Making crops pest-resistant means fewer applications of toxic chemical pesticides to control pests.
It means less environmental degradation and more safe and healthier food on the table. Apparently you must like food slathered with chemicals that are more dangerous than genes that combat pest infestation of the foods you eat.
You’re an idiot!
And you are ignorant of the effects of GMOs on human health.
“Apparently you must like food slathered with chemicals that are more dangerous than genes that combat pest infestation of the foods you eat.”
... So in your world there are only bad option?
Except the way Monsanto does that is making the plants more pesticide/herbicide tolerant so the farmers can spray MORE pesticide/herbicide on the plants to resist pests. But, guess what? The pests are becoming more pesticide/herbicide resistant and there is more pesticide/herbicide in the food we eat.
Nearly Half of All US Farms Now Have Superweeds
But of course there's another way. In a 2012 study I'll never tire of citing, Iowa State University researchers found that if farmers simply diversified their crop rotations, which typically consist of corn one year and soy the next, year after year, to include a "small grain" crop (e.g. oats) as well as off season cover crops, weeds (including Roundup-resistant ones) can be suppressed with dramatically less fertilizer usea factor of between 6 and 10 less. And much less herbicide means much less poison entering streams"potential aquatic toxicity was 200 times less in the longer rotations" than in the regular corn-soy regime, the study authors note. So, despite what the seed giants and the conventional weed specialists insist, there are other ways to respond to the accelerating scourge of "superweeds" than throwing moreand ever-more toxicchemicals at them.
Kumar, a shy young farmer in Nalanda district of India's poorest state Bihar, had using only farmyard manure and without any herbicides grown an astonishing 22.4 tonnes of rice on one hectare of land. This was a world record and with rice the staple food of more than half the world's population of seven billion, big news.It beat not just the 19.4 tonnes achieved by the "father of rice", the Chinese agricultural scientist Yuan Longping, but the World Bank-funded scientists at the International Rice Research Institute in the Philippines, and anything achieved by the biggest European and American seed and GM companies. And it was not just Sumant Kumar. Krishna, Nitish, Sanjay and Bijay, his friends and rivals in Darveshpura, all recorded over 17 tonnes, and many others in the villages around claimed to have more than doubled their usual yields.
The villagers, at the mercy of erratic weather and used to going without food in bad years, celebrated. But the Bihar state agricultural universities didn't believe them at first, while India's leading rice scientists muttered about freak results. The Nalanda farmers were accused of cheating. Only when the state's head of agriculture, a rice farmer himself, came to the village with his own men and personally verified Sumant's crop, was the record confirmed.
GMO fail: Monsanto foiled by feds, Supreme Court, and science
This matters because stacked-trait crops are a favored approach to combat the superweeds and bugs that are part and parcel of years of GMO crops. But the more you stack, the worse your yield. The scientists also found evidence of a yield penalty that comes simply from the act of manipulating plant genes.In short, the more one meddles with plant genes, the worse yields get; when you change multiple genes at once, yields drop even further. This should give pause to those who see GMO seeds as the means to address more complex problems like drought tolerance, nutritional value, or plant productivity. These are traits involving dozens, if not hundreds, of genes. This study suggests genetic manipulation of food crops at such a scale is a losing game.
A few years ago, the Union of Concerned Scientists published a report with a similar conclusion, but this is one of the first rigorous attempts to establish through controlled experiments the yield benefit (or penalty) of GM seeds.
The new report investigates how the current seed patent regime has led to a radical shift to consolidation and control of global seed supply and how these patents have abetted corporations, such as Monsanto, to sue U.S. farmers for alleged seed patent infringement.Seed Giants vs. U.S. Farmers also examines broader socio-economic consequences of the present patent system including links to loss of seed innovation, rising seed prices, reduction of independent scientific inquiry, and environmental issues.
Debbie Barker, Program Director for Save Our Seeds and Senior Writer for the Report, said today: Corporations did not create seeds and many are challenging the existing patent system that allows private companies to assert ownership over a resource that is vital to survival, and that, historically, has been in the public domain.