kellyb
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jan 18, 2006
- Messages
- 12,632
What I was really getting at, though, is that in the discussions here, I'm seeing frequent instances of an argument from authority in the form of what might be called the "appeal to FDA approval fallacy". It's proably worth at least mentioning that the current Deputy Commissioner for Foods at the FDA, Michael Taylor, was formerly Monsanto's Vice President for Public Policy.
I'm also not seeing a lot of differentiation between the economic imperatives of various countries and their economic geostrategic plans and economic unions and the differences in "safety" approvals by different regulatory authorities.
My gut feeling is that Monsanto's GMO crops are probably pretty safe. There's a lack of scientific evidence demonstrating this, but my "intuitive guess" is that some country somewhere would have been able to make a really stellar case against Monsanto's GMOs regarding safety if there were any big, negative effects out there. Especially for countries and trade unions, etc that have an economic interest in keeping Monsanto out or in the fringes.
If you look at BGHs instead of GMO crops, you can pretty easily find gov position papers from across the globe justifying (with compelling evidence) their non-approval outside of the US. I haven't been able to locate much beyond stuff like "might harm bees, maybe" to justify safety-related non-approvals for crops. Maybe that's because there is no significant harm, or maybe it's just harder to test for harm? I really don't know. (Or maybe there are safety issues being referenced out there and my google-fu just sucks?)