by Dr. Thierry Vrain Courtenay
April 29, 2013
from
FeederMedia Website
original Vancouver Sun "Genetically
modified food rapped" webpage
Thierry Vrain,
Former research scientist for
Agriculture Canada
and now promoting awareness of
the dangers of genetically
modified foods.
I retired 10 years ago after a long
career as a research scientist for Agriculture Canada.
When I was on the payroll, I was the
designated scientist of my Institute to address public groups and
reassure them that genetically engineered crops and foods were safe.
I don’t know if I was passionate about it but I was knowledgeable. I
defended the side of technological advance, of science and progress.
I have in the last 10 years changed my position. I started paying
attention to the flow of published studies coming from Europe, some
from prestigious labs and published in prestigious scientific
journals, that questioned the impact and safety of engineered food.
I refute the claims of the biotechnology companies that their
engineered crops yield more, that they require less pesticide
applications, that they have no impact on the environment and of
course that they are safe to eat.
There are a number of scientific studies that have been done for
Monsanto by universities in the
U.S., Canada, and abroad. Most of these studies are concerned with
the field performance of the engineered crops, and of course they
find GMOs 'safe' for the environment and therefore 'safe' to eat.
There is however a growing body of scientific research - done mostly
in Europe, Russia, and other countries - showing that diets
containing engineered corn or soya cause serious health problems in
laboratory mice and rats.
We should all take these studies seriously and demand that the
government agencies replicate them rather than rely on studies paid
for by the biotech companies.
The
Bt corn and
soya plants that are now everywhere
in our environment, are registered as insecticides.
But are these insecticidal plants
regulated and have their proteins been tested for safety? Not by the
federal departments in charge of food safety, not in Canada and not
in the U.S.
There are no long term feeding studies performed in these countries
to demonstrate the claims that engineered corn and soya are safe.
All we have are scientific studies out of Europe and Russia, showing
that rats fed engineered food die prematurely.
These studies show that proteins produced by engineered plants are
different than what they should be. Inserting a gene in a genome
using this technology can and does result in damaged proteins. The
scientific literature is full of studies showing that engineered
corn and soya contain toxic or allergenic proteins.
Genetic engineering is 40 years old. It is based on the naive
understanding of the genome based on the One Gene - one Protein
hypothesis of 70 years ago, that each gene codes for a single
protein.
The
Human Genome project completed in 2002 showed that this
hypothesis is wrong.
The whole paradigm of the genetic engineering technology is based on
a misunderstanding. Every scientist now learns that any gene can
give more than one protein and that inserting a gene anywhere in a
plant eventually creates rogue proteins.
Some of these proteins are obviously
allergenic or toxic.
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