by Dr. Joseph Mercola
July 13,
2023
from
Mercola Website
Story at-a-glance
-
One
of the latest GMO Frankenfoods is Piggy Sooy, a soybean
genetically engineered to contain pig protein. One or
more undisclosed pig genes are spliced into conventional
soya to create a soybean with 26.6% animal protein
-
Moolec, the U.K.-based company that developed Piggy Sooy,
is also working on developing a pea plant that produces
beef protein. The company claims these transgenic
hybrids will provide similar taste, texture and
nutritional value as meat, without the high cost of
cultured or lab-grown meat alternatives
-
June
21, 2023, the U.S. Department of Agriculture authorized
the sale of cell-cultivated chicken from Good Meat and
Upside Foods. Both plan on rolling out their synthetic
chicken to "high-end" restaurants across the U.S. first,
while they scale up production
-
Researchers have discovered that CRISPR-Cas gene editing
wreaks havoc in the plant genome, causing several
hundred unintended genetic changes to occur
simultaneously "in a catastrophic event" that ripples
across large parts of the genome
-
Because these changes are impossible to predict, gene
edited plants cannot be assumed safe without extensive
testing
The Latest GMO
Frankenfood - Pig Beans
More and
even wilder transgenic foods
are being
produced via molecular farming,
everything from
Piggy Sooy,
a soybean
genetically engineered with pig genes,
to a pea plant
that produces beef protein.
Assuming there
won't be
extensive
testing done on these 'foods,'
will they be OK
to eat?
As expected, more and
ever-wilder transgenic foods are being produced.
Among the latest is
Piggy Sooy, a soybean genetically engineered to contain pig
protein. 1,2
According to
Moolec, the U.K.-based company that
developed this latest Frankenfood,
pig genes were spliced into
conventional soya to create a soybean with 26.6% animal protein.
The exact pig genes used is a trade secret.
As a result of this
genetic engineering, the interior flesh of the soybean is also a
rosy flesh color.
The company is also working on developing a pea
plant that produces beef protein.
Moolec claims these transgenic
hybrids will provide similar taste, texture and nutritional value as
meat, without the high cost of cultured or lab-grown meat
alternatives.
According to New Atlas:
3
"Farmers will raise
the plants via conventional agricultural practices.
Once the
beans have been harvested and processed - again, via
conventional techniques - their proteins will go into meat
substitutes and other products...
As is the case with lab-grown pork, it is hoped that commercial
adoption of Piggy Sooy could ultimately eliminate the raising
and slaughtering of pigs, along with the associated ethical and
environmental concerns.
'Moolec has
developed a unique, successful, and patentable platform for
the expression of highly valuable proteins in the seeds of
economically important crops such as soybeans,' says the
company's chief science officer, Amit Dhingra.
'This achievement opens up a precedent for the entire
scientific community that is looking to achieve high levels
of protein expression in seeds via molecular farming.'
There's currently no
word on when foods containing the proteins may be available to
consumers."
US Authorizes
Cultured Chicken
Lab-grown chicken is also heading toward our plates.
On June 21, 2023, the U.S.
Department of Agriculture (USDA) authorized the sale of
cell-cultivated chicken - meaning chicken meat grown from stem cells
in a bioreactor - from Good Meat and Upside Foods. 4,5
Both plan on rolling out their synthetic chicken to "high-end"
restaurants across the U.S. first, while they scale up production.
In addition to these two, more than 100 other companies are also
working on different iterations of cultured meat, from cell-based
ground beef and 3-D printed steak and fish (see video above), to
synthetic foie gras and cultured seafood.
If you care about your health, I have but one recommendation.
Stay clear of all these
lab-grown concoctions. I don't even want to call them food. There's
simply no telling how they may affect your health, and no one is
studying it either...
It could be decades
before the effects become evident, and by then it may be far too
late to roll things back.
On the one hand, the know-how of how to grow and raise real food
might be lost.
On the other, we might
lose the ability to grow real food because there won't be any
unadulterated seeds left to work with unless we break open the
doomsday seed vault at the North Pole.
6
Gene Editing
Causes Chaos in the Genome
As reported by GMWatch in June 2023, researchers have discovered
7
that
CRISPR-Cas gene editing ends up wreaking havoc in the plant
genome: 8
"Recent scientific
findings have revealed chromothripsis-like effects after the
application of CRISPR-Cas gene editing in the genome of
tomatoes...
Chromothripsis refers
to a phenomenon in which often several hundred genetic changes
occur simultaneously in a catastrophic event.
Many sections of the
genetic material can be swapped, recombined, or even lost if
this occurs..."
Importantly, the same
catastrophic cascades of gene swaps, recombination and loss also
occurs in mammalian and human cells in response to gene editing.
Actually, that's been
known for some time.
Plants
obtained
from new genetic engineering (New GE)
cannot,
therefore, be regarded as safe per se,
and need to be
thoroughly investigated for risks.
Test Biotech
This is the first time they've found that
CRISPRthripsis occurs in
gene edited plants as well, and the unintended genetic alterations
not only occur far more frequently than previously suspected, but
they also occur across large parts of the genome.
Gene Edited
Plants Cannot Be Regarded as Safe
As explained by Test Biotech: 9
"... when both
strands of DNA are cut, as is typically the case with the CRISPR-Cas,
the ends of the chromosomes can lose contact with each other.
If the repair of the
break in the chromosomes fails, the severed ends can be lost,
restructured or incorporated elsewhere.
Chromothripsis otherwise seems to be relatively rare in plants.
CRISPR-Cas applications can frequently result also in changes at
genomic sites that are particularly well-protected by natural
repair mechanisms.
The risks cannot
generally be estimated, so they must be investigated thoroughly
in each and every case...
The recent findings shed new light on the alleged 'precision' of
gene scissors:
although the new
technology can be used to target and cut precise locations
in the genome, the consequences of 'cutting' the genome are
to some extent unpredictable and uncontrollable.
Plants obtained from
new genetic engineering (New GE) cannot, therefore, be regarded
as safe per se, and need to be thoroughly investigated for
risks.
Without exact genomic
analyses, chromothripsis can be easily overlooked.
It is, for example,
not unlikely that it also occurred in plants obtained from New
GE that were already deregulated in the US."
Precision in
Gene Editing Is Overrated
Those in favor of gene editing frequently stress the fact that it's
far more precise than natural breeding, the insinuation being that
precision assures we only get the desired changes, nothing more and
nothing less.
But that's clearly not
true.
Precision does not guarantee safety, because hundreds of unintended
genetic changes can occur from a single alteration, and unintended
genetic rearrangements and/or the disruption of gene expression, in
turn, can result in:
-
Alterations in the
biochemical composition of the plant (or animal tissue)
-
Production of novel toxins
-
Production of novel allergens
Europe Seeks
to Deregulate CRISPR Edited Plants
At present, the U.S. has no specific regulations for gene edited
plants.
The same regulations that apply for conventional crops apply
for GMOs... 10
That said, in late May 2023, the
Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) published a final rule on "Pesticides and Exemptions of
Certain Plant-Incorporated Protectants (PIPs) Derived from Newer
Technologies," 11,12 which now requires,
GMO developers to
submit data showing that plants that have been gene edited to
resist pests are harmless to other components of the ecosystem,
don't contain pesticide levels beyond those found in
conventional crops, and won't cause negative health effects in
consumers.
For years, Europe has had
rather stringent restrictions on GMO plants, but they're now seeking
to deregulate as well.
As reported by Test Biotech: 13
"Attempts are
currently being made in Europe to largely deregulate plants
obtained from CRISPR-Cas applications.
According to leaked
documents, the EU Commission plans to give companies permission
to release New GE plants into the environment and to market
their products after only a short period of notification.
Similar to the USA, the proposed criteria exempting them from
mandatory risk assessment would not require any investigation of
unintended genetic changes, e.g. chromothripsis.
The new regulation would not only be applicable to plants used
in agriculture, but also would allow the release of wild plants
with no in-depth risk assessment.
Testbiotech is
warning that the planned deregulation and large scale releases
of New GE organisms could threaten natural resources needed by
future generations."
Lab-Made Meats
are Ultra-processed Junk Food
Between genetically altered produce and lab-created meats, we're
getting close to not having many real, unadulterated whole food
options left. Importantly, many meat alternatives fall into the
category of ultra-processed foods, which we already have far too much
of.
In 2018, Friends of the Earth (FOE), a grassroots
environmental group, released a report that posed critical questions
about the trend toward synthetic biology.
In it, they stressed the
highly processed nature of these products: 14
"Various 'processing
aids' are employed to make some of these products, including
organisms (like genetically engineered bacteria, yeast and
algae) that produce proteins, and chemicals to extract proteins.
For example, chemicals like hexane are used to extract
components of a food, like proteins (from peas, soy, corn etc.)
or compounds (from genetically engineered bacteria) to make
xanthan gum... disclosure of these ingredients is not required.
Other processing aids (e.g. bacteria, yeast, algae), including
those that are genetically engineered to produce proteins, are
also not currently required to be disclosed on package labeling.
The lack of
transparency makes it difficult to assess the inputs and impact
of their use."
Can We End the
Tyranny of Ultra-processed Food?
In a June 2023 Wired article, Dr. Chris Van Tulleken, an
expert in infectious diseases and author of "Ultra-Processed People:
Why Do We All Eat Stuff That Isn't Food... and Why Can't We Stop?"
made a heartfelt plea to policymakers and doctors to protect public
health by leading the fight for real food: 15
"Diet-related disease
- which includes obesity, heart attack, strokes, cancer, and
dementia - is the leading cause of early death in the UK.
Driving it, is a set of industrially processed products... known
formally as ultra-processed food (UPF).
This type of food is usually wrapped in plastic and has
additives that you won't find in a typical kitchen.
In the US
and the UK, we get on average 60% of our calories from UPF
products like pizza, bread, breakfast cereals, biscuits, and
nutritional drinks...
UPF is a byproduct of a complicated financial system that
involves repurposing waste from animal food into human food.
To solve this problem, the first thing we need to do is include
in the official UK guidance about nutrition the information that
ultra-processed foods are associated with,
weight gain and
diet-related diseases, and that the recommendation for people is
to avoid these foods."
Unfortunately, while an
admirable call to action, I don't foresee governments issuing
guidance to avoid ultra-processed foods anytime soon, seeing how many
countries, especially the U.S., are all-in on
transitioning the
entire food system to one that is wholly, or close to wholly, made
up of
genetically engineered and processed fare.
It's part of the
technocratic takeover known as
The Great Reset.
By replacing real animal
foods with patented lab-made alternatives, globalists will have
unprecedented power to control the world's population.
It'll also
grant them greater control over people's health.
It's well-known that the consumption of ultra-processed food
contributes to disease, 16 and the benefactor of ill health
is Big Pharma...
The processed food industry has spent many decades driving
chronic illness that is then treated with drugs rather than a better
diet.
We're now looking at more ultra-processed foods being rolled out in
the name of combating
climate change, so don't hinge your hopes on
legislators.
The financial and
geopolitical forces against them are enormous. No, I believe the
real power resides with each and every one of us.
We need to ensure real
food still has a place in the marketplace by spending our money on
it and leaving all the processed and genetically engineered food on
the store shelves...
Sources and References
1, 3 New
Atlas June 30, 2023
2 New
Scientist June 28, 2023
4 Time
Magazine June 21, 2023
5 Sharyl
Attkisson June 27, 2023
6 Science
Daily February 9, 2007
7 bioRxiv
May 24, 2023
8 GM
Watch June 20, 2023
9, 13 Test
Biotech June 20, 2023
10 Global
Gene Editing Regulation Tracker
11 EPA
Exemptions of Certain Plant-Incorporated Protectants (PIPs)
Derived from Newer Technologies Final Rule
12 Science
June 2, 2023
14 Friends
of the Earth, From Lab to Fork, June 2018 (PDF)
15 Wired
June 30, 2023
16 BMJ
2018; 360:k322
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