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Roundup: Birth Defects Caused By World's Top-Selling Weedkiller, Scientists Say

Roundup Ready

First Posted: 06/24/11 10:04 AM ET Updated: 08/24/11 06:12 AM ET

WASHINGTON -- The chemical at the heart of the planet’s most widely used herbicide -- Roundup weedkiller, used in farms and gardens across the U.S. -- is coming under more intense scrutiny following the release of a new report calling for a heightened regulatory response around its use.

Critics have argued for decades that glyphosate, the active ingredient in Roundup and other herbicides used around the globe, poses a serious threat to public health. Industry regulators, however, appear to have consistently overlooked their concerns.

A comprehensive review of existing data released this month by Earth Open Source, an organization that uses open-source collaboration to advance sustainable food production, suggests that industry regulators in Europe have known for years that glyphosate, originally introduced by American agricultural biotechnology giant Monsanto in 1976, causes birth defects in the embryos of laboratory animals.

Founded in 2009, Earth Open Source is a non-profit organization incorporated in the U.K. but international in scope. Its three directors, specializing in business, technology and genetic engineering, work pro-bono along with a handful of young volunteers. Partnering with half a dozen international scientists and researchers, the group drew its conclusions in part from studies conducted in a number of locations, including Argentina, Brazil, France and the United States.

Earth Open Source’s study is only the latest report to question the safety of glyphosate, which is the top-ranked herbicide used in the United States. Exact figures are hard to come by because the U.S. Department of Agriculture stopped updating its pesticide use database in 2008. The EPA estimates that the agricultural market used 180 to 185 million pounds of glyphosate between 2006 and 2007, while the non-agricultural market used 8 to 11 million pounds between 2005 and 2007, according to its Pesticide Industry Sales & Usage Report for 2006-2007 published in February, 2011.

The Earth Open Source study also reports that by 1993 the herbicide industry, including Monsanto, knew that visceral anomalies such as dilation of the heart could occur in rabbits at low and medium-sized doses. The report further suggests that since 2002, regulators with the European Commission have known that glyphosate causes developmental malformations in lab animals.

Even so, the commission’s health and consumer division published a final review report of glyphosate in 2002 that approved its use in Europe for the next 10 years.

As recently as last year, the German Federal Office for Consumer Protection and Food Safety (BLV), a government agency conducting a review of glyphosate, told the European Commission that there was no evidence the compound causes birth defects, according to the report.

The agency reached that conclusion despite almost half a dozen industry studies that found glyphosate produced fetal malformations in lab animals, as well as an independent study from 2007 that found that Roundup induces adverse reproductive effects in the male offspring of a certain kind of rat.

German regulators declined to respond in detail for this story because they say they only learned of the Earth Open Source report last week. The regulators emphasized that their findings were based on public research and literature.

Although the European Commission originally planned to review glyphosate in 2012, it decided late last year not to do so until 2015. And it won’t review the chemical under more stringent, up-to-date standards until 2030, according to the report.

The European Commission told HuffPost that it wouldn’t comment on whether it was already aware of studies demonstrating the toxicity of glyphosate in 2002. But it said the commission was aware of the Earth Open Source study and had discussed it with member states.

“Germany concluded that study does not change the current safety assessment of gylphosate,” a commission official told HuffPost in an email. “This view is shared by all other member states.”

John Fagan, a doctor of molecular and cell biology and biochemistry and one of the founders of Earth Open Source, acknowledged his group’s report offers no new laboratory research. Rather, he said the objective was for scientists to compile and evaluate the existing evidence and critique the regulatory response.

“We did not do the actual basic research ourselves,” said Fagan. “The purpose of this paper was to bring together and to critically evaluate all the evidence around the safety of glyphosate and we also considered how the regulators, particularly in Europe, have looked at that.”

For its part, Earth Open Source said that government approval of the ubiquitous herbicide has been rash and problematic.

"Our examination of the evidence leads us to the conclusion that the current approval of glyphosate and Roundup is deeply flawed and unreliable," wrote the report’s authors. "What is more, we have learned from experts familiar with pesticide assessments and approvals that the case of glyphosate is not unusual.

"They say that the approvals of numerous pesticides rest on data and risk assessments that are just as scientifically flawed, if not more so," the authors added. "This is all the more reason why the Commission must urgently review glyphosate and other pesticides according to the most rigorous and up-to-date standards."

Monsanto spokeswoman Janice Person said in a statement that the Earth Open Source report presents no new findings.

"Based on our initial review, the Earth Open Source report does not appear to contain any new health or toxicological evidence regarding glyphosate,” Person said.

“Regulatory authorities and independent experts around the world agree that glyphosate does not cause adverse reproductive effects in adult animals or birth defects in offspring of these adults exposed to glyphosate," she said, "even at doses far higher than relevant environmental or occupational exposures.”

While Roundup has been associated with deformities in a host of laboratory animals, its impact on humans remains unclear. One laboratory study done in France in 2005 found that Roundup and glyphosate caused the death of human placental cells. Another study, conducted in 2009, found that Roundup caused total cell death in human umbilical, embryonic and placental cells within 24 hours. Yet researchers have conducted few follow-up studies.

“Obviously there’s a limit to what’s appropriate in terms of testing poison on humans,” said Jeffrey Smith, executive director of the Institute for Responsible Technology, which advocates against genetically modified food. “But if you look at the line of converging evidence, it points to a serious problem. And if you look at the animal feeding studies with genetically modified Roundup ready crops, there’s a consistent theme of reproductive disorders, which we don’t know the cause for because follow-up studies have not been done.”

“More independent research is needed to evaluate the toxicity of Roundup and glyphosate,” he added, “and the evidence that has already accumulated is sufficient to raise a red flag.”

Authorities have criticized Monsanto in the past for soft-pedaling Roundup. In 1996 New York State's Attorney General sued Monsanto for describing Roundup as "environmentally friendly" and "safe as table salt." Monsanto, while not admitting any wrongdoing, agreed to stop using the terms for promotional purposes and paid New York state $250,000 to settle the suit.

Regulators in the United States have said they are aware of the concerns surrounding glyphosate. The Environmental Protection Agency, which is required to reassess the safety and effectiveness all pesticides on a 15-year cycle through a process called registration review, is currently examining the compound.

“EPA initiated registration review of glyphosate in July 2009,” the EPA told HuffPost in a written statement. “EPA will determine if our previous assessments of this chemical need to be revised based on the results of this review. EPA issued a notice to the company [Monsanto] to submit human health and ecotoxicity data in September 2010.”

The EPA said it will also review a “wide range of information and data from other independent researchers” including Earth Open Source.

The agency's Office of Pesticide Programs is in charge of the review and has set a deadline of 2015 for determining if registration modifications need to be made or if the herbicide should continue to be sold at all.

Though skirmishes over the regulation of glyphosate are playing out at agencies across the U.S. and around the world, Argentina is at the forefront of the battle.

THE ARGENTINE MODEL

The Earth Open Source report, "Roundup and birth defects: Is the public being kept in the dark?" comes years after Argentine scientists and residents targeted glyphosate, arguing that it caused health problems and environmental damage.

Farmers and others in Argentina use the weedkiller primarily on genetically modified Roundup Ready soy, which covers nearly 50 million acres, or half of the country's cultivated land area. In 2009 farmers sprayed that acreage with an estimated 200 million liters of glyphosate.

The Argentine government helped pull the country out of a recession in the 1990s in part by promoting genetically modified soy. Though it was something of a miracle for poor farmers, several years after the first big harvests residents near where the soy cop grew began reporting health problems, including high rates of birth defects and cancers, as well as the losses of crops and livestock as the herbicide spray drifted across the countryside.

Such reports gained further traction after an Argentine government scientist, Andres Carrasco conducted a study, "Glyphosate-Based Herbicides Produce Teratogenic Effects on Vertebrates by Impairing Retinoic Acid Signaling" in 2009.

The study, published in the journal Chemical Research in Toxicology in 2010, found that glyphosate causes malformations in frog and chicken embryos at doses far lower than those used in agricultural spraying. It also found that malformations caused in frog and chicken embryos by Roundup and its active ingredient glyphosate were similar to human birth defects found in genetically modified soy-producing regions.

"The findings in the lab are compatible with malformations observed in humans exposed to glyphosate during pregnancy," wrote Carrasco, director of the Laboratory of Molecular Embryology at the University of Buenos Aires. "I suspect the toxicity classification of glyphosate is too low.”

“In some cases this can be a powerful poison," he concluded.

Argentina has not made any federal reforms based on this research and has not discussed the research publicly, Carrasco told HuffPost, except to mount a "close defense of Monsanto and it partners."

The Ministry of Science and Technology has moved to distance the government from the study, telling media at the time the study was not commissioned by the government and had not been reviewed by scientific peers.

Ignacio Duelo, spokesman for the the Ministry of Science and Technology’s National Council for Scientific and Technical Research [CONICET], told HuffPost in an statement that while Carrasco is one of its researchers, CONICET has not vouched for or assessed his work.

Duelo said that the Ministry of Science is examining Carrasco’s report as part of a study of the possible harmful effects of the glyphosate. Officials, he added, are as yet unable to “reach a definitive conclusion on the effects of glyphosate on human health, though more studies are recommended, as more data is necessary.”

REGIONAL BANS

After Carrasco announced his findings in 2009, the Defense Ministry banned planting of genetically modified glyphosate-resistant soy on lands it rents to farmers, and a group of environmental lawyers petitioned the Supreme Court of Argentina to implement a national ban on the use of glyphosate, including Monsanto's Roundup product. But the ban was never adopted.

"A ban, if approved, would mean we couldn't do agriculture in Argentina," said Guillermo Cal, executive director of CASAFE, Argentina's association of fertilizer companies, in a statement at the time.

In March 2010, a regional court in Argentina's Santa Fe province banned the spraying of glyphosate and other herbicides near populated areas. A month later, the provincial government of Chaco province issued a report on health statistics from La Leonesa. The report, which was carried in the leftist Argentinian newspaper Página 12, showed that from 2000 to 2009, following the expansion of genetically-modified soy and rice crops in the region, the childhood cancer rate tripled in La Leonesa and the rate of birth defects increased nearly fourfold over the entire province.

MORE QUESTIONS

Back in the United States, Don Huber, an emeritus professor of plant pathology at Purdue University, found that genetically-modified crops used in conjunction with Roundup contain a bacteria that may cause animal miscarriages.

After studying the bacteria, Huber wrote Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack in February warning that the "pathogen appears to significantly impact the health of plants, animals, and probably human beings."

The bacteria is particularly prevalent in corn and soybean crops stricken by disease, according to Huber, who asked Vilsack to stop deregulating Roundup Ready crops. Critics such as Huber are particularly wary of those crops because scientists have genetically altered them to be immune to Roundup -- and thus allow farmers to spray the herbicide liberally onto a field, killing weeds but allowing the crop itself to continue growing.

Monsanto is not the only company making glyphosate. China sells glyphosate to Argentina at a very low price, Carrasco said, and there are more than one hundred commercial formulations in the market. But Monsanto’s Roundup has the longest list of critics, in part because it dominates the market.

The growth in adoption of genetically modified crops has exploded since their introduction in 1996. According to Monsanto, an estimated 89 percent of domestic soybean crops were Roundup Ready in 2010, and as of 2010, there were 77.4 million acres of Roundup Ready soybeans planted, according to the Department of Agriculture.

In his letter to the Agriculture Department, Huber also commented on the herbicide, saying that the bacteria that he’s concerned about appears to be connected to use of glyphosate, the key ingredient in Roundup.

"It is well-documented that glyphosate promotes soil pathogens and is already implicated with the increase of more than 40 plant diseases; it dismantles plant defenses by chelating vital nutrients; and it reduces the bioavailability of nutrients in feed, which in turn can cause animal disorders," he wrote.

Huber said the Agriculture Department wrote him in early May and that he has had several contacts with the agency since then. But there’s little evidence that government officials have any intention of conducting the “multi-agency investigation” Huber requested.

Part of the problem may be that the USDA oversees genetically modified crops while the EPA watches herbicides, creating a potential regulatory loophole for products like Roundup, which relies on both to complete the system. When queried, USDA officials emphasized that they do not regulate pesticides or herbicides and declined to comment publicly on Huber's letter.

A spokesman eventually conceded their scientists do study glyphosate. "USDA’s Agricultural Research Service’s research with glyphosate began shortly after the discovery of its herbicidal activity in the mid 1970s," said the USDA in a statement. "All of our research has been made public and much has gone through the traditional peer review process.”

While Huber acknowledged his research is far from conclusive, he said regulatory agencies must seek answers now. “There is much research that needs to be done yet,” he said. “But we can't afford to wait the three to five years for peer-reviewed papers.”

While Huber’s claims have roiled the agricultural world and the blogosphere alike, he has fueled skeptics by refusing to make his research public or identify his fellow researchers, who he claims could suffer substantial professional backlash from academic employers who received research funding from the biotechnology industry.

At Purdue University, six of Huber’s former colleagues pointedly distanced themselves from his findings, encouraging crop producers and agribusiness personnel “to speak with University Extension personnel before making changes in crop production practices that are based on sensationalist claims.”

Since it first introduced the chemical to the world in the 1970s, Monsanto has netted billions on its best-selling herbicide, though the company has faced stiffer competition since its patent expired in 2000 and it is reportedly working to revamp its strategy.

In a lengthy email, Person, the Monsanto spokeswoman, responded to critics, suggesting that the economic and environmental benefits of Roundup were being overlooked:

The authors of the report create an account of glyphosate toxicity from a selected set of scientific studies, while they ignored much of the comprehensive data establishing the safety of the product. Regulatory agencies around the world have concluded that glyphosate is not a reproductive toxin or teratogen (cause of birth defects) based on in-depth review of the comprehensive data sets available.

Earth Open Source authors take issue with the decision by the European Commission to place higher priority on reviewing other pesticide ingredients first under the new EU regulations, citing again the flawed studies as the rationale. While glyphosate and all other pesticide ingredients will be reviewed, the Commission has decided that glyphosate appropriately falls in a category that doesn’t warrant immediate attention.

“The data was there but the regulators were glossing over it," said John Fagan of Earth Open Source, "and as a result it was accepted in ways that we consider really questionable.”

CORNERING THE INDUSTRY?

Although the EPA has said it wants to evaluate more evidence of glyphosate's human health risk as part of a registration review program, the agency is not doing any studies of its own and is instead relying on outside data -- much of which comes from the agricultural chemicals industry it seeks to regulate.

"EPA ensures that each registered pesticide continues to meet the highest standards of safety to protect human health and the environment," the agency told HuffPost in a statement. "These standards have become stricter over the years as our ability to evaluate the potential effects of pesticides has increased. The Agency placed glyphosphate into registration review. Registration review makes sure that as the ability to assess risks and as new information becomes available, the Agency carefully considers the new information to ensure pesticides do not pose risks of concern to people or the environment."

Agribusiness giants, including Monsanto, Dow Chemical, Syngenta and BASF, will, as part of a 19-member task force, generate much of the data the EPA is seeking. But the EPA has emphasized that the task force is only “one of numerous varied third-party sources that EPA will rely on for use in its registration review.”

The EPA is hardly the only industry regulator that relies heavily on data supplied by the agrochemical industry itself.

“The regulation of pesticides has been significantly skewed towards the manufacturers interests where state-of-the-art testing is not done and adverse findings are typically distorted or denied,” said Jeffrey Smith, of the Institute for Responsible Technology. “The regulators tend to use the company data rather than independent sources, and the company data we have found to be inappropriately rigged to force the conclusion of safety.”

“We have documented time and time again scientists who have been fired, stripped of responsibilities, denied funding, threatened, gagged and transferred as a result of the pressure put on them by the biotech industry,” he added.

Such suppression has sometimes grown violent, Smith noted. Last August, when Carrasco and his team of researchers went to give a talk in La Leonesa they were intercepted by a mob of about a hundred people. The attack landed two people in the hospital and left Carrasco and a colleague cowering inside a locked car. Witnesses said the angry crowd had ties to powerful economic interests behind the local agro-industry and that police made little effort to interfere with the beating, according to the human rights group Amnesty International.

Fagan told HuffPost that among developmental biologists who are not beholden to the chemical industry or the biotechnology industry, there is strong recognition that Carrasco’s research is credible.

"For me as a scientist, one of the reasons I made the effort to do this research into the literature was to really satisfy the question myself as to where the reality of the situation lies,” he added. “Having thoroughly reviewed the literature on this, I feel very comfortable in standing behind the conclusions Professor Carrasco came to and the broader conclusions that we come to in our paper

“We can’t figure out how regulators could have come to the conclusions that they did if they were taking a balanced look at the science, even the science that was done by the chemical industry itself.”

FOLLOW HUFFPOST GREEN

WASHINGTON -- The chemical at the heart of the planet’s most widely used herbicide -- Roundup weedkiller, used in farms and gardens across the U.S. -- is coming under more intense scrutiny following...
WASHINGTON -- The chemical at the heart of the planet’s most widely used herbicide -- Roundup weedkiller, used in farms and gardens across the U.S. -- is coming under more intense scrutiny following...
 
 
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06:02 PM on 07/08/2011
I'm not surprised that roundup's dangers weren't (aren't) taken seriously by (some) (many) law makers. Even scientists can be blind to the obvious.

Since we've got dogs we keep wandering the neighborhoods and I keep 2 eyes out to one small yard that's been decorated with a huge spray container of Roundup. The un-wanted plants (''weeds') keep coming in despite the at least 2 year long efforts of the home owners. I was thinking about taking pictures of the container and the ever more flourishing 'weeds'.

I also keep thinking about how easy it is to sell poisons that can kill many many people (and their resources) without even to have to show an ID (Homeland Security anybody??). I have signed every petition to remove this (and other) Monsanto et al. poisons I came across and am always shocked to see how readily even small stores now distribute toxins such as Roundup (and rodent and snail, etc. poisons which are toxic to more than the targeted 'pest' species. )

It is shameful (and scary) that legitimate poisoning of our planet can go on in front of our eyes (what do you think when you see a Roundup commercial!???). I believe government agencies may need more money or redistribute money to employ better educated unbiased staff to do the job to recognize such obvious toxic chemicals which are currently distributed like candy. Perhaps they also need to pull the plug on several lobbyists.
07:48 PM on 07/01/2011
Here's a farmer ..... Monsanto told him to clear the canadian GMO rapeseed by hand. So, even with GMOs it's a joke that humans won't have to pull weeds.

Monsanto - phewy - they and their products are crap crap crap

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jEX654gN3c4&feature=youtu.be
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PartisanLove
doh
05:30 PM on 06/28/2011
"After World War II, a philosopher studying the impact of organized propaganda on the quality of democratic debate wrote, "The conversion of all questions of truth into questions of power has attacked the very heart of the distinction between true and false."

as noticed in this article we have people always presenting that the scientific study has to be questioned. So lets not try to find the truth anywhere in the studies, lets attack the messenger.
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Beth Alexander
02:53 PM on 06/28/2011
No surprise here. However with the continued deregualation of "roundup-ready" crops, its use will simply continue to increase, as it is needed to grow these. And in amounts that would KILL any other plants not modified, not to mention harm people around it.
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HazelPethigFan
I don't know until I know
08:08 PM on 06/27/2011
"John Fagan, a doctor of molecular and cell biology and biochemistry and one of the founders of Earth Open Source, acknowledged his group’s report offers no new laboratory research."

"No new laboratory research". Got that?

Sounds like these people do nothing for themselves, but just try to get the publicity.
Some of the "research" they cite has already been discredited by other scientists
http://www.foodsafetynews.com/2011/02/purdue-scientists-refute-anti-gmo-claims/

But who cares....all publicity is good publicity, right?
12:03 PM on 07/01/2011
These types of literature review papers are very common in the scientific world. They gather all the research that has been done on the topic and organize it into a concise study, It is not simply a publicity grab.
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Limari Colon
05:07 PM on 06/27/2011
The saddest part of all this Monsanto/Food Inc. poisoning Americans and pretty much every race they can, is that it has been possible thanks to the US government. Aren't they supposed to protect us? Monsanto rules the food industry along with Smithfield meats, and all the while we keep asking ourselves "why is cancer killing everyone"? The answer is irrelevant, because most of us just turn on the tv or the computer and keep ignoring our crummu quality of life.
10:12 AM on 06/28/2011
And what, if I may be so bold to ask, is crummy about it? You go to the store and have a wider selection of food available than people of wealth and affluence did 200 years ago(not a long time for human history), you have shelter, effective & quick transportation, not to mention a wide variety of luxury goods to suit any potential fashion or function you could require. Not only that, but you also have an average lifespan far higher than the civilizations of the past, and next to no fears for the safety of your life, your family's lives, or your property.

Sorry that you are so petty that you have to convince yourself to be unhappy.
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Beth Alexander
02:50 PM on 06/28/2011
I'm a happy person and i STILL think I deserve to not consume poison. I would give up any luxury for this madness to stop. Some people just have different priorities.
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Beth Alexander
02:56 PM on 06/28/2011
oh and the "wider selection" of food will DEcrease because of this, because the genetically modified crops grown to merely increase purchase of roundup promote a monoculture. Its already happening. Get your facts straight :)
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dadoorsron
04:02 PM on 06/28/2011
Half-life of Glyphosate is 44 days in field dissapation from The 1993 Agrochemicals Handbook, other data from DPR PestChem Database (Kollman and Segawa,1995) Farmers will spray Their fields when invasive plants start growing. At that time frame Glyphosate will be untraceable or under the allowed thresehold by the FDA. I hope I'm not the first to tell you this. However, the FDA sets standards on rodent droppings, insect larva, and chemicals allowed in our food we eat. Oh yes, the so called "Organic food" as well. That gets multiple sprays of poultry manure during its growing season.

So "why is cancer Killing everyone"? Well, I saw a recent number that there are 1.1 Billion smokers on this planet. Smoking is well documented cancer causer. so just like your opinion on Monsanto is killing Americans. The Tobacco compaines are killing the smoker and the non smokers. Big tobacco is the cause of all cancers! I think my overall blanket statement holds more backing then your unbacked statement.
03:24 PM on 06/27/2011
What I hate about democrats is that they think reading and commenting on Huffpost is a valuable way to spend time and can help fuel the change in government that is needed; because nothing is more helpful in spreading a message than commenting on a bunch of articles with a bunch of people who already agree with your point of view (which is why they came to the Huffpost to read the article and aren't at the National Review website). Try joining an environmental group, like the EWG, and go door to door handing out flyers, on recycled paper of course, instead of wasting time commenting on this site which accomplishes precisely nothing towards the common good. There are plenty of environmental groups looking for volunteer help, and judging by everyone's response to this article it seems that there are plenty of people with the time to volunteer. But none of you will, because that would require a democrat to walk the walk and not just talk the talk, and all democrats are good for is SAYING what they think needs to be done by SOMEONE ELSE.
03:25 AM on 06/29/2011
Christ, lighten up! Maybe take a day off from all the do-gooding you're doing for the rest of us. How do you know what others do in their spare time...little judgemental, aren't you? You could have made your point without the anger. Chill!
05:59 AM on 07/11/2011
Many people, including some democrats are doing just that. Doesn't mean that sitting on the internet is taking people away from that task. In fact thank god we have the internet, I hate to say, because when would I ever come across this articles twenty years ago unless I was in this field or reading literature connected to it.
03:17 PM on 06/27/2011
What I hate about republicans is that they blindly support private industry over government. They support the group who wants your money and doesn't care about about your well-being instead of the group that wants your money only to use it to help protect you and everyone else in society. That is like getting mugged and tripping the cop who is chasing after the guy with your wallet. Just because the government, in this case the EPA and Department of Agriculture, isn't doing its job that doesn't mean that the idea of government protecting its people is a bad idea; it just means it isn't being carried through properly.
10:17 AM on 06/28/2011
The issue is that the price of government "security" is far more than money: its your freedom. How long does it take until regulations made in the interest of public "safety" encroach on you, or your neighbor, or hamper your employer in such a way that its no longer profitable to keep the doors open on his business?

Also: in an actual capitalist system(not a mixed/hybrid abomination like what the US has had for 100+ years) private industry has to care, to a certain extent, about their customers' well-being, because to not do so will lose them long-run profit. Nowadays they don't because a good bit of the lucky guys business comes from their cronies in Federal and State gov'ts, not from us.
12:24 PM on 06/28/2011
Two biggest mistakes made on Huffpost. Assuming what we have is a capitalist system when it certainly not capitalist (hybrid abomination is certainly an apt description) and that Republicans represent capitalism when they are like every politician, money and power hungry people who only look out for their best interests or do what it takes to get reelected if that means giving into special interest groups.
03:13 PM on 06/27/2011
What I hate about republicans is that they blindly support private industry over government. They support the group who wants your money and doesn't care about about your well-being instead of the group that wants your money only to use it to help protect you and everyone else in society. That is like getting mugged and tripping the cop who is chasing after the guy with your wallet. Just because the government, in this case the EPA and Department of Agriculture, isn't doing its job that doesn't mean that the idea of government protecting its people is a bad idea; it just means it isn't being carried through properly.

What I hate about democrats is that they think reading and commenting on Huffpost is a valuable way to spend time and can help fuel the change in government that is needed; because nothing is more helpful in spreading a message than commenting on a bunch of articles with a bunch of people who already agree with your point of view (which is why they came to the Huffpost to read the article and aren't at the National Review website). Try joining an environmental group, like the EWG, and take this time you are wasting commenting on this site and use it to knock on doors handing out flyers, on recycled paper of course, or find other groups to volunteer for (there are plenty to choose from). But that would require a democrat to walk the walk and not just talk
02:59 PM on 06/27/2011
You mean insecticides can be harmful? Shock! Horror! You know what's worse? NO STINKING FOOD!
mothergrace
If they knock you down, bite 'em on the ankle.
06:57 PM on 06/27/2011
The article is about an herbicide.

If you are, however, worried about no food as you say, overuse of any -cide whether for insects or weeds creates resistance so what about the food then?
12:55 PM on 06/27/2011
The eco-terrorists strike again! File this one in the file with the alar debacle, and DDT. Millions die needlessly every year due to trumped up 'studies' that are not worth the paper they are printed on. Libs wouldn't be happy if we were eating dirt and bark while we lived in mud huts heated by burning cow flop.
04:23 PM on 06/27/2011
What a worthless comment. You're obviously not a scientist and yet have such a strong opinion on something you also obviously know nothing about. Then, you use your ignorance
to comment on "Libs". Your certitude covers (you think) your intellectual cowardice.
I bet if your posts are reviewed, you're pretty certain and angry about everything.
"'specially Libs!"
04:25 PM on 06/27/2011
...so you're a scientist then?
01:25 PM on 06/28/2011
I'm sure the villagers in Africa would much prefer a good dose of DDT to reading a copy of "Silent Spring" under the cover of a mosquito net.
12:02 PM on 06/27/2011
Folks, let's face it, if the question is "Money vs. safety, money will win out everytime in a capitalist economy that allows regulation to be a catch-phrase for pablum. Capitalism, without very serious oversight by the people. Remember the government is the people in our system so when you criticize 'government oversight' you are saying you are willing to forgo your ownership of the government in favor of corporatist entities and people like the Koch Bro. who view the masses as nothing more than 'lice' (their words not mine).
12:26 AM on 07/03/2011
Not surprised to hear this. Pesticide abuse in other countries, big corp's have no trouble polluting/taking advantage of another. NO one watching what's going on & pay people dirt cheap. Monsanto, they have alot of control as they have alot of money & alot of other people with alot of money hiding all the bad stuff. it's not heard in the public until the damage is done and people/animals are so sick. companies are able to buy themselves out of everything. a drop in the bucket when fined. they pay huge fines but the damage is done. most of the time the crap is never even cleaned up. this goes on across the whole country. the people with the big money do not seem to care what's dumped as long as they have record profits, line their pockets and put other people out of business. i'm really not sure why they don't care as it effects ALL. this is a problem across the globe. "Underdog" cartoon, the villian was always taking or destroying to have it all and "TAKE OVER THE WORLD." See one of the many Monsanto Documentry's reguarding pesticides, patening seeds, buying everything in sight, (GM- genedically modified) VERY SCARY. messing with the genes in seeds,) farmers unable to wash their own seeds ( if caught doing so, they are BLACK LISTED, put out of business losing the family farm.) This is just (one) of many large companies polluting/destroying the globe, human race.
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DrMandible
No one on the corner has a swagger like us.
11:02 AM on 06/27/2011
NEVER buy Monsanto products. That includes most soy.
10:50 AM on 06/27/2011
When you are given lemons, make lemonade. Dandelions make a decent wine.
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AKansasComment
Don't it make my brown eyes blue
10:45 AM on 06/27/2011
Poisinous? Whowoodathunkit?