Author

Topic: GMO in the food we eat. (Read 1425 times)

legendary
Activity: 1918
Merit: 1570
Bitcoin: An Idea Worth Spending
June 20, 2012, 07:49:37 AM
#14
I guess I don't need to keep the company secret, but will hold back a tad longer of what I have in mind.

What do you folks think about this candy?

legendary
Activity: 1918
Merit: 1570
Bitcoin: An Idea Worth Spending
June 20, 2012, 07:45:14 AM
#13
Quote
I don't see why these companies (pharma as well) get to keep their research secret on products they already have patents on.

KFC and Coca_Cola come to mind, but not sure if that's what you're in reference to.

Quote
Even though I don't think there is good reason to be wary, anything is possible in biology.

This!?



And an aside. I'm saving the following image in case I ever need it down the road for the admins/mods here.



Fact: Autism causes here in the Sandwich, IL, area is one of the few local non-profits that I heavily donate to.

Sorry for going on a tangent, but Autism awareness was not the reason for starting this thread. I simply wanted more information on GMO since a/the company I want to approach seems to be anti-GMO.

~Bruno~
hero member
Activity: 728
Merit: 500
June 20, 2012, 05:28:00 AM
#12
So after a little more investigation I would say that the monsanto research I have seen is good for what it is (as long as it is not made up) but really, really incomplete. They need to look at later time points (even do multiple generations), use positive controls (feed animals contaminated food), and assess cognition. And, of course, their results need to be verified by a non-monsanto group. Also, farmers should demand studies on pigs before feeding it to pigs, humans should want to see studies in primates before choosing to eat it, etc. Even though I don't think there is good reason to be wary, anything is possible in biology.

Finally, the anti-GMO crowd appears to produces really crap research which is only hurting their cause. Personally I consider monsanto's behaviour pretty evil as far as companies go, and would like to see some actual investigation into what they are doing. I don't see why these companies (pharma as well) get to keep their research secret on products they already have patents on.

hero member
Activity: 728
Merit: 500
June 19, 2012, 11:03:38 PM
#11
Found the monsanto report they were forced to release:

http://cera-gmc.org/docs/decdocs/05-184-001.pdf


I have to say that every study should be recording and reporting what they do. This is excellent. There is actually info here. If they had done more than two doses and more than two timepoints this would be the greatest study ever.
hero member
Activity: 728
Merit: 500
June 19, 2012, 09:37:03 PM
#10
Quote
Rosman believes the problem manifested itself on his farm because he
planted 100 percent of the same brand of seed corn and feeds 100 percent of
that corn to his livestock.
His sample, in effect, was undiluted. "We got
nailed really hard because we're a small operation feeding 100 percent of
our own corn," he says. "If somebody sends 15,000 to 20,000 tons of this
stuff to an elevator and somebody gets a blast of it, it could hit their
units for a week or 10 days and then it's over."

Ah, I think i misinterpreted the bolded sentence.

In this video he makes no mention of the fusarium though:
http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=fa7_1327109175

Interesting.
legendary
Activity: 1918
Merit: 1570
Bitcoin: An Idea Worth Spending
June 19, 2012, 07:52:46 PM
#9
http://www.gene.ch/genet/2002/May/msg00055.html

Disclaimer: I have only barely looked into this...

It sounds like it was a fungal contamination. Most likely a strain of fusarium developed resistance to the pesticides and was able to outcompete all other (non-resistant) microorganisms until it reached toxic levels and was producing some estrogen receptor agonist that messed with the pigs. So the problem is not with the genetics, per se, but is similar to what happens in your gut if you overuse antibiotics. This "antibiotic" overuse was facilitated by the use of pesticide-resistant (gmo) crops. I wonder what happens if you feed the same pigs soy.

Also eating the same thing all the time can't be good for these pigs. A diverse diet may have prevented this problem.

I can't imagine any pig farmer feeding their pregnant, or not, sows nothing but corn. Remember, the surrounding pig farmers suffered the same faith with their sows.

~Bruno~
hero member
Activity: 728
Merit: 500
June 19, 2012, 02:30:52 PM
#8
http://www.gene.ch/genet/2002/May/msg00055.html

Disclaimer: I have only barely looked into this...

It sounds like it was a fungal contamination. Most likely a strain of fusarium developed resistance to the pesticides and was able to outcompete all other (non-resistant) microorganisms until it reached toxic levels and was producing some estrogen receptor agonist that messed with the pigs. So the problem is not with the genetics, per se, but is similar to what happens in your gut if you overuse antibiotics. This "antibiotic" overuse was facilitated by the use of pesticide-resistant (gmo) crops. I wonder what happens if you feed the same pigs soy.

Also eating the same thing all the time can't be good for these pigs. A diverse diet may have prevented this problem.
legendary
Activity: 1918
Merit: 1570
Bitcoin: An Idea Worth Spending
June 19, 2012, 07:59:19 AM
#7
My first job actually coding as a programmer was for a company working in the field. You could fax them an order, with a string like AGGGCTATCGGTACG and they would produce it and ship it out. Pretty cool seeing a desktop machine with bottles labelled A, C, G, T that fed into it. Anyway, I learned a lot about genetic engineering there - I actually wrote the code that analyzed and displayed the enzyme analysis (showing where each particular enzyme would break the chain).

The first thing I would say is that if someone says something like "they're putting fish genes in plants", the person has no clue and is probably talking FUD. Genes are what make organisms, not the other way around. Saying "fish gene" is the equivalent of saying "fish carbon atom" or "fish water molecule".

Genetic engineering is basically doing the same thing we've been doing for millenia only with more understanding and ability to test. I'm all for genetic modification - in general.

That being said, corporations are using the patent system to screw things up. I'm sure we've all heard about the evils of Monsanto and how they're attacking farmers inappropriately. If not, do some searching.

I'm all for labeling. IMHO there should be a private organization to do that, like for Kosher foods. We know we can't trust any government to do it properly - look at how they've screwed up 'organic' - allowing certain chemicals and up to certain concentrations that any reasonable person would find unacceptable for that designation.

This is pretty much my opinion. There are societal implications of GMO food but healthwise it is a non-issue.

I, too, was giving the issue a lesser concern, util I saw the video on sows going through false pregnancies and the farmer who owned said sows went bankrupt.

~Bruno~
hero member
Activity: 728
Merit: 500
June 18, 2012, 03:34:59 PM
#6
My first job actually coding as a programmer was for a company working in the field. You could fax them an order, with a string like AGGGCTATCGGTACG and they would produce it and ship it out. Pretty cool seeing a desktop machine with bottles labelled A, C, G, T that fed into it. Anyway, I learned a lot about genetic engineering there - I actually wrote the code that analyzed and displayed the enzyme analysis (showing where each particular enzyme would break the chain).

The first thing I would say is that if someone says something like "they're putting fish genes in plants", the person has no clue and is probably talking FUD. Genes are what make organisms, not the other way around. Saying "fish gene" is the equivalent of saying "fish carbon atom" or "fish water molecule".

Genetic engineering is basically doing the same thing we've been doing for millenia only with more understanding and ability to test. I'm all for genetic modification - in general.

That being said, corporations are using the patent system to screw things up. I'm sure we've all heard about the evils of Monsanto and how they're attacking farmers inappropriately. If not, do some searching.

I'm all for labeling. IMHO there should be a private organization to do that, like for Kosher foods. We know we can't trust any government to do it properly - look at how they've screwed up 'organic' - allowing certain chemicals and up to certain concentrations that any reasonable person would find unacceptable for that designation.

This is pretty much my opinion. There are societal implications of GMO food but healthwise it is a non-issue.
sr. member
Activity: 382
Merit: 253
June 18, 2012, 06:19:09 AM
#5
My first job actually coding as a programmer was for a company working in the field. You could fax them an order, with a string like AGGGCTATCGGTACG and they would produce it and ship it out. Pretty cool seeing a desktop machine with bottles labelled A, C, G, T that fed into it. Anyway, I learned a lot about genetic engineering there - I actually wrote the code that analyzed and displayed the enzyme analysis (showing where each particular enzyme would break the chain).

The first thing I would say is that if someone says something like "they're putting fish genes in plants", the person has no clue and is probably talking FUD. Genes are what make organisms, not the other way around. Saying "fish gene" is the equivalent of saying "fish carbon atom" or "fish water molecule".

Genetic engineering is basically doing the same thing we've been doing for millenia only with more understanding and ability to test. I'm all for genetic modification - in general.

That being said, corporations are using the patent system to screw things up. I'm sure we've all heard about the evils of Monsanto and how they're attacking farmers inappropriately. If not, do some searching.

I'm all for labeling. IMHO there should be a private organization to do that, like for Kosher foods. We know we can't trust any government to do it properly - look at how they've screwed up 'organic' - allowing certain chemicals and up to certain concentrations that any reasonable person would find unacceptable for that designation.
legendary
Activity: 4536
Merit: 3188
Vile Vixen and Miss Bitcointalk 2021-2023
June 17, 2012, 07:17:25 PM
#4
Damn. I thought this was going to be a scheme to encode bitcoin URIs in the DNA of gentically-modified food products, thereby removing the need for price tags once hardware wallets start incorporating DNA sequencers. I mean, this is the 21st century after all, we're supposed to have cool stuff like this by now. This future never fails to disappoint me.
legendary
Activity: 1918
Merit: 1570
Bitcoin: An Idea Worth Spending
June 17, 2012, 07:01:43 PM
#3
Bruno, sorry, but I won't let you genetically modify bitcoins.
No fucking way! Over my dead body!

Don't worry! This will have nothing to do modifying anything related to the mining, protocol, etc. of Bitcoin. Not to let the perverted (may be the wrong word) cat out of the bag, I have an existing company (NEW) in mind, wanting to introduce them to, then incorporate Bitcoin into one (or more) of their product line(s). They are a food company that is anti-GMO, hence wanting to get more up to speed about GMOs. I think this could turn out to be a really "sweet" marriage of them and Bitcoin.

~Bruno~
legendary
Activity: 1358
Merit: 1002
June 17, 2012, 06:52:05 PM
#2
Bruno, sorry, but I won't let you genetically modify bitcoins.
No fucking way! Over my dead body!
legendary
Activity: 1918
Merit: 1570
Bitcoin: An Idea Worth Spending
June 17, 2012, 06:32:19 PM
#1
I've got something up my sleeve (Bitcoin related), but first I need to read more information on genetically modified organism (GMO), hence this thread. Hopefully a lively discussion, whether pro, con or indifferent, will ensue. Yes, a myriad of information is readily available to me via the rest of the internet, of which I've read and viewed my fair share, but I desire to learn more from like-minded individuals like yourselves.

Thank you in advance.

~Bruno~
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