Posted on 08/21/2017 12:20:32 PM PDT by nickcarraway
Multiple EPA officials colluded with Monsanto to slow a safety review of the companys glyphosate-based herbicide, Roundup, according to email communications obtained by Freedom of Information Act requests.
Monsanto officials first reached out to the EPA in early 2015 regarding the Centers for Disease Control and Preventions planned toxicology review of the herbicide, which the CDC said would be published by October 2015. This review has yet to be published, something EcoWatch notes was no accident, no bureaucratic delay, but rather was the result of a collaborative effort between Monsanto and a group of high-ranking EPA officials.
The emails, sent just weeks after the World Health Organizations International Agency for Research on Cancer had declared glyphosate a probable human carcinogen, show that shortly after Monsantos Michael Dykes reached out to the EPAs Jim Jones regarding the CDCs planned review, Jones contacted Dr. Patrick Breysse, the director of the CDCs National Center for Environmental Health, noting that the EPAs own risk assessment of glyphosate was nearly complete and might render the CDCs assessment redundant. In his email, Jones questioned whether two separate assessments were a good use of government resources. After several months of correspondence, the CDCs report was placed on hold.
I think its very clear that EPA officials and Monsanto employees worked together to accomplish a goal of stopping that analysis, Brent Wisner, a lawyer representing many of the cancer victims who are suing Monsanto, told EcoWatch. That is collusion. I dont know what else youd call that.
The following year, the EPA released a cancer assessment report contradicting the findings of the IARC, declaring that glyphosate was not likely to cause cancer.
In late July of this year, a New Zealand Green Party report revealed local scientists were highly critical of the EPAs review.
Its really unclear to me why the EPA decided to essentially ignore the IARC report, commission a report by a single author who is just not able to provide the same level of expertise as 17 experts across the globe and then come up with different conclusions, Jeroen Douwes, director of Massey Universitys centre for Public Health Research, told Radio New Zealand, adding that he wasnt sure if the EPA was bowing to outside influence or otherwise incompetent.
These are only the latest FOIA-obtained documents that show collusion between Monsanto and outside entities to hide the dangers of glyphosate. More than 75 documents released by the law firm Baum, Hedlund, Aristei & Goldman during the lawsuit against Monsanto on behalf of people who have become ill with non-Hodgkin lymphoma as a result of exposure to the companys Roundup product show that Monsanto was aware of the dangers of Roundup and colluded with academics as well as with the news media to hide these dangers from the public.
If you want to try a wheat-free bread, I’ve been using the Ener-G brand tapioca bread for 6 years (since I did an allergy test and found many food allergies that were making me ill). Ener-G brand makes several different flour breads including brown rice , but I found the Tapioca and Light Tapioca to be closest to “real” bread.
Not to put too fine a point on it, but Monsanto is just one of many companies making Round Up (glyphosate) in one form/concentration of another.
Monsanto - killing more then insects.
I guess the execs at Monsanto think of us as insects.
Doesn’t Monsanto nearly pay for every show on PBS through grants and commercials...
I looked for Ultra Kill at Lowe’s but they didn’t have any on hand...showed as a product online but unavailable at any of the other local stores. However, there was a product on the shelf called Knock Out right next to the Roundup...same chemical makeup as the Ultra Kill (41 % glysophate), decent reviews, exact same shape bottle but different color plastic, much cheaper than Round-Up ($10 for 32oz bottle). It may be the same as the Ultra Kill...just rebranded.
Reviews were good overall, but said it was slow to kill. One reviewer said it doesn’t have one chemical in it that Round-Up does (that wilts the plant giving the appearance of a “quick kill”), but still completely kills the sprayed area within about 10 days. The sprayed area can be reseeded after 7 days...same as Roundup.
I bought some and will try it out.
Thanks for the advice.
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