French Study: Rats eating GMOs develop tumors, impaired pituitary function, kidney damage, and more

A new French study published in Food and Chemical Toxicology is receiving great attention from natural-foods enthusiasts and Monsanto’s public relations department.  The 2-year study is a unique contribution to the data pool, in that it is a longitudinal study.

Currently, no regulatory authority (such as the FDA) requires “chronic” studies in order to demonstrate safety.  Industry practice is to conduct 90-day studies, which is insufficient to view long-term effects on health.

The GMO crops typically under scrutiny are Monsanto’s Roundup-ready soybeans and maize, which are engineered to produce modified Bt toxin insecticide.  According to the report, “These GM crops contain new pesticide residues for which new maximal residual levels (MRL) have been established in some countries.”

This particular study focused on NK603 R-tolerant maize.

The problem with present studies is that they attempt to measure the effects of the active ingredient of a particular toxic compound, rather than the full-spectrum of adjuvants (a pharmacological or immunological agent that modifies the effect of other agents) and other ingredients.

The authors of the paper note that:

toxicity evaluation of herbicides is generally performed on mammalian physiology through the long-term study of only their active principle, rather than the formulation used in agriculture, as was the case for glyphosate (Williams et al., 2000), the active herbicide constituent of R. It is important to note that glyphosate is only able to efficiently penetrate target plant organisms with the help of adjuvants present in the various commercially used R formulations (Cox, 2004). When R residues are found in tap water, food or feed, they arise from the total herbicide formulation, which is the most commonly used mixture in agriculture; indeed many authors in the field have strongly emphasized the necessity of studying the potential toxic effects of total chemical mixtures rather than single components (Cox and Surgan, 2006; Mesnage et al., 2010; Monosson, 2005). Even adjuvants and not only glyphosate or other active ingredients are found in ground water (Krogh et al., 2002), and thus an exposure to the diluted whole formulation is more representative of an environmental pollution than the exposure to glyphosate alone in order to study health effects.

In other words, the authors are attempting to study more realistic variables over the long term.

They reported in the discussion of their findings that:

In conclusion, it was previously known that glyphosate consumption in water above authorized limits may provoke hepatic and kidney failures (EPA). The results of the study presented here clearly demonstrate that lower levels of complete agricultural glyphosate herbicide formulations, at concentrations well below officially set safety limits, induce severe hormone-dependent mammary, hepatic and kidney disturbances. Similarly, disruption of biosynthetic pathways that may result from overexpression of the EPSPS transgene in the GM NK603 maize can give rise to comparable pathologies that may be linked to abnormal or unbalanced phenolic acids metabolites, or related compounds. Other mutagenic and metabolic effects of the edible GMO cannot be excluded. This will be the subject of future studies, including transgene and glyphosate presence in rat tissues. Reproductive and multigenerational studies will also provide novel insights into these problems.

This study represents the first detailed documentation of longterm deleterious effects arising from the consumption of a GM Rtolerant maize and of R, the most used herbicide worldwide. Altogether, the significant biochemical disturbances and physiological failures documented in this work confirm the pathological effects of these GMO and R treatments in both sexes, with different amplitudes. We propose that agricultural edible GMOs and formulated pesticides must be evaluated very carefully by long term studies to measure their potential toxic effects.

In other words, the “safety thresholds” set by regulatory agencies are not enough.  What we have seen in these rats, in an attempt to account for environmental synergistic factors, is illness: tumors, liver and kidney damage, and more.

If you trust the corporate-infiltrated FDA’s safety limits, then you have given your consent to be the lab rat.

The backlash from this study illuminated a number of problems in its design: first, that the rats tested were of a breed already prone to tumors; second, that there were not enough rats in the control group, and just one rat can seriously skew a correlation.

These are valid points.  However, I wouldn’t discard the study completely.  While the leading scientist already has a poor track record in the scientific community and has been accused of poor study design and misleading interpretations of results in the past, I will state something in his defense.

The findings of increased kidney and liver lesions from a diet containing GMO corn have been seen elsewhere.  Check it out…

http://benthamscience.com/open/tonutraj/articles/V004/3TONUTRAJ.pdf

http://www.medecine.uottawa.ca/bmi/assets/documents/dr_altosaar/dr_altosaar1.pdf

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0278691507005443

http://www.i-sis.org.uk/mon.php

http://www.gmwatch.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=11884:health-effects-and-risks-of-bt-foodsconflicts-of-interest-in-approval-signed-by-medics

Whether is this enough to cause cancer, I cannot say.  But lesions of any kind are enough to make me balk at a plant that produces more potent Bt toxin, which ultimately has a conversation with my organs.

Whole Foods Market & Friends Encourage Co-Existence of Organic & GM

Approximately 2/3 of the products sold by Whole Foods Market and their main distributor, United Natural Foods (UNFI) are not certified organic, but rather are conventional (chemical-intensive and GMO-tainted) foods and products disguised as “natural.” — Ronnie Cummings, The Organic Consumer’s Association

I’m devastated to hear it, but not in the least bit surprised.  For several years, I have had the convenience of either living near, or working near the well-known giant in organic, “natural”, and to some extent artisan foods giant, “Whole Paycheck.”

And yes, while Whole Foods is pricey, consumers didn’t shy away from the booming organic and natural movement.  Our willingness to pay such a higher percentage of our income on these foods demonstrates consumer values.

It also demonstrates consumer ignorance.

Don’t be misled by labels, and don’t be misled by advertising.  Images on cartons of milk showing happy, grass-fed cows are still far from illustrating the truth.  Just because something costs more doesn’t make it better.

To understand the aforementioned quote–to know how such a deception is still possible, and legal–see “What you’re REALLY eating (part 3): don’t be misguided by food labels.”

Why post the quote at all?  It came from “The Organic Elite Surrenders To Monsanto,” by Ronnie Cummings, which describes how Whole Foods and other major names are simply tired of dealing with their cranky, demanding consumer base.  Because $9 billion of their sales is represented by the non-organic, GM-containing products, it is easier to continue raking in profits by sweeping the issue under the rug.

Most consumers, believe it or not (my readership is not representative of “most consumers,”) cannot sufficiently qualify a difference between natural and organic.  The industry will rely on this ignorance to perpetuate sales after the wake of outrage from more conscious consumers.

Retail stores like WFM and wholesale distributors like UNFI have failed to educate their customers about the qualitative difference between natural and certified organic, conveniently glossing over the fact that nearly all of the processed “natural” foods and products they sell contain GMOs, or else come from a “natural” supply chain where animals are force-fed GMO grains in factory farms or Confined Animal Feeding Operations (CAFOs). –OCA

Thanks to people like me (in my nascent health-and-environment-conscious stages also couldn’t tell you the difference between natural and organic, and due to a lack of funds, felt warm and fuzzy with my “natural” purchases all the same) a problem seeded itself in ignorance, then grew mightily in the organic-natural grocery boom.

…well-intentioned but misled consumers have boosted organic and “natural” purchases to $80 billion annually-approximately 12% of all grocery store sales.  —OCA

While organic took profits away from conventional, “conventional natural” took profits back.

How much progress have we made, really?

Know your labelsKnow what you’re buying.

Pesticides Kill

“…every year 220,000 people are killed by pesticides worldwide.” – Vandana Shiva, The Killing Fields of MNCs.

Wait, seriously?

Causes of death:

1) Environmental and workplace contamination both on farms and pesticide manufacture plants.

2) Farmer suicides (particularly in India), related to the GMO market’s marriage to and reliance upon the agro-chemical industry.

3) Numerous cancers, auto-immune, dermatological, and neurological disorders associated with the synergistic effect of synthetic chemicals on the body.

Unnecessary death.

From a utilitarian moral foundation, perhaps the worst of all evils.

Another good reason to go Organic.

Now What, Monsanto?

Things you should know:

1) The Monsanto Corporation (see article, All About Monsanto) has a monopoly on GMO seeds.

2) The most famous Monsanto product is Roundup, a highly potent herbicide.

3) The second most famous Monsanto product is Roundup Ready Soybeans (another popular product is Roundup Ready corn).

4) 90% of American soy is Roundup Ready (70%, corn).

5) Roundup kills essentially everything but Roundup Ready Soybeans.

…except for a new Roundup-resistant weed!

Environmentalists have been saying it for years.  Natural selection will produce a super-species.  It happens all the time (the most terrifying of which, in my opinion, is super-antibiotic-resistant staphylococcus).  In at least 22 states, there exist Roundup-resistant weeds.

Farmers once heavily dependent on Monsanto products are beginning to realize that Roundup (glyphosate) won’t be enough, and are now turning to more expensive inputs: new, more toxic herbicides, mechanical methods, pulling weeds by hand.  This is almost certain to effect the cost of food (not that I would want to buy herbicide-soaked food to begin with).

What’s next?

My tip: go organic.

GMO Foods Strongly Linked To Infertility

The Organic Consumer’s Association sends weekly newsletters to my email account.  Before I say anything about what arrived recently, I’d like to make a disclaimer: I do not remember ever submitting my email address to this association (in fact, I blame my mother).  I do not put a lot of stock into anything they send me, as I find this organization to lack sophistication when it comes to advancing its ideas.  I might call their newsletters “organic propaganda.”  Whatever.  This association makes a lot of bold statements and often fails to cite its sources.

But it’s still fun to read, and much of what the association tells me, I have already heard.  So I think to myself, it’s not totally bunk.

What recently came to my attention was a summary of a study originating in Russia, involving GMO food (in this study, it was GMO soy, which represents approximately 90% of American soybean production) and hamsters (a never-before tested animal species).

Below you will find a link to the article (our Russian scientists, Dr. Mercola, has not yet officially published his findings.  Hence, this article is merely a summary), and an excerpt stating the shocking findings:

“Warning: This Common Food Causes Devastating Offspring Effects In New Research Study.”

“One group of hamsters was fed a normal diet without any soy whatsoever, a second group was fed non-GMO soy, a third ate GM soy, and a fourth group ate an even higher amount of GM soy than the third.

“At first all went well, but serious problems became apparent when they selected new pairs from the offspring.

“The first problem was that this second generation had a slower growth rate and reached their sexual maturity later than normal.

“However, this second generation eventually generated another 39 litters:

  • The no-soy control group had 52 pups
  • The non-GM soy had 78
  • The GM soy had only 40, of which 25 percent died

Nearly all of the third-generation GMO babies were sterile!

But then an even bigger problem became apparent, because nearly all of the third generation hamsters lost the ability to have babies altogether.

Only a single third-generation female hamster gave birth to 16 pups, and of those, one fifth died.

In short, nearly the entire third generation of GM soy eaters were sterile!

But it doesn’t end there.

In the GM soy-fed groups they also found an unusually high prevalence of an otherwise extremely rare phenomenon – hair growing inside the animals’ mouths.

Gross.  Apparently this is not the first study reporting infertility issues in animals fed high amounts of GMO food.

Can I put this into perspective?  GMO technology is a very new thing.  Anyone born after 1990 has been eating GMO food.  GMO soy and/or GMO corn is found in most processed food: corn starch, corn syrup, HFCS, corn flakes are just the most basic examples of GMO corn; vegetable oil, soybean oil, soy lecithin, soy milk… a few basic examples of soy ingredients.

It’s everywhere, and not only is it everywhere, it’s not labelled.  Thanks to ties between patent owners of GMO technology (Monsanto, in particular; see my article, “All About Monsanto,”) and government officials (particularly in the FDA), there is no labelling law of GMO ingredients in sight.

America, the land of the free, with a complete lack of food sovereignty.  You eat what corporations want you to eat.

We already know that infertility is on the rise, don’t we?

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