Posted on 04/08/2019 7:48:34 PM PDT by BenLurkin
Clumps of dandelions have popped up in your yard, so you reach for a bottle of Roundup, the popular weed killer. It is known for being very effective, but its main ingredient, glyphosate, is getting a lot of attention because of lawsuits alleging links to cancer.
Last week, a federal jury ordered Monsanto, the maker of Roundup, to pay $80 million to a 70-year-old man with cancer who had used it for three decades on his 56 acres in Sonoma County, Calif. The jury found that Roundup was a substantial factor in his illness.
Bayer AG, which bought Monsanto last year, said it would appeal the decision.
Glyphosate is by far the most widely used herbicide in the United States
Last year, a California superior court jury in San Francisco reached a similar verdict against Monsanto in favor of a groundskeeper with the same disease non-Hodgkin lymphoma, a potentially fatal cancer of the immune system. Monsanto also appealed that decision.
Glyphosate is by far the most widely used herbicide in the United States, and probably worldwide. It is used on nearly every acre of corn, cotton and soybeans grown in the U.S. You may have sprayed it on your lawn or garden.
But many jurisdictions, in more than two dozen countries, have banned or restricted its use. Among the latest: Los Angeles County announced last month that it was suspending use of glyphosate on county property until more is known about its health effects.
Bayer says on its website that the weed killer has been thoroughly tested, and an extensive body of research shows that products containing it can be used safely and that glyphosate is not carcinogenic.
Cynthia Curl, an environmental health scientist at Boise State University in Idaho who studies the chemical, said, many assumptions have been made about the safety of glyphosate that are now being actively questioned. We will see an explosion of information about glyphosate, and its about time. Were really playing catch-up on this one.
Lets try to provide a few answers:
Q: What is glyphosate, and what is it used for?
First sold commercially by Monsanto in 1974 under the name Roundup, glyphosate kills weeds by blocking enzymes that regulate plant growth.
Over the four decades after its launch, use of Roundup increased a hundredfold. Monsanto genetically engineered crops to tolerate glyphosate in 1996, and these Roundup Ready seeds paved the way for the weed killer to be used on farm fields around the world.
Q: Roundup isnt the only weed killer with glyphosate, right?
Right. Over 750 glyphosate-containing products are sold in the United States, either in solid or liquid form. In addition to Roundup, common ones include Ortho GroundClear, DowDuPonts Rodeo, Compare-N-Save Concentrate Grass and Weed Killer, RM43 Total Vegetation Control and Ranger Pro Herbicide, also made by Monsanto. If you dont know whether a weed killer contains glyphosate, read the label. It would be listed under active ingredients.
Q: How extensive is human exposure to glyphosate?
Because of its widespread use, glyphosate is in water, food and dust, so its likely almost everyone has been exposed. And human exposure, through food and water, will probably increase in tandem with growing use of the weed killer, according to a 2016 study published in the journal Environmental Sciences Europe.
But little is known about the magnitude of human exposure, because food and water are not regularly tested for glyphosate residue. However, a few years ago, researchers tested the urine of a small group of people across the United States and found glyphosate residue in 93% of them.
Curl said she is launching a project that will compare the exposure of pregnant women who live in farm areas and non-farm areas, then introduce organic diets to try to tease out how much of the glyphosate comes from food.
Q: What do we really know about the human health risks of glyphosate?
For decades, it was thought that glyphosate posed a risk only to plants, not people. Thats because it inhibits an enzyme that humans dont even have.
Its possible link to cancer has prompted a blizzard of claims and counterclaims over the past several years, and major public health agencies disagree about it. The World Health Organizations International Agency for Research on Cancer has called glyphosate a probable human carcinogen, and in 2017, the state of California added it to its list of cancer-causing chemicals.
The Environmental Protection Agency, however, decided in late 2017 that glyphosate was not likely to cause cancer in humans.
But evidence is mounting that people who are heavily exposed to it farmworkers and landscapers, for example have an increased risk of non-Hodgkin lymphoma.
A review led by University of Washington scientists published in February found that agricultural workers who used a lot of glyphosate had a 41% higher risk of contracting non-Hodgkin lymphoma over their lifetimes than people who used it infrequently or not at all.
On average, about 2 out of every 100 Americans develop non-Hodgkin lymphoma. For people who are highly exposed to glyphosate, the disease rate jumps to 2.8 per 100. That means they still have a relatively small chance of contracting the disease, but their risk is substantially higher because of glyphosate use.
Monsanto has submitted more than 800 studies to the EPA and European regulatory agencies suggesting that glyphosate is safe, according to Bayer.
Q: What about the risks to the rest of us, who only occasionally use glyphosate and only on a small scale?
No one knows.
The data is really starting to suggest that there is a correlation between high glyphosate exposure and non-Hodgkin lymphoma, said Curl. But we have a lot of unanswered questions about the rest of us. We dont know what that means for people who dont have high exposures, and we dont know what it means with a chemical that is so widely used.
Q: Should people still use glyphosate at home, or are there safer substitutes?
All chemical pesticides are toxic. Some gardeners have limited success using vinegar or homemade remedies.
The best non-toxic solution for killing weeds is good old elbow grease: Get a trowel and dig them out.
From a personal perspective, I prefer to use caution and avoid pesticides in my own garden, said Rachel Shaffer, a Ph.D. student at the University of Washingtons School of Public Health and co-author of the universitys study on glyphosate and non-Hodgkin lymphoma.
Our understanding of the health effects of glyphosate will continue to evolve as the science advances, said Shaffer, who blogs on her findings. Individuals who are particularly concerned in the interim may want to take steps to reduce use in their home gardens.
Q: If I use glyphosate products, what precautions should I take?
Carefully follow label instructions and warnings. Wear gloves and dont let the chemical come in contact with your skin, clothing or eyes. Use it only on calm, rain-free days to prevent drift. Do not let it run off into waterways or gutters. Pets and people should wait until treated areas are dry before entering them.
Took my wife's cooking and several years of aging to do that, not that I am obese but I am probably a little heavier than I should be. But the strong winds no longer rule me either. 9>)
That is what the article says. I didn’t say I believe it.
A good solid concrete pad is my favorite weed killer.
I don't think 2-4-D and Roundup are similar enough to be compared. IIRC 2-4-D only affects broad-leaf weeds and has no effect on grass, while Roundup kills almost everything green, including lawn grasses.
What’s new is how much and how. It didn’t used to be used directly on food then Monsanto started genetically engineering food crops to withstand it. So now it’s in far more of our food than ever before. I’m not saying the alarmists are right, but it’s a legitimate issue to be looked at, not all lies.
I caught that too. The writer was wrong.
Without GM (genetic modification) more of the world would starve and many would be malnourished.
An estimated 50 million people died from malaria when they banned DDT, and they used lies to ban DDT. Same process in effect here.
I'm all for study, as long as it is an honest study, and not an emotional study riddled with lies to win the argument.
But is it better that a small number may be adversely affected while millions more get the food they need, or do we make millions suffer from starvation and malnutrition to save the smaller numbers who may be adversely affected?
While that may turn some people off, it's a decision we must make. I will go for the few being adversely affected, even if I number in those who are.
Like man made global warming this is just another attempt to control the masses. In this case they want to thin the population. So attack those who would be most vulnerable by the banning of pesticides that may or may not be safe for humans. That point, safety, is irrelevant to them and their true agenda.
Maybe not. They have to follow strict safety/handling regs every day while Pedro just sloshes it around the back of his pickup on the way to his next gig.
Round-Up Ready dandelions. What could go wrong?
..and its been linked to colony collapse disorder (CCD) in honey bees.
Not necessarily. The molecule is a Glycolysis blocker, in a way which many cancers exhibit. Sugar can be broken down partly into building blocks, or fully into energy. It is supposed to go you use it for energy first, and anything left over gets put into growth. Usually the idea is you break it down into energy until the organism is saturated in energy to do work, then the breakdown slows, and building blocks accumulate so cells can proliferate and the organism shifts from survival to growth.
It is one of the reasons a lot of people say, go on a sugar-free diet if you have cancer, because it has been observed a lot of cancer cells exhibited a deranged process which produces a lot of building blocks, and not a lot of energy. You won’t get those building blocks glycolysis produces because there will be no sugar to make them on a sugar-free diet.
Glyphosate mucks up a step of that glycolysis, which causes building blocks to accumulate, and sets in motion one of the factors observed in some cancers.
Now it doesn’t create cancer, but cancer is the process of winning several lotteries, many of which the odds increase if you have won others. So get exposed to glyphosate, and it is possible you have completed one step of getting to cancer, and the increased number of building blocks may cause you to “buy” more lottery tickets, increasing your chance of winning a cancer diagnosis.
I think it probably does something, because exposure correlates with lymphomas, IIRC, but it isn’t a case of it gives it to you or it doesn’t. It just increases the chances. Of course when it is being fed to everyone in everything from cereals to beer, it has the potential to create a lot of cancers.
I wonder if the jury was aloud to consider the fact that the older a person is the more likely they are to have cancer.
A simple statistical fact. If you live long enough, you will have cancer.
In his seventy years I am sure that the man had been exposed to a huge number of carcinogens. Saying that one or another was a substantial factor in his illness is impossible.
I would never be chosen to be on such a jury. I am too rational.
2-4-D (mechamine) kills everything except grass. Use 1-2 oz per gal on grass to kill weeds - do not use when weather hot and dry.
Roundup kills everything including grass.
They can be mixed in the spray tank.
The World Health Organizations International Agency for Research on Cancer has called glyphosate a probable human carcinogen,
Their choices were Yes or No. No in between or other choice
Usual junk science. It pays no attention to the critical variable which is dosage. An axiom of toxicology is that dosage determines toxicity. Minute doses of Round Up such as would be encountered by the average user would be harmless.
Citing research showing it to be in 93% of subjects, without mentioning levels, Is worse than junk science. it is deliberate agenda-driven demogoguery.
It only causes cancer in the court room.
Chlordane was the best - and is now banned. 2-4 D is widely available
Ignorance is Bliss. Russell Bliss.
I had my commercial herbicide/pesticide license for years. I had no need for it anymore so I left it expire. Forgot much of it.
I’ll never forget using atrazine to kill the grass along the driveway and it rained, killing a much wider area than I expected.
Or finding out that crappie bass were highly allergic to copper sulfate and they all went through the overflow pipe to escape it.
School of hard knocks learning.
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