. This pathology was confirmed by optic and transmission electron microscopy. Marked and severe kidney nephropathies were also generally 1.3–2.3 greater. Males presented 4 times more large palpable tumors than controls…”

88   121212   2012 Dec 28, 2:51am  

http://www.naturalnews.com/036023_Monsanto_GM_alfalfa_USDA.html

Exposed: Monsanto planted GM alfalfa before USDA approved it, federal agency knew all along

91   121212   2012 Dec 28, 2:54am  

.....USDA acknowledges that GE material moves into fields and markets where it is not allowed or wanted. OSA believes the agency missed an opportunity to establish a comprehensive framework for overseeing GE crops and to protect the organic industry.

92   Maga_Chaos_Monkey   2012 Dec 28, 3:15am  

rdm says

I think what you fail to understand is that what we are calling GMO is an organism that could not in any way develop "naturally" that is under natural circumstances.

Actually no, it's your failure of understanding. A gene for a salmon oil can turn up in a plant 'naturally' aka 'randomly' without help from any person. It could happen faster using older selective technologies. It cab happen really fast with modern scientific tools. Granted, it might be rare or not happen at all 'naturally' but there is nothing preventing this from occurring. The entire globe is a 'natural' GMO experiment. Trillions and trillions and trillions of GMO experiments are occurring everywhere all the time and have been for billions of years. There are such experiments going on in your shoes, your bathroom, your kitchen all-the-time. The world is not flat and you will not fall off if you sail West.

@donjumpsuit: Nice comments! I'm glad someone with direct experience in this area is commenting. Folks like you work their tails off all their lives to better the world and have to put up with this sort of nonsense. It's almost criminal. I'd considered going that route over a decade ago but decided against it when I saw the fear in Europe spreading here. Much easier ways to scratch out a living.

93   Maga_Chaos_Monkey   2012 Dec 28, 3:27am  

@Zlxr: That marijuana you are smoking is giving you a paranoid imagination.

@121212: Fortunately for me I don't work for a GMO company and never have. Consequently I am not paid by them - there are plenty of other DNA based companies and technologies for me to work on that will continue just fine if crazies ever managed to ban GMO foods (plants/animals). Keep on charging at windmills if you believe they are ferocious giants.

94   Tenpoundbass   2012 Dec 28, 3:49am  

Good stuff Don, it's refreshing to actually hear the voice of reason from a Scientist that didn't go to the University of Hope and Change.

What do you have to say about Climate change, and what would be the best way to address it? Something tells me that if GW/CC is a real threat, and we're depending on Green upstarts to pull our bacon out of the fire, then that will be an up charge.

95   121212   2012 Dec 28, 4:08am  

donjumpsuit says

126 independent studies on the safety of GMO's in a variety of different situations, crops, environments. Conducted and published, peer reviewed in very trusted journals.

.....USDA acknowledges that GE material moves into fields and markets where it is not allowed or wanted. OSA believes the agency missed an opportunity to establish a comprehensive framework for overseeing GE crops and to protect the organic industry.

96   121212   2012 Dec 28, 4:09am  

donjumpsuit says

On glyphoshpate (RoundUP) specifically? Here is a 2 year study on the long term effects of Round up herbicide and GMO's in mammals.

B U L L S H I T!

http://www.globalresearch.ca/stench-of-eu-corruption-in-monsanto-gmo-whitewash/5316294

Cancer of Corruption, Seeds of Destruction: The Monsanto GMO Whitewash

Their findings were more than alarming. The Seralini study concluded, “In females, all treated groups died 2–3 times more than controls, and more rapidly. This difference was visible in 3 male groups fed GMOs…Females developed large mammary tumors almost always more often than and before controls; the pituitary was the second most disabled organ; the sex hormonal balance was modified by GMO and Roundup treatments. In treated males, liver congestions and necrosis were 2.5–5.5 times higher. This pathology was confirmed by optic and transmission electron microscopy. Marked and severe kidney nephropathies were also generally 1.3–2.3 greater. Males presented 4 times more large palpable tumors than controls…”

97   Patrick   2012 Dec 28, 5:55am  

just_passing_through says

A gene for a salmon oil can turn up in a plant 'naturally' aka 'randomly' without help from any person.

I had many biology classes in college, including genetics and embryology and I just don't see how a salmon gene could ever turn up in a plant.

Please explain.

98   121212   2012 Dec 28, 5:57am  


I had many biology classes in college, including genetics and embryology and I just don't see how a salmon gene could ever turn up in a plant.

Same way a human liver is grown in a Pig.

99   zzyzzx   2012 Dec 28, 7:27am  

121212 says

Same way a human liver is grown in a Pig.

I think Patrick was really saying that putting a gene from plant to animal or vice versa seems implausible. A human liver grown in a pig seems way less of a stretch, even to someone like myself who has no background in biology.

100   Patrick   2012 Dec 28, 7:28am  

121212 says

I had many biology classes in college, including genetics and embryology and I just don't see how a salmon gene could ever turn up in a plant.

Same way a human liver is grown in a Pig.

But there is no way for either to happen without direct and deliberate human involvement, right?

101   121212   2012 Dec 28, 7:35am  

Right. Infact Monsanto and othes cannot PATENT anything that would occur naturally. It has to be artificially created and not happen in nature.

102   Maga_Chaos_Monkey   2012 Dec 28, 8:33am  


I had many biology classes in college, including genetics and embryology and I just don't see how a salmon gene could ever turn up in a plant.

Please explain.

Well, technically it would be a plant gene if it evolved in a plant but they'd be identical. Random chance mutations would do the job.

Check out these structure diagrams:

http://lansbury.bwh.harvard.edu/structure_of_dha_and_epa.htm

DHA is mostly only found in sea life. EPA is found in plants. They are already almost identical. It does not take that many mutations to convert one to the other. In fact, if I looked a bit harder I'd bet there are already some plants with DHA.

103   rdm   2012 Dec 28, 8:34am  

just_passing_through says

Actually no, it's your failure of understanding. A gene for a salmon oil can turn up in a plant 'naturally' aka 'randomly' without help from any person.

Provide any evidence that this is true. This is simply your imagination. There are clear and very substantial built in barriers to inter-species breeding. In closely related species it does occur in divergent species such as salmon and plants it cannot occur... naturally

104   Maga_Chaos_Monkey   2012 Dec 28, 8:36am  

A bit more:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eicosapentaenoic_acid

"EPA is also a precursor to docosahexaenoic acid (DHA)"

It's virtually impossible for this change to not have occurred in some plant somewhere throughout time.

105   Maga_Chaos_Monkey   2012 Dec 28, 8:39am  

rdm says

Provide any evidence that this is true. This is simply your imagination. There are clear and very substantial built in barriers to inter-species breeding. In closely related species it does occur in divergent species such as salmon and plants it cannot occur... naturally

I never said it would happen through inter-species breeding. Useful traits at the molecular level and macro level find their way and occur through evolution independently. For instance, bats, birds and insects all have wings but they are all unrelated - as far as wings are concerned.

106   Maga_Chaos_Monkey   2012 Dec 28, 8:47am  

just_passing_through says


I had many biology classes in college, including genetics and embryology and I just don't see how a salmon gene could ever turn up in a plant.

Please explain.

Well, technically it would be a plant gene if it evolved in a plant but they'd be identical. Random chance mutations would do the job.

Check out these structure diagrams:

http://lansbury.bwh.harvard.edu/structure_of_dha_and_epa.htm

DHA is mostly only found in sea life. EPA is found in plants. They are already almost identical. It does not take that many mutations to convert one to the other. In fact, if I looked a bit harder I'd bet there are already some plants with DHA.

By the way Pat, not to poke at you but they didn't teach you much about evolution apparently. If you believe in that and understood how it works and the implications then none of this would seem out of the ordinary at all.

107   rdm   2012 Dec 28, 8:50am  

just_passing_through says

I never said it would happen through inter-species breeding. Useful traits at the molecular level and macro level find their way and occur through evolution independently. For instance, bats, birds and insects all have wings but they are all unrelated - as far as wings are concerned.

Yes of course evolution can develop similar genes in plants and fish but they have evolved naturally over millions of years. Your post implied that an actual gene from a salmon could end up in a plant through some natural process. That is simply not true. This evolutionary natural selection creating desirable (for the species survival) is a far cry from "shooting" genetic material directly from a bacteria into a corn plant.

108   Maga_Chaos_Monkey   2012 Dec 28, 9:00am  

No, I didn't say "similar", I said, "identical". You just clearly don't understand and this is the source of your fear. No worries, kids are going to understand it as will successive generations.

109   Maga_Chaos_Monkey   2012 Dec 28, 9:03am  

I take that back rdm, I don't know if you are afraid of GM but do know you don't understand how these things work.

110   Maga_Chaos_Monkey   2012 Dec 28, 9:18am  

No arguments with you on any of that Zlxr... But it's all not GM. If you have an issue with a company or industrial process we might agree.

Simply freaking out about GM though is barking up the wrong tree. There are so many things in food to worry about. Transfats are one I look out for. I don't eat baked goods these days unless I can read the label etc..

111   rdm   2012 Dec 28, 9:24am  

just_passing_through says

I don't know if you are afraid of GM but do know you don't understand how these things work.

I have yet to see where you have shown me how I dont "know how these things work"

I have stated I am not totally opposed to GMO's. I think they can provide some great benefits. One being the almost complete end to the application of corn root worm insecticide. I think they have been unleashed upon us with minimal regard to the complex web of life that exists on earth. Yet the Earth is resilient and we will likely survive any negative consequences.

What I most object to is the scientific hubris proclaiming that you and others have all the answers and anyone questioning your reasoning doesnt have the background to argue rational points. Your posts generally end with such a statement. I am speaking from experience as an ex farmer and one that is currently involved in agriculture as well as having a fair amount of "book learnin" Scientists have been wrong many times when they felt they had all the answers, the stakes just get higher as our level technological expertise grows.

113   New Renter   2012 Dec 28, 10:02am  


just_passing_through says

A gene for a salmon oil can turn up in a plant 'naturally' aka 'randomly' without help from any person.

I had many biology classes in college, including genetics and embryology and I just don't see how a salmon gene could ever turn up in a plant.

Please explain.

http://blog.23andme.com/23andme-and-you/genetics-101/genetic-similarities-of-mice-and-men/

Does this help?

114   New Renter   2012 Dec 28, 10:06am  

Zlxr says

Maybe we'll hear about a big one attacking kids in New Jersey or something.

http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history-archaeology/The-Shark-Attacks-That-Were-the-Inspiration-for-Jaws-165313716.html

OMG, they SAID it was a bull shark... Could it have been a giant newly carnivorous salmon?

115   New Renter   2012 Dec 28, 10:18am  

rdm says

What I most object to is the scientific hubris proclaiming that you and others have all the answers and anyone questioning your reasoning doesnt have the background to argue rational points. Your posts generally end with such a statement. I am speaking from experience as an ex farmer and one that is currently involved in agriculture as well as having a fair amount of "book learnin" Scientists have been wrong many times when they felt they had all the answers, the stakes just get higher as our level technological expertise grows.

As an ex-farmer perhaps you can tell me - in your opinion can traditional farming methods provide food for the world as abundantly, reliably, cheaply and safely as the commercial methods used today? If not, how traditional can farming be without putting the worlds food supply at greater risk?

116   121212   2012 Dec 28, 11:23am  

Thanks Renter

You think you can dismiss the entire argument with three links? This was contained in one of your links.

Séralini and his seven co-authors mount their own defense in Food and Chemical Toxicology. They dismissed most of the criticism as coming from industry sympathizers or corporate scientists, claiming they had “no right to review the results” because of their alleged conflicts of interest. They produced a chart to respond to some of the criticisms, and offered more substantive responses on some issues, for example defending the choice of a rat strain prone to tumors. They reiterated their refusal to release their raw data, yet concluding, defiantly, "GM NK603 and R cannot be regarded as safe as long as their safety is not proven by further investigations.”

Some scientists (although few geneticists), almost all of them from the activist-scientist anti-GM community, have come to Séralini’s defense. Two anti-GM science groups, the European Network of Scientists for Social and Environmental Responsibility (ENSSER) and the French Committee for Research and Independent Information on Genetic Engineering (GRIIGEN), which partially funded the study, rebuked some of criticisms but generally mounted an ad hominem response over what it maintained were ad hominem attacks against Séralini.

The activist sizable anti-GM NGO and journalism communities, which have been the study’s most vigorous defenders have been stunned by the critical reaction to Seralini’s study and his attempt to manipulate media coverage. On the defensive for the first time on this issue, they came together to compose an “open letter,” apparently fearing that the public tide may turn decisively against GM critics—which in fact may be happening if the rejection of California Proposition 37 is any indication. Their tactic: frame mainstream scientists as corporate apologists and dismiss the overwhelming and unprecedented reaction by the science journalism community against Séralini’s tactics as manufactured by “corporate influence.”

“When those with a vested interest attempt to sow unreasonable doubt around inconvenient results, or when governments exploit political opportunities by picking and choosing from scientific evidence, they jeopardize public confidence in scientific methods and institutions, and also put their own citizenry at risk,” the letter concluded. The polemic concluded that both the peer review process and the public debate are “rigged in favour of [corporations and] backed up by systematic suppression of independent scientists working in the public interest.”

In a just-released Nature commentary about the Séralini paper, Francois Houllier, President and Chief Executive of France’s public research Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA), asked, “How do we address the questions about the impact of GM crops, and how do we prevent this kind of negative reaction?” He proposed a laser focus on rigorous science, including an emphasis on more public finding for risk-benefit analyses—a position generally rejected by anti-GM activists—as well as “proper academic standards.” He specifically called for allowing research data to be inspected and outside experts to comment on the results—standards notably lacking in the handling of the Séralini paper).

Houllier also noted the vehemence of the anti-GM activist community, citing a GM grapevine rootstock study that was publicly funded with no intention to develop a commercial variety, but nevertheless vandalized.

Considering the science-resistant views of many in the anti-GM community, it’s questionable whether Houllier’s appeal to reason will have any impact. A thoughtful post on the blog New Antropocene by an Australian research scientist highlights the skepticism. “[R]igour is by all means valuable and something academic research should strive for, however none of this has much to do with the proceedings of Séralini et al. (2012), the author wrote. “The paper clearly had a preconceived agenda that had nothing to do with improving our understand of and human application within the known universe.”

The author continued: “Of course we want to know that the food we eat and give to our children is of the highest quality and safe, thus it seems plausible to conclude that the individuals behind this paper attempted to cash in on these rational fears by appealing to expert authority without submitting the basis for that authority to the critical review of the expert community! They took a short cut to maximise their impact—something that has, as Houllier states, undermined confidence in GM produce. This is unfair to the wealth of human knowledge as well as potential human well-being and entirely motivated by personal gain. … Rigour is not the point here at all; but instead it is academics knowingly subverting the course of public awareness of scientific understanding for personal gain. What needs to happen is more rigour in how science should be communicated to the public.”

A recalibration of the ethics and practice of science journalism may be in order, the author suggests. “Science communication needs to live by the principle of fair weight, not equal weight, to various ideas,” he writes. In other words, giving “equal time” to discredited, suspect or unscientific ideas may damage public discourse.

117   Homeboy   2012 Dec 28, 11:33am  

rdm says

I think what you fail to understand is that what we are calling GMO is an organism that could not in any way develop "naturally" that is under natural circumstances. Much of the so called genetic manipulation prior to the relatively recent labortory insertion of genetic material from other species has been by selection and controlled selection. These varieties could theoretically occour in nature, by accident, it is just that they have been selected in situations where man has controlled their genetic makeup through selective breeding.

This makes no sense. How do you know what "could" or "could not" happen to genes in nature? All the selective breeding that has been done over thousands of years would not have happened without the intervention of man. This is just a different method of changing genetics. Your belief that it is somehow inherently evil isn't based on any facts.

118   Maga_Chaos_Monkey   2012 Dec 28, 11:41am  

@121212: Equal time such as creation science? Should we be teaching that in schools? People used to live with dinosaurs right?

Someone mentioned you're liberal so I would guess the answer is, "no".

As a moderate who's lived in the bay area for the past 15 years far left folks like you sound just as crazy.

That being said I think I saw you make some good posts in a dating/marriage forum earlier, so I know your aren't, you've just been drinking too much cool-aid. I really want to reply in that thread but I have a hot date! Woohoo, get me outta here!

Oh, BTW, that 'research' you pointed out was the laughing stock of our department a few months back. A French guy in the group blasted it out to all of us. Union of Concerned Scientists and similar groups are a bunch of quacks. Also, it's hard being a good scientist. You don't think it might be easier to write a book or something else to scare people and make much more money that way? You bet your a$$ it is.

119   rdm   2012 Dec 28, 12:00pm  

`New Renter says

As an ex-farmer perhaps you can tell me - in your opinion can traditional farming methods provide food for the world as abundantly, reliably, cheaply and safely as the commercial methods used today? If not, how traditional can farming be without putting the worlds food supply at greater risk?

A good and difficult question to which I will give a qualified; yes traditional farming/organic farming could feed the world. It would require a complete reconfiguration of how ag. is practiced including an end to mono-culture, more livestock integrated into individual farms, the use of acceptable technology ( such as hybrid seed, new mechanical weeding devices etc.) and many more people living and working on the land. Of course an end to corn based ethanol would occur. Many of these changes IMO would be positive but given the huge industrial complex built up around production, transport, processing and sale of food it would be incredibly disruptive to the economy.

I farmed both organically and conventionally. It is certainly possible to get very good yields organically. It takes more skill and labor to farm organically. Farm chemicals particularly herbicides and chemical fertilizers have allowed, in conjunction with enormous machinery one farmer to farm vast tracts of land. That just cant happen with traditional/organic methods. GMO crops have made this even easier but have provided little increase in crop yield. They have merely replaced other inputs that worked but took more time and or money to use. So GMO's could be dropped should society decide to do so with no threat to the food supply

120   rdm   2012 Dec 28, 12:18pm  

Homeboy says

This makes no sense. How do you know what "could" or "could not" happen to genes in nature? All the selective breeding that has been done over thousands of years would not have happened without the intervention of man. This is just a different method of changing genetics. Your belief that it is somehow inherently evil isn't based on any facts.

Yes I cant know what has occurred in nature over millions of years but there is a scientific understanding as to how various species evolved and to my knowledge no one has claimed that transmigration of genetic material from a plant to a fish has played a part in the evolution of life on Earth, as it is understood and accepted by science. If you have an example of this please provide.

If you think I feel GMO's are " inherently evil" you need to re read my posts because that is another fantasy you have concocted. I believe in questioning science, it is not infallible and we do not need to accept everything science offers as either desirable and or of value.

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