My stand about GM plants/crops
Everywhere I look and turn, people are telling me to get involved and to make a stand against GM. I have leaflets through the door, people on the high street with petitions and it's all over the internet. It seems everyone is anti-GM right now, and they all assume I will agree with them and want to fight the mean GM monster (or whatever personification of frankenstine they've given it).
Well, I can't tell you if it's safe or not - but I can say the whole argument has lost direction. It's not about calculating the risks and making a fair descision, it has also got nothing to do with our future and has become a media hype driven by little more than emotive paper articles. I have never seen so many people who clearly haven't done their research object so loudly. Most of the people I've asked don't agree, yet few can tell me anything about the process, how it works or even name a single example of modified crops currently in usage. It seems to have been entirely overlooked that cross bred plants are used by the hundreds with excellent safe results, despite being unatural and alien to our ecosystem. I have a hybrid Japanese flowering cherry in my garden, it does not fit in with our brittish ecosystem and is just as alien as a GM cherry tree would be, yet it has been there over 80 years and despite being cross fertile with english cherry trees has done no harm at all. The idea unatural plants will go on the rampage contaminating everything in their path isn't a fully formed concept at all, in fact it's highly unlikely. If the propsal was to plant GM crops on mass outside the lab and sell them in the stores right now, yes I would totally object. However the propsal is to start the early stages of trials and tests in a lab, just simply to find out more info so we can make a better informed choice later when we know what its impact will be. If the government scrap the GM testing by outlawing at such an early stage, it won't be because it's unsafe or a risk, it will be because the public outcry presurised them in to doing it to gain popularity. If this does happen they will be very popular on this debate, and all of us will miss out on the valuable information and benifits we could gain from safe testing. I feel it's wrong to make a descision before we know all the facts, but that's what most people want to do. It's no better than outlawing trial by jury, after all many people have pronounced GM 'guilty' before we even fully know what it is or any firm data on it. When we have so much starvation and environmental dammage, it seems crazy to pass up trying the technology which could solve so much of it. I strongly feel we should be presurising for highly regulated trials with a calculated risk, then perhaps we can make the right descision in the future based on real facts, and not unfounded propaganda and pictures of evil vegitables with bolts through their necks. I don't want to say no to GM anymore than I want to say yes, I just want to know what I'm being asked to accept or reject before I make a descision... |
My stand about GM plants/crops
: Everywhere I look and turn, people are telling me to get involved and
: to make a stand against GM. I have leaflets through the door, people : on the high street with petitions and it's all over the internet. It : seems everyone is anti-GM right now, and they all assume I will agree : with them and want to fight the mean GM monster (or whatever : personification of frankenstine they've given it). : : Well, I can't tell you if it's safe or not - but I can say the whole : argument has lost direction. It's not about calculating the risks and : making a fair descision, it has also got nothing to do with our future : and has become a media hype driven by little more than emotive paper : articles. I have never seen so many people who clearly haven't done : their research object so loudly. Most of the people I've asked don't : agree, yet few can tell me anything about the process, how it works or : even name a single example of modified crops currently in usage. It : seems to have been entirely overlooked that cross bred plants are used : by the hundreds with excellent safe results, despite being unatural : and alien to our ecosystem. I have a hybrid Japanese flowering cherry : in my garden, it does not fit in with our brittish ecosystem and is : just as alien as a GM cherry tree would be, yet it has been there : over 80 years and despite being cross fertile with english cherry : trees has done no harm at all. The idea unatural plants will go on : the rampage contaminating everything in their path isn't a fully : formed concept at all, in fact it's highly unlikely. : : If the propsal was to plant GM crops on mass outside the lab and sell : them in the stores right now, yes I would totally object. However the : propsal is to start the early stages of trials and tests in a lab, : just simply to find out more info so we can make a better informed : choice later when we know what its impact will be. If the government : scrap the GM testing by outlawing at such an early stage, it won't be : because it's unsafe or a risk, it will be because the public outcry : presurised them in to doing it to gain popularity. If this does : happen they will be very popular on this debate, and all of us will : miss out on the valuable information and benifits we could gain from : safe testing. I feel it's wrong to make a descision before we know : all the facts, but that's what most people want to do. It's no better : than outlawing trial by jury, after all many people have pronounced : GM 'guilty' before we even fully know what it is or any firm data on : it. : : When we have so much starvation and environmental dammage, it seems : crazy to pass up trying the technology which could solve so much of : it. I strongly feel we should be presurising for highly regulated : trials with a calculated risk, then perhaps we can make the right : descision in the future based on real facts, and not unfounded : propaganda and pictures of evil vegitables with bolts through their : necks. I don't want to say no to GM anymore than I want to say yes, I : just want to know what I'm being asked to accept or reject before I : make a descision... Spot on, I agree with you |
My stand about GM plants/crops
On Fri, 03 Oct 2003 00:39:58 GMT, Bry
wrote: Everywhere I look and turn, people are telling me to get involved and to make a stand against GM. I have leaflets through the door, people on the high street with petitions and it's all over the internet. It seems everyone is anti-GM right now, and they all assume I will agree with them and want to fight the mean GM monster (or whatever personification of frankenstine they've given it). Well, I can't tell you if it's safe or not - but I can say the whole argument has lost direction. It's not about calculating the risks and making a fair descision, it has also got nothing to do with our future and has become a media hype driven by little more than emotive paper articles. I have never seen so many people who clearly haven't done their research object so loudly. Most of the people I've asked don't agree, yet few can tell me anything about the process, how it works or even name a single example of modified crops currently in usage. It seems to have been entirely overlooked that cross bred plants are used by the hundreds with excellent safe results, despite being unatural and alien to our ecosystem. I have a hybrid Japanese flowering cherry in my garden, it does not fit in with our brittish ecosystem and is just as alien as a GM cherry tree would be, yet it has been there over 80 years and despite being cross fertile with english cherry trees has done no harm at all. The idea unatural plants will go on the rampage contaminating everything in their path isn't a fully formed concept at all, in fact it's highly unlikely. It doesn't surprise me at all that there's a 'populist' backlash against this technology. I think it's a grave mistake to assume that simply because people don't understand the science behind it, their opinion isn't valid. We've listened to the scientists before, and trusted them, and then found that babies were being born with deformities, or drugs have been hastily withdrawn alongside dark muttering about cancer risks. The issue is less about the science and more about integrity - a fact not helped by some of the apparently less-than-wholesome commercial interests in GM. Clearly you've given the matter some thought, and you're not at all convinced that there will be a Frankensteinien disaster on the cards - but what about the more subtle effects? You assure us that your hybrid cherry hasn't done any harm - and it probably hasn't... but how do you know? What steps have you taken, what test have you done to check what effect it had on the environment? It grows, it flowers, it isn't surrounded by dead bodies...therefore it must be OK? And it's one plant, in one location - what if there were millions of them, all over the place? How can you be sure what the environmental impact would be? As for plants going on the rampage, I agree, it's highly unlikely that anyone would be so stupid as to introduce a modified plant that has all the tenacity of, say, Ground Elder ( whoops ) - but surely there's a case to answer further down the environmental chain. How will such plants interact with their environment, what are the implications for wildlife and the surrounding vegetation - and these questions aren't just confined to the effects the plant itself might have but on it's cultivation practice. Even something as innocuous as bringing forward a crop's harvest time can have a dramatic effect on the landscape. If the propsal was to plant GM crops on mass outside the lab and sell them in the stores right now, yes I would totally object. However the propsal is to start the early stages of trials and tests in a lab, just simply to find out more info so we can make a better informed choice later when we know what its impact will be. If the government scrap the GM testing by outlawing at such an early stage, it won't be because it's unsafe or a risk, it will be because the public outcry presurised them in to doing it to gain popularity. If this does happen they will be very popular on this debate, and all of us will miss out on the valuable information and benifits we could gain from safe testing. I feel it's wrong to make a descision before we know all the facts, but that's what most people want to do. It's no better than outlawing trial by jury, after all many people have pronounced GM 'guilty' before we even fully know what it is or any firm data on it. I agree again. I'm sure there were people who though that travelling faster than 30mph would be a bad thing ( Minnie Bannister, for one! ) - and time has proved them wrong ( or has it?? ). The issue here is where and how such tests are carried out. When we have so much starvation and environmental dammage, it seems crazy to pass up trying the technology which could solve so much of it. I strongly feel we should be presurising for highly regulated trials with a calculated risk, then perhaps we can make the right descision in the future based on real facts, and not unfounded propaganda and pictures of evil vegitables with bolts through their necks. I don't want to say no to GM anymore than I want to say yes, I just want to know what I'm being asked to accept or reject before I make a descision... I'm not at all convinced by the argument that GM would solve starvation and environmental problems - we already have it within our power to do this, the question that must be asked is why have we not already done it? It comes to something when a celebrity has to go on Radio 4 to beg for thirty quid so that a community in the third world can have a standpipe. These 'problems' are less about inefficient technology and agriculture, and more about greed and politics. And that has to lead people to ask what GM is for? Better tasting vegetables? Well, we have those already - but the supermarkets only stock them grudgingly, and the public only pays for them grudgingly - and the powers that be seem hell-bent on making life as difficult as possible for the small, specialist growers and producers. Longer lasting vegetables? Would that be because most of our small greengrocers have been forced out of business, and supermarkets would make more money if they could keep stock on the shelf longer? Better disease resistance? Is this because we now grow fewer varieties, and wish to protect the stalwart popular ( AKA best selling ) varieties? Who stands to gain? And then there's the emotive issue of whom do we trust to decide what the best way forward might be. An argument often raised is that nature's 'at it' on a wholly arbitrary basis. Plants cross-breed with gay abandon, GM scientists are precise and focussed - but who's had the most experience? Nature has a remarkable talent for devising all manner of strange and wonderful ways to fill a niche - there can't be many places on Earth some form of vegetation doesn't thrive - and yet every time mankind intercedes we end up with the potential for a right-royal f*ckup - and there have been plenty enough of those. Whom do you trust? Regards, -- Stephen Howard - Woodwind repairs & period restorations www.shwoodwind.co.uk Emails to: showard{whoisat}shwoodwind{dot}co{dot}uk |
My stand about GM plants/crops
"Robert" wrote in message ... : Everywhere I look and turn, people are telling me to get involved and : to make a stand against GM. I have leaflets through the door, people : on the high street with petitions and it's all over the internet. It : seems everyone is anti-GM right now, and they all assume I will agree : with them and want to fight the mean GM monster (or whatever : personification of frankenstine they've given it). : : Well, I can't tell you if it's safe or not - but I can say the whole : argument has lost direction. Spot on, I agree with you My complaint is the oil seed rape that is being modified to withstand weed killers. All very well except: 1) Weed killer will then be sprayed on the crop willy nilly causing damage to other plants, including I suspect in adjacent fields and garden. 2)Rape has already spread to become a nuisance weed, killing the modified version will become very difficult. So my bitch is not about GM per se but the thoughtless (I think) modifications that are being done. cheers John T |
My stand about GM plants/crops
Thankyou Stephen for very lucidly putting forward most of my thoughts and
opinions on the GM debate (in far better English than I could muster) Especially the paragraph about who stands to gain. I think the public is being mislead over the reasons for GM tests. I think anyone would be very naive if they thought that multinational companies were testing these crops for the benefit of the general public...... I would also disagree with Bry on the point that his cherry tree is "just as alien as a GM cherry tree would be" 80 years of research in the science of genetics would make any new crops *very* different to your cherry tree. Dave H |
My stand about GM plants/crops
"Bry" wrote in message s.com... Everywhere I look and turn, people are telling me to get involved and to make a stand against GM. I have leaflets through the door, people on the high street with petitions and it's all over the internet. It seems everyone is anti-GM right now, and they all assume I will agree with them and want to fight the mean GM monster (or whatever personification of frankenstine they've given it). Well, I can't tell you if it's safe or not - but I can say the whole argument has lost direction. It's not about calculating the risks and making a fair descision, it has also got nothing to do with our future and has become a media hype driven by little more than emotive paper articles. I have never seen so many people who clearly haven't done their research object so loudly. Most of the people I've asked don't agree, yet few can tell me anything about the process, how it works or even name a single example of modified crops currently in usage. It seems to have been entirely overlooked that cross bred plants are used by the hundreds with excellent safe results, despite being unatural and alien to our ecosystem. I have a hybrid Japanese flowering cherry in my garden, it does not fit in with our brittish ecosystem and is just as alien as a GM cherry tree would be, yet it has been there over 80 years and despite being cross fertile with english cherry trees has done no harm at all. The idea unatural plants will go on the rampage contaminating everything in their path isn't a fully formed concept at all, in fact it's highly unlikely. If the propsal was to plant GM crops on mass outside the lab and sell them in the stores right now, yes I would totally object. However the propsal is to start the early stages of trials and tests in a lab, just simply to find out more info so we can make a better informed choice later when we know what its impact will be. If the government scrap the GM testing by outlawing at such an early stage, it won't be because it's unsafe or a risk, it will be because the public outcry presurised them in to doing it to gain popularity. If this does happen they will be very popular on this debate, and all of us will miss out on the valuable information and benifits we could gain from safe testing. I feel it's wrong to make a descision before we know all the facts, but that's what most people want to do. It's no better than outlawing trial by jury, after all many people have pronounced GM 'guilty' before we even fully know what it is or any firm data on it. When we have so much starvation and environmental dammage, it seems crazy to pass up trying the technology which could solve so much of it. I strongly feel we should be presurising for highly regulated trials with a calculated risk, then perhaps we can make the right descision in the future based on real facts, and not unfounded propaganda and pictures of evil vegitables with bolts through their necks. I don't want to say no to GM anymore than I want to say yes, I just want to know what I'm being asked to accept or reject before I make a descision... -- Bry As a scientist, I suspect that most GM plants will be safe and harmless to the environment, but like all theories, this needs to be verified by adequate, independent assessment. However my main suspicion is that the large companies are acting primarily to boost their own profits, rather than to benefit mankind. For example, for thousands of years, farmers have used some seed from thie current crop to produce next year's crop. I understand that some of the large companies have specifically banned this procedure, claiming patent rights (and fees) over use of the seed from GM plants - or alternatively, designed plants that cannot produce viable seeds. This means that in future, farmers will have to purchase 100% of their seed requirement each year - leading to increased sales & profits for the GM seed producers. Bevan |
My stand about GM plants/crops
The battle being fought by the anti GM factions has already been lost. Over 50% of the world's population lives where GM crops are permitted and it has the quickest adoption rate of any new agricultural technology. Of particular note is the rate at which underdeveloped countries have begun to adopt GM crops. |
My stand about GM plants/crops
The message m
from Bry trolled If the propsal was to plant GM crops on mass outside the lab (snip), yes I would totally object. However the propsal is to start the early stages of trials and tests in a lab, just simply to find out more info so we can make a better informed choice later when we know what its impact will be. Oh, here we go, some moron at MODERATED gardenbanter has discovered trolling. Wake up, Webmaster. Janet. |
My stand about GM plants/crops
"Bevan Price" wrote in message ... [snip] As a scientist, I suspect that most GM plants will be safe and harmless to the environment, but like all theories, this needs to be verified by adequate, independent assessment. However my main suspicion is that the large companies are acting primarily to boost their own profits, In the real capitalist world, the *sole* and *only* purpose of a company is to maximise its profits for its shareholders. Business companies are not in any sense of the word charitable institutions. You, for one, should object vehemently if any company in which you might own shares, would fritter potential profits in charitable excercises. You should wish to donate privately for such purposes. rather than to benefit mankind. [snip] Franz |
My stand about GM plants/crops
On Fri, 3 Oct 2003 05:37:08 +0000 (UTC), "Robert"
wrote: : just want to know what I'm being asked to accept or reject before I : make a descision... Spot on, I agree with you fair enough, but did you have to repost the entire rant? -- Derek Turner Outlook Express is worth precisely what you paid for it. -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
My stand about GM plants/crops
"Derek Turner" wrote in message ... On Fri, 3 Oct 2003 05:37:08 +0000 (UTC), "Robert" [snip] Outlook Express is worth precisely what you paid for it. I don't make a habit of singing the praises of Microsoft, but I have to give praise where praise is due. I have used Outlook Express for about six years now, and it has not let me down yet. Please tell me what I am supposed to criticise about it, so that I can join in the general fun. Franz |
My stand about GM plants/crops
Bevan Price wrote or quoted:
However my main suspicion is that the large companies are acting primarily to boost their own profits, rather than to benefit mankind. For example, for thousands of years, farmers have used some seed from thie current crop to produce next year's crop. I understand that some of the large companies have specifically banned this procedure, claiming patent rights (and fees) over use of the seed from GM plants - or alternatively, designed plants that cannot produce viable seeds. This means that in future, farmers will have to purchase 100% of their seed requirement each year - leading to increased sales & profits for the GM seed producers. That happens today with non-GM crops: hybrid seed. If you don't want seeds that produce infertile plants, you don't have to buy them. -- __________ |im |yler http://timtyler.org/ Remove lock to reply. |
My stand about GM plants/crops
John Towill wrote or quoted:
My complaint is the oil seed rape that is being modified to withstand weed killers. All very well except: 1) Weed killer will then be sprayed on the crop willy nilly causing damage to other plants, including I suspect in adjacent fields and garden. 2)Rape has already spread to become a nuisance weed, killing the modified version will become very difficult. So my bitch is not about GM per se but the thoughtless (I think) modifications that are being done. There will inevitably be some stupid modificaitons - by all means criticise those. http://members.tripod.com/c_rader0/gemod.htm#early lists some of the not-so-stupid ones, though - and many seem worthwhile. -- __________ |im |yler http://timtyler.org/ Remove lock to reply. |
My stand about GM plants/crops
: On Fri, 3 Oct 2003 05:37:08 +0000 (UTC), "Robert"
: wrote: : ::: just want to know what I'm being asked to accept or reject before I ::: make a descision... :: :: Spot on, I agree with you :: : fair enough, but did you have to repost the entire rant? Perhaps not |
My stand about GM plants/crops
: "Derek Turner" wrote in message
: ... :: On Fri, 3 Oct 2003 05:37:08 +0000 (UTC), "Robert" : : [snip] : :: Outlook Express is worth precisely what you paid for it. : : I don't make a habit of singing the praises of Microsoft, but I have : to give praise where praise is due. I have used Outlook Express for : about six years now, and it has not let me down yet. : : Please tell me what I am supposed to criticise about it, so that I : can join in the general fun. : : Franz Good one Franz, I can't see anything wrong with it either. It has no adverts amd does exactly what I want it to do. I have tried Eudora, and another that I forget the name of and to my mind they are not a patch on microsoft |
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