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progressoid

(50,748 posts)
Tue Mar 17, 2015, 03:27 PM Mar 2015

The anti-GM lobby appears to be taking a page out of the Climategate playbook

Barely a week goes by, it seems, without some new attack on science. For years, oil and coal lobbies have orchestrated assaults on climate scientists, while the religious right continues to oppose the teaching of evolution in US schools, questioning the basic tenets of evolutionary biology.

Denialism does its damage by driving a wedge between science and society, undermining public understanding of science with misinformation and confusing pseudo-debate. The effects can be seen not just in climate change mitigation efforts, but in peoples’ health – witness the recent US upsurge in childhood measles concentrated in areas where there is opposition to vaccines. No wonder the latest survey of scientists by the Pew Research Center found scientists increasingly pessimistic about how their work is viewed in the wider society.

In the latest organised attack on science, 14 senior US scientists are being targeted by anti-GM lobby group US Right to Know (USRTK), an offshoot of the failed California GM labelling campaign Yes on 37. USRTK is using the Freedom of Information Act (FoIA) to demand access to years of private emails and other correspondence of these scientists, undoubtedly aiming to undermine their credentials and sully their names in public.

...

USRTK’s statements are unambiguous – it views any scientist with the temerity to speak out in public on biotechnology as part of “the PR machine for the chemical-agro industry”. Hence its FoIA requests focus on any email exchanges with biotech companies such as Monsanto, Syngenta, and DuPont, as well as other organisations, including the Grocery Manufacturers Association and the Council for Biotechnology Information. These researchers have denied receiving hidden funding from these groups, yet a good deal of damage can be done with private communications quoted out of context.

Ironically, USRTK is less eager to reveal its own agenda and funding. Its website reveals only one donor, the Organic Consumers Association (OCA), a group that seeks to turn US agriculture 100% organic and eliminate GM crops. It is clearly promoting the interests of the organic food business, now a $63bn (£42bn) dollar industry.

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More here http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2015/mar/09/gm-opponents-are-science-deniers
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The anti-GM lobby appears to be taking a page out of the Climategate playbook (Original Post) progressoid Mar 2015 OP
Yeah, the anti-GMO people portray organic as a bunch of hippy farmers... Archae Mar 2015 #1

Archae

(46,810 posts)
1. Yeah, the anti-GMO people portray organic as a bunch of hippy farmers...
Tue Mar 17, 2015, 03:32 PM
Mar 2015

Singing "Inch By Inch" as they gently handle the food they apologize to the plants for taking.

Bullshit.

"Organic" has become a meaningless term now to justify charging up to three times the price for the same food.

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