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Pop Science & Propaganda: The GM Debate Revisited
March 25 -- When the British government last week ordered its chief scientist to conduct a review of the merits of genetically modified (GM) crops, those involved in the long running debate over the controversial technology were unsurprised.
Designated a "wealth creator" and future growth industry by the government, biotechnology was unlikely to disappear despite widespread public opposition to the technology and the announcement was soon followed by all the standard tropes of the now-familiar debate.
Amol Rajan at The Independent welcomed the "new campaign against hysteria, irrationality, and stupidity in relation to GM food" while Clare Oxborrow, the senior food campaigner at Friends of the Earth lambasted ministers for an "obsession with GM as a techno-fix solution to problems in food and farming."
This time however, advocates of GM crops turned to a report they hoped could buttress their position with a no-nonsense scientific dismissal of widespread concerns; a essay by Dr. Matt Ridley titled "genetically modified crops and the perils of rejecting innovation."
The article - a chapter in the 134-page book "Science vs. Superstition" published by centre-right think tank the Policy Exchange - was lauded by commentators as a "superb and meticulous critique of today's anti-science and anti-industrial forces."
From the title onwards it was clear there was little truck for nuance in the publication; this was a "with us or against us" case of empiricism versus the hobgoblins of the pre-modern mind and Ridley, a former science editor of the Economist and banker with a doctorate in zoology, ploughed confidently into his exposition on GM crops.
"Genetically modified crops are an unnecessary, dangerous and untested innovation, bad for the environment and cynically foisted upon farmers and consumers for profit by multinational firms, or so goes the conventional European wisdom," Ridley jibed, before the dénouement: "Here I demonstrate that every one of these assertions is untrue."
Confidence in any author is an admirable trait, but a closer inspection of the paper raised a number of worryingly obvious lacunae. Ridley was non-executive chairman of failed British bank Northern Rock at the time it was taken into administration after a run on its finances, and his essay follows a remarkably similar trajectory to his bank: its reach extends its grasp and the confidence of those maintaining an interest dissolves after a closer look at the facts and figures.
Most clearly problematic at first glance is his claim that "almost by definition all crop plants are genetically modified" and that transgenic (GM) plants are "kinder, more precise and gentler than mutation breeding."
Dr Mae Wan Ho, a former reader in Biology at the Open University and currently director of the Institute for Science in Society is scathing about this claim:
"GM makes artificial synthetic combinations of sequences that never existed in billions of years of evolution. The constructs are created to invade genomes, and there is now definitive evidence that they integrate randomly, but preferentially into active regions of the genome, typically in rearranged, scrambled forms, causing mutations and sequence scrambling, not only at the site of insertion, but genome-wide." She responded.
"This process is uncontrollable and unpredictable, and so are the unintended effects due to new gene products being made, new toxins, new species of regulatory nucleic acids being unleashed, etc. To make things worse, the transgenic lines are unstable, which makes proper safety assessment well nigh impossible."
Ridley dismisses one of the few concrete examples of scientific testing he refers to on the potential side-effects of GM crops with the cursory comment that the scientist concerned, Arpad Pusztai, was "discredited." This is highly debatable. A decade after Pusztai first raised concern about the effects GM potatoes had on rats in his laboratory, his experiments continue to polarize scientific opinion, but what is beyond doubt is that after an initial firestorm, Pusztai - a world renowned expert on plant lectins and author of more than 270 papers - was prevented from continuing his work, forced out of his job and effectively gagged.
Dr Michael Antoniou, a geneticist at King College, London, in unimpressed with Ridley's comment. "I can reassure you that Arpad Pusztai's work was first rate and appropriately controlled and internally consistent. His data stands as valid," he writes. "P.S. I don't know who Matt Ridley is. What qualifies him to write on the subject in such broad terms?"
This is hardly the resounding vote of confidence one might expect from a scientific peer, but such a response may be partially explained by Ridley's tendency to construct some monumental straw men.
"Nostalgic urban dwellers would prefer farmers to leave fields fallow, to grow oats for horses, to tolerate cornflowers in wheat and bees in clover, and not to pollute streams with nitrate run-off" he steams; rhetoric so far removed from the actual debate over GM that one wonders at his motives almost as much as at his prose. (And does he think polluting streams is a good idea?)
As Professor Peter Saunders at Kings College writes, "I don't know anyone who opposes research into agriculture. On the contrary, one of the most serious objections to GMOs is that they divert attention and resources from research (into sustainable agriculture.) That's especially true of GMOs: there may be a better solution to a problem (like intercropping instead of insecticides) but if it isn't patentable there's nothing in it for companies - or, increasingly, for universities and research institutes, who are also expected to make profits."
The notion that GM crops might pose a threat to sustainable agriculture or organic farmers is one that Ridley dismisses in seven short, remarkable lines. In response to the concerns of organic farmers that their crops could face cross-pollination or contamination by GM crops he writes the following:
"By the early 2000s, many critics of GM crops had fallen back on a new argument, that pollen from GM crops somehow ‘contaminated' their own organic crops. This was entirely self-inflicted. Organic farmers had suddenly made their own new rule, that their crops must have less than a certain trace of genes from GM plants to still qualify as organic. Lo and behold, this rule gave them a reason to object to neighbours using GM crops. Ingenious, and circular, reasoning!" The palpable irrationality of this comment hardly needs further magnification, but Percy Schmeiser would no-doubt have something to say.
In 1997 the independent canola farmer was sued by GM giant Monsanto for patent infringement after the corporation's Roundup ready canola was found growing on his farm as a result of cross-contamination. Whilst Ridley can dismiss cases such as this (and there are many) in seven lines, it took Schmeiser an 11-year legal battle to get Monsanto to admit liability and pay for clean-up costs.
The above are a mere handful of the problems with this supposedly "meticulous" article; one wonders if the Independent reviewer who termed it "the best recent essay in defence of the science behind GM foods" had read it.
Perhaps Ridley's work was ‘subconsciously influenced' by his membership of the advisory council of Sense about Science; a charity which has come under fire for failing to disclose the industry affiliations of the experts it enlists.
The Times recently noted that eight of the contributors to the pamphlet are based at the John Innes Centre, which has received funding from biotech companies and that another contributor, Professor Vivian Moses is also the chairman of CropGen, a GM lobby croup that receives funding from the biotech industry. Matt Ridley is not known to have any affiliations with the industry and did not respond to a request for comment.
Whilst the failure of the Policy Review to note Ridley's membership of the charity's advisory board was no doubt oversight, Dr. Michael Antoniou, a geneticist at King's College London described Sense about Science's omissions to The Times as "outrageous" and Professor Guy Cook of the Open University noted that such failures of transparency "deal a severe blow to... authority of science, which rests upon rationality, objectivity, evidence and disinterest."
Indeed. With friends like these, the biotech industry must be wondering who needs enemies.
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9 Comments so far
Show AllI will state this as an farmer who has been 'organic' (on my own, following my own creed--observations of truth) for more than 30 years: There is a lot of 'pop-science' and propaganda in the organic industry, as well. Why? I just said why. Organic INDUSTRY. Industry, get it?
You cannot trust those who maintain the level of fanatical industrialism and corporatism that has taken over and infiltrated every act of human life and common thinking and ways of doing things today. No matter what words they use. When you see words people, LOOK carefully at who is using those words. Follow the chain of command. Corporatism creates a very hard line (strong chain, shackles) of COMMAND and, OBEY. This is elementary, my dear Watson....
I am very disappointed to learn recently, that CommonDreams censors some comments based on colorful language. You can bet I will never send them any umm donations, other than my time, and my voice (opinion, experience) diluted and CENSORED as apparently only they feel entitled to control.
nedlud
Its nice to see an article that doesnt fall back on non human animal research to make its case. For every study that uses animal research to say its bad, another comes along saying its good. Animal researchers make money just by torturing animals. They are part of the problem.
Although it is about money, science is also regarded religiously, as a saviour. Secular fundamentalism, technosupremacy.
The comments by Dr Mae Wan Ho sums it up well. Humans cant predict what will happen. We are told to be stupid and say: yeah! Humans are smart and know what they are doin!
Just like they did when they sold heroin and cocaine over the counter as cough suppressants.
GM scientists are anti Nature extremists. Nothing has changed since Frankenstein. You have people who want to play deity, and as we know, deities like to make victims suffer, even when they say its for your own good.
No one is more irrational or overly emotional than the gm scientists who think that they, as imperfect beings, can be more perfect than nature.
Fools in lab coats.
They all suffer from a shared delusion - and 'group-think' keeps them on their wayward path. Pretty much the same as happens in any other cult - the crazier they get, the more they think they're right (and there is no other way). Extremists are cultists - they insulate themselves from reality - and this happens on both sides.
So, how do you like fascism now?
Union of Concerned Scientists has posted a letter writing campaign to Congress on limiting the use of antibiotics in CAFOS.
https://secure3.convio.net/ucs/site/Advocacy?cmd=display&page=UserAction&id=1924&s_src=wac&s_subsrc=actioncenter
Sioux Rose
Generally, it's never cost-effective LONG TERM to f--k with mother nature. She prefers to be made love to. The forced combining of genes under laboratory conditions definitely qualifies as the former.
Nice deconstruction of an essay authored by a person who didn't know what he was talking about. however, Targett gets the Percy Schmeiser case wrong. Percy was found to have been more than an "innocent' neighbor but one who actively harvested and replanted the seeds over a 3 year period and thus was held GUILTY of patent infringement (but the court said Monsanto was not damaged, so he didn't have to pay anything). In a second lawsuit, he got monsanto to clean up (they have done it for many farms), but without admitting any liability.
It doesn't help that folks repeatedly misstate what this decsion held.
Phil Bereano
Just a few comments. This is a sharp and quite funny rebuttal but I don't think it's an entirely substantive critique of GM crops for the simple reason that there are so many other arguments and facts to be marshaled against GMOs.
For instance proponents of the technology argue that GM crops require less use of herbicides, which plenty of research has found to be false, including a report by Dr. Charles Benbrook which draws on USDA data. The patenting issue is again a massive ethical issue; there are all sorts of problems with owning patent rights to something that effectively reproduces itself "chaotically". It's not like you can accuse mother nature of piracy when she burns and distributes copies of herself is it?
For that reason I think Phil's comment, whether he is right or wrong about Schmeiser - and I'll take his word for it that he's right - is in a way besides the point. Schmeiser may have harvested and used patented crops that were growing on his property, but they had blown there intitially, and Targett was using the fact that this can happen to illustrate the idiocy of Ridley's argument about the concerns of organic/independent farmers. GM's a new technology in many ways, so of course they needed to legislate for what was and what wasn't acceptable levels of contamination.
Nedlud: true in some ways. I always think it's mad when I see people buying expensively packaged organic food flown from Chile or something... I'd probably rather buy local non-organic food that hasn't done the airmiles, but the argument that effectively managed organic farms protect biodiversity rather than destroy it stands good.
smipypr
Indeed, the backers of GM seeds have claimed lower amounts of fertilizers, herbi- and pesticides are needed, and that has shown to have been false. Additionally, they also claim higher yields - and that is false. Monsanto et. al. are simply modifying "their" seeds to be able to survive huge doses of RoundUp herbicide. Farmers have long realized that buying the entire package is pretty risky. Better not save any seeds... Farms in Mexico have corn crops hybridized by pollen blowing into their fields from GMO fields. The whole debate is nuts anyway, as the majority of corn and soybeans grown are either fed to cattle (one link away in the food chain) or processed for oil or meal. Plant monoculture is risky anyway; there are dozens of varieties of corn, soybeans, and cereal grains. It would be cheaper and safer, in the long run, to rotate varieties for human food production. That would be a true "Green Revolution".