The real problem with GMO Food

What's the real problem with GMO Food? Support OCC by signing up for Nebula, and get 20+ bonus, ad-free videos: go.nebula.tv/occ/
In this Our Changing Climate environmental video essay, I look at the real problem with GMO food, also known as Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs). Specifically, we look at whether GMOs and GMO foods are actually bad both for the environment and for your health. GMOs and genetically modified food like soybeans or corn have long raised the ire of non-GMO food activists because they are supposedly frankenfood that will poison us, as a result, they embrace organic foods. GMO advocates champion genetically modified food as a way to combat climate change, solve environmental issues, and solve world hunger. There are truths and fallacies both of the extremes of the GMO debate, but the reality is, and really the core problem with GMOs is not the technology or the genetically modified food itself, but what GMOs and genetically modified foods are used and controlled. Monsanto's BT and HT crops are a perfect example of how GMO foods are used to create monopolies of environmental destruction.
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Timestamps:
Intro - 0:00
What is a GMO? - 1:15
The GMO debate - 2:39
The real problem with GMOs - 6:18
Are there other solutions? - 8:19
Sponsored message - 10:29
Outro - 11:39
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Further Reading and Resources on GMOs:
ourchangingclimate.notion.sit...
#GMOs #GMOFood #Environment

Пікірлер: 1 500

  • @OurChangingClimate
    @OurChangingClimate3 жыл бұрын

    🍎 There's a lot of info out there about GMOs, so treat this video as the beginning of your research--not the end. Read more and let me know what you think of GMOs in the comments below! 💡 I just did a video on Monsanto that you can check out here: kzread.info/dash/bejne/X5dmxMWMhbDafrQ.html

  • @djssdns

    @djssdns

    3 жыл бұрын

    From the Philippines, Bicol is pronounced bee-kol. Long time fan here. Love your work

  • @guillermoblanco286

    @guillermoblanco286

    3 жыл бұрын

    I personally think the video you did on Monsanto is a bit off. You present a dichotomy that isn't quite there, as if the only alternative to what Monsanto offers is organic self sustained agriculture. In the same way that doctors decide when, what and how to prescribe medicine, there should be people doing the same for plants. As everyone knows, they're mutiple ways of preventing and fighting plages, weeds and diseases crops might have; and there're thousands if not millions of varieties of each crop that are adapted to every single location where they've ever been produced. It's an oversimplifaction of a very convoluted mater, and the alternative you present as the only viable solution is, in my opinion, going too far back in the past.

  • @almostbutnotentirelyunreas166

    @almostbutnotentirelyunreas166

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@popeyegordon Ah, there we the Popeye AGAIN!! Just 4 u , Popeye, got the burn-salve ready? Already identified the videographer in public? Illegal on YT, but you live above THAT , don't ya? HERE ARE 6 GMO FACTS: 1)ZERO CLINICAL HUMAN TRIALS, ZERO CONTROLLED EMPIRICAL DATA, UNQUANTIFIED HUMAN RISK IN GMO FOOD. 2) CODEX ALIMENTARIUS RECOMMENDS HUMAN SAFETY TESTS FOR GMO FOODS...NONE EVER DONE!! 3) THE PRO-GMO GLP BLOG: 8.7% OF GOV'T FUNDED ANIMAL STUDIES ON FDA APPROVED GMO CROPS ARE 'LESS SAFE' AND/OR CAUSE HARM 4) UN FAO STATEMENT: GMO IS NOT REQUIRED TO SOLVE THE WORLD HUNGER PROBLEM. 5) ISAAA GMO DATABASE EXISTS BECAUSE 'GMO' IS DISTINCT FROM EXTANT SELECTION / BREEDING METHODS. 6) NAS 2016: NO SIGNATURE YIELD-IMPROVEMENT OF GMO ACROSS AMERICA, COMPARED TO NON-GMO. So there is NO GMO IMPERATIVE (except $$$), it has incomplete due-diligence in Human Safety (per Codex Alimentarius), on average its yield is barely better than non-GMO.......aside from shareholder $$$$, GMO Food for Humans has NOTHING TO OFFER THE CONSUMER, EXCEPT UNQUANTIFIED RISKS. Hidden BONUS FACT 7: There are nasty pro-GMO Shills lurking on social media…..stuffed shirts on morgue-duty…… LOLOL. Funny Fact!

  • @almostbutnotentirelyunreas166

    @almostbutnotentirelyunreas166

    3 жыл бұрын

    Ah yes, the CONTRACT not to save seeds.......what an enigma, rolled up into a conundrum. some thought, you will accept that it is about financial control, that's about right for Corporates, isn't it? But ACTUALLY, it is about VERSION CONTROL OF THE PLANT, and the risks of having such an organism mutate (like all plants do) in the field. EXCEPT with this GMO plant, there is NO PREDICTING / CONTROLLING of the inserted mutation: The RISKS are so huge that it dare NEVER occur. First season GMO seed, the crop is outstanding! It needs next to nothing but water & some KNO (not even fertile soil is required). Save 10 seeds, plant them out. Second season: Crop is outstanding, no perceptible difference to the first. Third season: Approx 80% of the first season.....hmmmm. 4th season: About 50% of the first season......a total failure in yield, the farmer loses now. 5th season: Yield is down to 20% of first season, so you stop bothering (commercially) and buy from the supplier, provided they didn't catch on.... So this is designed obsolescence, but less for monetary reasons, than for anti-mutation / hybridsation control of the their product. And people eat this....???

  • @almostbutnotentirelyunreas166

    @almostbutnotentirelyunreas166

    3 жыл бұрын

    Do you know why farm animals suffer little / no apparent harm from GMO feedstock? What percentage of there natural life-cycle do farm animals generally get harvested at? www.farmtransparency.org/kb/abattoirs/48-age-animals-slaughtered No time to get ill on the crap GMO foods.....now about Humans.....???

  • @swaree
    @swaree3 жыл бұрын

    "on a CRISPR day, in early August" I see what you did there

  • @OurChangingClimate

    @OurChangingClimate

    3 жыл бұрын

    ;)

  • @thegoldengamer9315

    @thegoldengamer9315

    3 жыл бұрын

    nice

  • @ru2225
    @ru22253 жыл бұрын

    And as always, human selfishness and greed is the issue

  • @sashoDman

    @sashoDman

    3 жыл бұрын

    There's is no cure for that problem :/

  • @blankalpaca

    @blankalpaca

    3 жыл бұрын

    I'd say the larger issue here is capitalism...

  • @ru2225

    @ru2225

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@blankalpaca which is based on what? Yes you guessed it, selfishness and greed.

  • @holleey

    @holleey

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@ru2225 chicken and egg scenario. at one point in history, capitalism has been a revolutionary improvement to what came before, and sustainability did not really play a role at that time because the scale of our industry was much smaller. you may call it selfishness and greed, but in the end, people are just doing what they are supposed to do under capitalism. the relentless profit incentive can never be sustainable. this is systemic.

  • @blankalpaca

    @blankalpaca

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@ru2225 yup u r very right

  • @QuestionEverythingButWHY
    @QuestionEverythingButWHY3 жыл бұрын

    “Earth provides enough to satisfy every man's needs, but not every man's greed.” ― Mahatma Gandhi

  • @xxxzz8413

    @xxxzz8413

    3 жыл бұрын

    That mahatma slept with children. Read his book "experiment with truth".

  • @karigrandii

    @karigrandii

    3 жыл бұрын

    Gandhi was a horrible man, learn your history

  • @almostbutnotentirelyunreas166

    @almostbutnotentirelyunreas166

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@popeyegordon How did I KNOW you'd be here, with your innane, ridiculous perspective.... Can you BACK YOUR CLAIM ABOUT HUMAN SAFETY WITH ANY PEER-REVIEWED , PUBLISHED SCIENCE YET, Popeye? No, still not?? Still commenting from opinion, deflection, lies, expletives, insults?

  • @johnmarshall6599

    @johnmarshall6599

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@popeyegordon At the @ mark they state that there is no difference between GMO and conventional crops. Well here's evidence that there is a big difference between BT "corn" and real Corn. Apparently Roundup has the ability to severely reduce all the good aspects of corn and in place of them poisons are added. THIS IS WHAT GLYPHOSATE DOES. IT IS AN INDUSTRIAL PIPE DESCALER THAT KILLS EVERYTHING IT TOUCHES. It's used to remove metals that build up on the inside of industrial pipes. Notice below how most of the beneficial metals are significantly reduced? THAT'S WHAT GLYPHOSATE WAS MADE TO DO! And when it is in your body, guess what it continues to do? The only way the FDA ever believed Monsanto's claim that BT "corn" and REAL Corn were the same, without any data the way, was the fact that Michael Taylor was a commissioner at the FDSA at the time. Google Michael Taylor folks. He's the Ex-Monsanto exec was working at the FDA with the express purpose of getting GMO food into the food supply so Monsanto could make huge profits. And why do you think Monsanto/Bayer makes farmers sign agreements that they will never allow their GMO products to be tested? Wake up everybody! Eat organic food whenever you can, it's the only way to know that it's not intentionally laced with neurotoxic poisons. @t

  • @johnmarshall6599

    @johnmarshall6599

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@popeyegordon Just shows you how effective Michael Taylor was at the FDA, doesn't it? An industrial pipe descaled that kills everything it touches as a medicine. Keep on goin' Poopeye.

  • @chigeh
    @chigeh3 жыл бұрын

    You forgot to mention that part of the reason that GMO's are so monopolized is because regulations are so strict. There are significant administrative barriers for start ups and small teams. Large companies overcome this and consolidate the market share

  • @DukeGMOLOL

    @DukeGMOLOL

    3 жыл бұрын

    That's true.

  • @PolionL

    @PolionL

    2 жыл бұрын

    They are monopolized and so tightly regulated because they are part of the biological weapons program. You can not access the highly dangerous materials needed to modify genes.

  • @charlesmrader

    @charlesmrader

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@PolionL PolionL, I don't know where you heard this, but it is totally wrong. Several years ago, I took a course at a local science museum, in which we actually did some genetic engineering as part of the course. There were absolutely no dangerous materials involved. We used things like soap, alcohol, test tubes, Bunsen burners, stuff you could find in your kitchen or your cleaning supplies. The special genes being transferred were easily bought on line for a few dollars. This same course lab experiments are part of some high school science courses and almost any college has some similar courses today.

  • @PolionL

    @PolionL

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@charlesmrader What genetic information did you transfer between species? What process did you use and how did you confirm gene transfer? GMO's when first invented were specifically designed as weapons, antibiotic resistant bacteria and terminator seeds are examples. Horizontal gene transfer is carried out through the use of modified bacteria and fungus, and can not be done with things you find in your kitchen. Genetic engineering takes a generation. It is done by infecting the parent who then passes the infection in the form of modification to its offspring. The implications of this technology can produce thing like anthrax that spreads like the flu, or black plague that spreads like corona. It is highly dangerous tech that puts all of humanity at risk. I'm sure they didn't mention that in your "local science course"...

  • @MissMoontree

    @MissMoontree

    2 жыл бұрын

    Patents on organisms shouldn't be granted to other organisms.

  • @Pyro-et9vs
    @Pyro-et9vs3 жыл бұрын

    Could you go into the Tea industry, and how sustainable the industry is?

  • @eco-techandtravel5258

    @eco-techandtravel5258

    3 жыл бұрын

    Actually , i have this question from long time because in india most of tea plantations in rainforest area. And it's destroy elephant, tiger and other very important species habitat.

  • @Rae709

    @Rae709

    3 жыл бұрын

    YES PLEASE...

  • @mountainslopes

    @mountainslopes

    3 жыл бұрын

    Perhaps looking at companies like Tetley and how they created whole worker cities in places like Kerala, India

  • @bumpusjones.1978

    @bumpusjones.1978

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yeah let’s move away people in third world countries continuing do die for incredibly flawed nonsense and move on to your favorite warm drink.

  • @kyliepurcell4382

    @kyliepurcell4382

    3 жыл бұрын

    Would be interested in this as well! Additionally, does buying fair trade tea actually translate to benefits for the workers

  • @Pyro-et9vs
    @Pyro-et9vs3 жыл бұрын

    I am Pro GMO and anti corporation/monopoly

  • @johnmarshall6599

    @johnmarshall6599

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@popeyegordon At the @ mark they state that there is no difference between GMO and conventional crops. Well here's evidence that there is a big difference between BT "corn" and real Corn. Apparently Roundup has the ability to severely reduce all the good aspects of corn and in place of them poisons are added. THIS IS WHAT GLYPHOSATE DOES. IT IS AN INDUSTRIAL PIPE DESCALER THAT KILLS EVERYTHING IT TOUCHES. It's used to remove metals that build up on the inside of industrial pipes. Notice below how most of the beneficial metals are significantly reduced? THAT'S WHAT GLYPHOSATE WAS MADE TO DO! And when it is in your body, guess what it continues to do? The only way the FDA ever believed Monsanto's claim that BT "corn" and REAL Corn were the same, without any data the way, was the fact that Michael Taylor was a commissioner at the FDSA at the time. Google Michael Taylor folks. He's the Ex-Monsanto exec was working at the FDA with the express purpose of getting GMO food into the food supply so Monsanto could make huge profits. And why do you think Monsanto/Bayer makes farmers sign agreements that they will never allow their GMO products to be tested? Wake up everybody! Eat organic food whenever you can, it's the only way to know that it's not intentionally laced with neurotoxic poisons. @t

  • @johnmarshall6599

    @johnmarshall6599

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@popeyegordon At the @ mark they state that there is no difference between GMO and conventional crops. Well here's evidence that there is a big difference between BT "corn" and real Corn. Apparently Roundup has the ability to severely reduce all the good aspects of corn and in place of them poisons are added. THIS IS WHAT GLYPHOSATE DOES. IT IS AN INDUSTRIAL PIPE DESCALER THAT KILLS EVERYTHING IT TOUCHES. It's used to remove metals that build up on the inside of industrial pipes. Notice below how most of the beneficial metals are significantly reduced? THAT'S WHAT GLYPHOSATE WAS MADE TO DO! And when it is in your body, guess what it continues to do? The only way the FDA ever believed Monsanto's claim that BT "corn" and REAL Corn were the same, without any data the way, was the fact that Michael Taylor was a commissioner at the FDSA at the time. Google Michael Taylor folks. He's the Ex-Monsanto exec was working at the FDA with the express purpose of getting GMO food into the food supply so Monsanto could make huge profits. And why do you think Monsanto/Bayer makes farmers sign agreements that they will never allow their GMO products to be tested? Wake up everybody! Eat organic food whenever you can, it's the only way to know that it's not intentionally laced with neurotoxic poisons. @t

  • @yoyo-jv4rp

    @yoyo-jv4rp

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@johnmarshall6599 Okay two things. 1. Glyphosate ≠ BT corn Just because farmers who use BT corn also use Glyphosate doesn’t mean it’s the same. If legislation prohibited or restricted the use of Glyphosate and other pesticide, we would have less pesticide AND more yield (compared to non-GMO corn). 2. Nobody said BT corn = non-GMO corn. The point is BT corn is not more/less healthy than non-GMO corn. This is acknowledged by the National Academy of Science, Engineering and Medicine, the WHO and even accepted by the EU Commission.

  • @johnmarshall6599

    @johnmarshall6599

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@yoyo-jv4rp "Nobody said BT corn = non-GMO corn". What? If you do the research you'll see that Monsanto themselves lied to the FDA when they got BT corn "approved". That's the only way they could get it approved. And Michael Taylor, the Ex-Monsanto executive who infiltrated the FDA for the exact purpose of getting GMO's into the food supply.

  • @trishhoney2172

    @trishhoney2172

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@popeyegordon scaremongering

  • @BolanleJenny
    @BolanleJenny3 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for talking this subject. I have always felt a bit mixed about GMOs since I definitely understand the science of it but I was also aware of they can be used/weaponised against small scale farmers and by big agriculture.

  • @BolanleJenny

    @BolanleJenny

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@popeyegordon I would suggest looking up Monsanto.

  • @BolanleJenny

    @BolanleJenny

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@popeyegordon If you believe that🤷🏾‍♀️

  • @arnowisp6244

    @arnowisp6244

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@BolanleJenny Popeye Gordon is a troll who floods every GMO related video. Ignore him. As for Monsanto they are merged with Bayer now. Hardly proving they don't exist.

  • @arnowisp6244

    @arnowisp6244

    3 жыл бұрын

    Indeed. www.theguardian.com/world/2012/may/15/india-gm-cotton-bayer www.csmonitor.com/USA/Justice/2013/0513/Farmers-cannot-replicate-Monsanto-seeds-for-second-crop-Supreme-Court-rules

  • @arnowisp6244

    @arnowisp6244

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@popeyegordon Oh yes straight from a pro gmo activist site because activist sites are unbiased. BTW, I've heard about these illegal black market seeds. In some cases they are fraudulently labelled as "gmo".

  • @notdpanda9525
    @notdpanda95252 жыл бұрын

    Humans have been cultivating and breeding plants for thousands of years. The original plants have long been lost, or exist in the wild.

  • @necrosteel5013

    @necrosteel5013

    2 жыл бұрын

    Like original plant species in the wild cross polinating at random You get a loss of several species and are left with the hardy mongrel plants that outlasts the others.

  • @zerosugar8026

    @zerosugar8026

    2 жыл бұрын

    Gene splicing and cross breeding are not the same. If you need a laboratory to do it then it wasn't done thousands of years ago

  • @necrosteel5013

    @necrosteel5013

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@zerosugar8026 true, but that's only because gene splicing completely cuts away the middle man of generations of trails required for the desired plant with guaranteed results. Wild cross pollination will favour the hardiest and fast spreading plants,just look at common grass.

  • @Rahul_G.G.
    @Rahul_G.G.3 жыл бұрын

    2:58 Nah every news debate in India is about "PASSION + HYPERBOLE"

  • @VK-pn6rg

    @VK-pn6rg

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yep! As an Indian, can confirm. This is why I usually reference to written articles and international networks rather than live TV.

  • @viggomarzelius8882
    @viggomarzelius88823 жыл бұрын

    This "problem" is only a problem if there are no alternativ seeds on the market and while no one is alowed to make a new one. As long as the market of seeds and gmo seeds is free, this problem does not exist. Gmo is gonna be amazing for everyone involved, but we have to have our eyes open for fraud, bad products and monopolies, just like every other market for eny product.

  • @arnowisp6244

    @arnowisp6244

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@popeyegordon Yeah, debunked with sources with links to people who benefit from GMOs.

  • @arnowisp6244

    @arnowisp6244

    3 жыл бұрын

    Except these companies are slowly conglomerating into a giant oligarchy. As for right now 3 companies now control 60% of the worlds food supply.

  • @beccam9854

    @beccam9854

    3 жыл бұрын

    so sweet need open source seeds is what I'm hearing

  • @vanessaaventura

    @vanessaaventura

    3 жыл бұрын

    Monsanto is a current monopoly

  • @AaronAC91

    @AaronAC91

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@popeyegordon Sir, You and me could be a really good friends.

  • @elephant-room
    @elephant-room3 жыл бұрын

    Yeah, I missed you. Thanks for coming back, man!

  • @Peeze16

    @Peeze16

    3 жыл бұрын

    I love his videos. Every Friday I wait in anticipation

  • @Ecotasia
    @Ecotasia3 жыл бұрын

    Very well said, I don't like how Monsanto has applied the technology. I also like how you focus on saying silver bullets do not exist, I think this is the main thing we as a society have to understand. I imagine that if we can get GMOs into integrated pest-management systems they could be really amazing.

  • @guillermoblanco286

    @guillermoblanco286

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@popeyegordon The fact that Monsanto is now OWNED by Bayer doesn't mean they've stopped doing what they were doing! It's like claming that KZread is dead because its owned by Google!

  • @johnmarshall6599

    @johnmarshall6599

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@popeyegordon At the @ mark they state that there is no difference between GMO and conventional crops. Well here's evidence that there is a big difference between BT "corn" and real Corn. Apparently Roundup has the ability to severely reduce all the good aspects of corn and in place of them poisons are added. THIS IS WHAT GLYPHOSATE DOES. IT IS AN INDUSTRIAL PIPE DESCALER THAT KILLS EVERYTHING IT TOUCHES. It's used to remove metals that build up on the inside of industrial pipes. Notice below how most of the beneficial metals are significantly reduced? THAT'S WHAT GLYPHOSATE WAS MADE TO DO! And when it is in your body, guess what it continues to do? The only way the FDA ever believed Monsanto's claim that BT "corn" and REAL Corn were the same, without any data the way, was the fact that Michael Taylor was a commissioner at the FDSA at the time. Google Michael Taylor folks. He's the Ex-Monsanto exec was working at the FDA with the express purpose of getting GMO food into the food supply so Monsanto could make huge profits. And why do you think Monsanto/Bayer makes farmers sign agreements that they will never allow their GMO products to be tested? Wake up everybody! Eat organic food whenever you can, it's the only way to know that it's not intentionally laced with neurotoxic poisons. @t

  • @remco6816

    @remco6816

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@johnmarshall6599 uhm you sound more like a fear mongering than reasonable. You do realize that organic food suffers from land use and has a higher risk of crops failure. So to be able to feed every human you will need more land than non biological. Biological foods also still use pesticides but biological pesticides but because it says biological it doesn't mean its any better or safer its just differently produced.

  • @almostbutnotentirelyunreas166

    @almostbutnotentirelyunreas166

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@remco6816 Get a clue: FAO : 4 www.fao.org/ United Nations Food & Agriculture Organization, FAQ on GMO: Excerpt: “4) First, despite what is sometimes said, we do not need GMOs to resolve the current world hunger problem. There is enough food for everybody, but millions of people are poor and simply do not have the money to buy food - that is why access to food is a major problem.” www.fao.org/fileadmin/user_upload/biotech/docs/faqsen.pdf

  • @almostbutnotentirelyunreas166

    @almostbutnotentirelyunreas166

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@remco6816 Get ANOTHER clue: Yield of GMO is barely better than non-GMO ........why bother? Its easier on farmers, makes more $$$. "FINDING: The nation-wide data on maize, cotton, or soybean in the United States do not show a significant signature of genetic-engineering technology on the rate of yield increase...... " i.e. GMO yield is marginally better than non-GMO. www.nap.edu/read/23395/chapter/7#100 Excerpt as above. USA NAS 2016.

  • @eleoptera
    @eleoptera3 жыл бұрын

    Could you please make a whole video on the alternative land use models you mentioned? Like ageoforestry and polyculture?

  • @firmbeliever3847

    @firmbeliever3847

    3 жыл бұрын

    Watch the documentary...kiss the ground...

  • @joyhouse5934

    @joyhouse5934

    3 жыл бұрын

    I don't hated GMO but without more information and regulations by United nations and different countries. How do we know that companies can be trusted with this technology 🤔??? We need world wided regulations on this Technology on global police force 🤔? Food standards effected every one on earth 🌎 . I believe people do have a choice too , if want natural crops or GMO crops. This may seem hard to see but choice makes better economic sense and better product's for everyone.

  • @Somajsibere

    @Somajsibere

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@joyhouse5934 Just get rid of the corporarions and we should be well enough, after all they are killing us.

  • @nilminideen5296

    @nilminideen5296

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@joyhouse5934 need to stopped GMO completely. Ever wonder why developed countries health issues rising up high in every year than the previous years? If the countries are developed health issues need to come down haven’t they ? GMO is one link for the above question too. Read the ingredients in any food item when buying then can see how many scientific names being consuming in daily diet too.

  • @FrancisE.Dec.Esquire

    @FrancisE.Dec.Esquire

    Жыл бұрын

    George HW Bush - Genetically Modified Food Deregulation (1992).mp4

  • @akar4373
    @akar43732 жыл бұрын

    The only "pro GMO" video I have seen that isn't simply berating the anti GMO crowd and pretending they are complete idiots. Thanks.

  • @jorgeavelar98

    @jorgeavelar98

    Жыл бұрын

    its true tho. Anti GMO crowd are complete idiots

  • @havanadaurcy1321
    @havanadaurcy13212 жыл бұрын

    From a book my grandfather had from the 1960's: Domesticated food is scientifically modified from the wild plants. It's amazing how you miss this fact

  • @amish613

    @amish613

    2 жыл бұрын

    By human selection. Not genetically modified in lab.

  • @conradmbugua9098

    @conradmbugua9098

    Жыл бұрын

    You confuse human selection with forcing a random gene to a plant with unforeseeing consequences

  • @Pyriphlegeton
    @Pyriphlegeton3 жыл бұрын

    All plants are riddled with random mutations. About 70% of modern food plants are the result of nuclear agriculture, literally exposing them to radiation to induce random mutations. Being afraid of "gmos" per se is completely stupid.

  • @curiousbystander9193

    @curiousbystander9193

    3 жыл бұрын

    you should be afraid of hard to digest cry1 proteins being expressed in staple crops........increasing the lectin load in staple foods leads to gi tract problems in the population through degradation of the small intestine villi......"believe" what you want

  • @DoesNotGiveAF

    @DoesNotGiveAF

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@curiousbystander9193 Can you provide the studies that back your claims here? Rational people believe what has been proven by the scientific method, claims are just and only that. Provide evidence of your argument if would like people to "believe" you.

  • @curiousbystander9193

    @curiousbystander9193

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@DoesNotGiveAF besides the explosion of the probiotics market, the explosion of auto immune diseases across the board, and the vast increases autism and other psych problems, all arising from poor gut biomes.....more like MR. AF, where's the studies showing how glyphosate and cry gmo proteins influence the human gi track biome......vacancy, yet many rational people just munch away ignorantly....go figure

  • @polinaskirta3334

    @polinaskirta3334

    2 жыл бұрын

    We have already found out that genetecly modified foods have side effects.Nuclear agriculture isn't goodeither it has side effects as well.Both are undesirable. Just because we consume Foods that have been grown in worse conditions doesn't mean that gmo foods are all of a sudden safe

  • @ajnomotorola13
    @ajnomotorola133 жыл бұрын

    Thanks Charlie for making the videos that cut through the noise.

  • @VideoGerm
    @VideoGerm3 жыл бұрын

    Your production quality is amazing. What font are you using?

  • @petrhorky7355
    @petrhorky73553 жыл бұрын

    The graphics are really next level, good job!

  • @-topic9506
    @-topic95063 жыл бұрын

    I would love to see a video on expiration dates/what is perceived as "spoiled" food in western societies!

  • @suexxxxxxxx

    @suexxxxxxxx

    Жыл бұрын

    They say that they starting to remove expiry dates due to people wasting so much food, it was only meant for the supermarkets not the customer but they got crafty by not telling the people so they could reap more money out of us all, people have forgotten how to use their own senses. I steer clear of gmo food as there is more than what he is saying in that. Also there is nothing wrong with the climate they are lying to us again and again, this has been happening since ww2 and we are all still here. Telling us that the polar ice is melting and the sea will rise, not going to happen. For instance pour yourself a glass of say gin and tonic put ice in went it melts does your drink become a large gin and tonic??

  • @AndreaS-xp6op
    @AndreaS-xp6op3 жыл бұрын

    I'm impressed. In the past 10 years I have only encountered one other written article that has given such a concise yet nuanced view of GMOs that was meant for the general public. I have a degree in plant science, and in a plant genetics class I found it so frustrating to watch my prof (a world class plant geneticist) bring in a bag of Brassica veggies and tell the class that "these were genetically modified (through traditional breeding) and thus the same as GMOs", but when I raised the point that maybe there are socioeconomic and environmental impacts to be considered he agreed and then quickly changed the subject. I hope this video gets many views!! 😁

  • @almostbutnotentirelyunreas166

    @almostbutnotentirelyunreas166

    3 жыл бұрын

    A degree in plant science? The angle of the sun does NOT confer a 'degree' of insight. *ISBN 978-92-5-105914-2* UN Codex Alimentarius on GMO(cut /paste at 180 degree) : Pg 3, “19. Risk management measures may include, as appropriate, food labelling8 conditions for marketing approvals and post-market monitoring.” Pg 18, “56: Gene transfer from plants and their food products to gut micro-organisms or human cells is considered a rare possibility because of the many complex and unlikely events that would need to occur consecutively. Nevertheless, the possibility of such events cannot be completely discounted.6” Pg 10, “ 15: Unintended effects can result from the random insertion of DNA sequences into the plant genome, which may cause disruption or silencing of existing genes, activation of silent genes, or modifications in the expression of existing genes. Unintended effects may also result in the formation of new or changed patterns of metabolites. For example, the expression of enzymes at high levels may give rise to secondary biochemical effects or changes in the regulation of metabolic pathways and/or altered levels of metabolites” Pg 16. "46: ….. consideration should be given to the potential impacts on human health using conventional procedures for establishing the safety of such metabolites *(e.g. procedures for assessing the human safety of chemicals in foods)* .” i.e. Human Safety Studies, YET: None ever.

  • @zacknattack

    @zacknattack

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@almostbutnotentirelyunreas166 oh wow anti-intelluectualism epic

  • @almostbutnotentirelyunreas166

    @almostbutnotentirelyunreas166

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@zacknattack So, you didn't read it, did you? How intellectual of you, knowing everything in advance, already! Amazingly simple, isn't it?

  • @zacknattack

    @zacknattack

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@almostbutnotentirelyunreas166 nah, i read it it's funny, thy own logic is self defeating. if thou can say that degrees don't matter, then none of thy sources credentials matter, either! by starting thy argument by arguing degrees don't matter, thou's already made thyself pretty sussy

  • @almostbutnotentirelyunreas166

    @almostbutnotentirelyunreas166

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@zacknattack So you didn't read it, yet you wish to argue.... pseudo-intellectualism expands.....yawn. Stick to the FACTS about GMO, which you cannot, because you haven't read the UN Codex protocols on GMO safety. YT: Where the idiocracy comes to feed. Pssst, google Kruger-Dunning effect, have a mirror handy....LOLS. Meanwhile: GMO foods for Humans are EXPERIMENTAL, there isn't a single scientific safety study on Human GMO consumption, that meets the UN Codex protocols...not one! All YOU (o intellectual-wannabe) have to do , is link ONE Human Safety Study on GMO Foods that meets UN Codex protocols, and you win this 'debate', Mr Master-Debator!

  • @kalakakku7749
    @kalakakku77493 жыл бұрын

    This was nuanced as usual. Thank you for making great informative content.

  • @DavidRichardson153
    @DavidRichardson1533 жыл бұрын

    There is a lot of nuance that goes into GMOs, and not just in the debate and controversy over the food. It is true that genes from completely different organisms get spliced into each other all the time, and this is the case for genetic research. The point of this is to identify a specific gene's function(s), so one of the best ways to learn this is to insert the gene into an organism that would not naturally have it. So when you hear of a fish gene being inserted into a piece of lettuce or vice versa, there are three things to know: 1) Unless they are specifically researching food crops, they will NOT use food crops for the research, and when they do, they typically insert the crops gene(s) into something that would NOT be used as a food source anywhere - and even then, they do not risk any of these edited organisms getting out in any way, either as a whole or even a specific gene segment, and thus, they completely destroy any and all genetic material (incineration is perhaps the best method for this). 2) When they are trying to develop a new food crop, they only use what is already used as food crops for their development. Thus, plants will only be spliced with other plants - no meat, fish, or even microbes get used - and this applies across all such research (this goes on for all possible food sources, but plants, by far, get the most attention and research). When you hear of a new rice being developed, the genes used in that new rice would have come from other rice. Rarely, if ever, do they splice genes from different crop types - this is why you rarely, if ever, hear of rice and corn genes being spliced together into a new crop (too different to reliably use). 3) After they develop the crop in a laboratory, they then recreate the same new crop using the old-fashioned method, without the highly specific gene editing techniques. This is to help test (and ideally ensure) the new crop's genome, to see if it will withstand constant exposure to potential mutations. After all, it does not do much good if the new crop can only persist through lab manufacturing and would otherwise be wiped out within a few generations in the field. These GMOs that are made for developing worlds are designed so that a lab is NOT needed to produce them, that a (comparatively) low-tech society can continue to produce the crop over many generations of the crop. Now, there is still plenty to be concerned about when it comes to GMOs. GMOs that are designed to also contain nutrients in other variants of the crop they were created from are generally VERY safe (there is always the possibility that some detail was overlooked, hence why they pour so much effort into covering everything that would prevent ANYTHING from going wrong with it - even the amount of the nutrient in the crop is carefully analyzed to reduce, if not eliminate, the risk of overdosing, because, yes, nutrient-overdosing happens). GMOs that incorporate what would be considered synthetic materials (like Monsanto's Roundup-ready crops) are the ones that tend to pose the greater risk - there is no guarantee that these types of GMOs are dangerous in a general sense, but the GMOs that were eventually found to cause problems mostly, if not always, come from this category. This has resulted in ever-tightening oversight of the development if any and all future GMOs - and why there is a growing trend of shifting away from what some might call "chemically-infused crops" like the Monsanto Roundup ones. GMOs can and do help, but they are indeed NOT a silver bullet. In fact, expecting ANYTHING to be a silver bullet for ANY problem is inviting disaster. As was pointed out at the end, GMOs would be a great addition to more sustainable forms of agriculture. I would also argue that in the future, especially if we want to reduce the environmental impact of raising livestock (by greatly cutting back on livestock - not necessarily all of it, but certainly a lot of it), GMOs are going to become even more important - still not "silver bullet" status (again, nothing can ever be one) but still more important. An advantage meat has is that it condenses virtually all nutrients needed into one sort-of convenient package, and finding a meat-free alternative for that will not be easy (unless you want to go the Soylent Green route, which I doubt many will - and that was not exactly meat-free). What types of new GMOs are developed should always be a cause for concern, and while non-GMOs might be better for the natural environment, as long as people continue to live in places we're humans never did in the past (and as long as technology keeps on existing existing developing, that will be the case), natural crops will not be enough, as they cannot withstand the journey to get to these naturally-inhospitable areas - and just to remind people, refrigeration and freezing requires a constant power source and a multitude of other resources, so while helpful, they are not the most practical or efficient. That might be the biggest advantage GMOs have - they can better survive in places other crops cannot. Even so, caution should be warranted for everything, but I do not believe that GMOs should ever be banned from food.

  • @DukeGMOLOL

    @DukeGMOLOL

    3 жыл бұрын

    Great stuff David.

  • @Pyro-et9vs
    @Pyro-et9vs3 жыл бұрын

    9:07 behold, Climate Change's arch nemesis *THE FLYING BANANA!!!!!*

  • @outofcompliance1639

    @outofcompliance1639

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yep, climate change is another of the dozen scams coming from the left.

  • @flyingdart9819

    @flyingdart9819

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@outofcompliance1639 why, politically speaking I'm on the right, but i believe in climate change. What are your counter arguments?

  • @outofcompliance1639

    @outofcompliance1639

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@flyingdart9819 Very complex issue, which is why they use it. What is their argument? They have nothing. If you are really interested I can give you my argument, but I would not call it a counter argument, theirs is the counter argument. I will try to follow up this week with plenty of information.

  • @flyingdart9819

    @flyingdart9819

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@outofcompliance1639 i saw a video about climate change. It explained a lot of things like the temperature changes over the course of thousands of years and how it's changing now. Basically CO2 levels have never been this high in thousands of years. This shows that the climate is not changing naturally, but by humans. However i do agree that this problem has been politicised a lot especially by the left. It is not a scam though.

  • @wannabehistorian371

    @wannabehistorian371

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@flyingdart9819 lol they didn’t reply in a week.

  • @dianasofia1669
    @dianasofia16693 жыл бұрын

    I love watching this channel because the videos always make me feel like talking to a like-minded friend who teaches me and challenges me to be better and to get well educated and informed 😌❤️ thank you!

  • @noemi9985
    @noemi99853 жыл бұрын

    i really appreciate how well researched your videos are, you do a great job of exposing the underlying issues to many problems and the more i watch the more i realise that it's usually a structural issue rather than a specfic technology/brand/product etc

  • @jorgeavelar98

    @jorgeavelar98

    Жыл бұрын

    You should check out "In a Nutshell - Are GMOs good or bad" video. They do a much better job at explaining this. Although there are legitimate concerns with GMOs, the positives far outweigh the hypothetical negatives.

  • @Josuekv
    @Josuekv3 жыл бұрын

    I'm always astonished the ways you transdiciplinary cover complex issues

  • @jorgeastiazaran
    @jorgeastiazaran3 жыл бұрын

    Great video, as you said, technology is only as good or as bad as the one using it. The monopoly issue is only worsened by all the misinformation and controversy. Governments should be creating their own GMO crops based on their local needs, to guarantee food security and economic stability, but very few governments would be willing to assign a good budget in GMO R&D if they fear social backlash. So it leaves free ground for these corporations, which will pursue their own interests.

  • @emilyryckman1217
    @emilyryckman12173 жыл бұрын

    I have just discovered your channel and I have honestly been blown away with your content. As a Canadian who spent the past few years working with small-scale organic farmers in Colombia and Nicaragua, I think there is a lot of potential to broaden your reach into South America, especially your content on food systems. My partner (Colombian) and I are fluent in Spanish and would like to offer our skills to help create Spanish subtitles on your videos. Spanish is the fourth most spoken language in the world, and the majority of Latin American countries are agricultural-based economies, many of which have deeply entrenched industrialized food systems. If this is something you are interested in, please reach out.

  • @buddydunkel
    @buddydunkel3 жыл бұрын

    Amazing video as always. I always had such a hard time explaining to people that it isn't the technology itself, but the way it is applied and the environment cultivated around it that is bad. Just like it is with so many things. Maybe for future reference: I think you meant the German company Bayer, but I wasn't sure by your pronunciation. The name of that company is pronounced closer to bi-er, where the i is pronounced like in I and the er like it is in emergency. I hope this may help you in the future

  • @guessdog4871

    @guessdog4871

    3 жыл бұрын

    Bio-engineering has so much potential for misuse, both deliberate or through carelessness. Free market capitalists (not all but enough of them) have proven that they simply can't be trusted to act with a conscience, and in many industries.

  • @falcoperegrinus82

    @falcoperegrinus82

    3 жыл бұрын

    At least in the US, Bayer is always pronounced as "bear" like the animal. It's even pronounced like that in their own TV commercials.

  • @dougpatterson7494
    @dougpatterson74942 жыл бұрын

    This is a general fair assessment. I would say this is the best video of yours I've seen. I would like to add is that societies attitude towards food needs to change. Less insistence that food must be in "perfect" condition to be consumed. The average appearance of produce from my garden is lower than what I'd buy at the grocery store.

  • @sandpiperbf9767
    @sandpiperbf97673 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for bringing rationality to controversial topics.

  • @maxstarn3299
    @maxstarn32993 жыл бұрын

    Charlie your videos are so clean, they deserve so many more views it’s killing me seeing so much work put into a video that only gets 20k views at times. I love these videos so much

  • @tonyclif1
    @tonyclif13 жыл бұрын

    To suggest farmers spray pesticides indiscriminately is ridiculous ! They use as little as possible for a very simple reason - cost. Why would they use more than necessary if it reduces their profit? Seed saving hasn’t been a practice for decades.

  • @als5845

    @als5845

    3 жыл бұрын

    Most people have no idea how a real farm operates and yet they have such strong opinions. As a farmer, it’s very frustrating

  • @oddrii_malenchki
    @oddrii_malenchki3 жыл бұрын

    I'm from Bicol and I never heard of this before, till it became a topic in one of our class

  • @nivedita5899
    @nivedita58993 жыл бұрын

    You're doing a phenomenal job. Though I reached here a bit late I'm glad I did. Love from India

  • @SamuelNormandeau
    @SamuelNormandeau2 жыл бұрын

    As a horticultural technologist, I am often dismayed by the misunderstanding of GMO technology. Thank you for your accurate portrayal of this technology.

  • @nenmaster5218

    @nenmaster5218

    Жыл бұрын

    DONT just comment 'Oh, waste=bad'! Do something! Watch 'Second Thought' adress these Issues, like in his video 'Is Capitalism even efficient?' Food-Waste is adressed there and elsewhere for real!!

  • @andreipopa5540
    @andreipopa55403 жыл бұрын

    I don't like the argument of "There's enough food". There is, because of the current system of farming. We need GMO's, but pest resistant ones, not chemical resistant ones. Without GMOs we cannot indutrially farm at all. I have a small garden and I changed my Pinova apples with wild apples because of pests, but I get 1/3 of the production.

  • @bachvandals3259

    @bachvandals3259

    3 жыл бұрын

    It's like that almost everywhere... Except for the America, where companies has lobbying power to change law. Most cancerous pesticide is banned around the world, it's simple, some just don't want to change. It's politics, not science which is the one killing people.

  • @davidadcock3382

    @davidadcock3382

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@bachvandals3259 That is the Idea of gmo technology so Farmers can use much less and much safer pesticides even much safer than many of the highly toxic pesticides Organic growers use.

  • @juliaisagoodwitch
    @juliaisagoodwitch3 жыл бұрын

    I always learn something new whenever I watch you videos! 👍

  • @barbarapagan6292
    @barbarapagan62922 жыл бұрын

    you killed the mood with the audiobook ad

  • @victoravramov3802

    @victoravramov3802

    Жыл бұрын

    Especially since it's amazon's audiobook company

  • @herb_rolls3929
    @herb_rolls39293 жыл бұрын

    I love love love your content. The connection to the big picture is something so many explanations lack. You're also mad talented with your motion graphics, if I were a teacher I would show them all of your videos

  • @johnmarshall6599

    @johnmarshall6599

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@popeyegordon At the @ mark they state that there is no difference between GMO and conventional crops. Well here's evidence that there is a big difference between BT "corn" and real Corn. Apparently Roundup has the ability to severely reduce all the good aspects of corn and in place of them poisons are added. THIS IS WHAT GLYPHOSATE DOES. IT IS AN INDUSTRIAL PIPE DESCALER THAT KILLS EVERYTHING IT TOUCHES. It's used to remove metals that build up on the inside of industrial pipes. Notice below how most of the beneficial metals are significantly reduced? THAT'S WHAT GLYPHOSATE WAS MADE TO DO! And when it is in your body, guess what it continues to do? The only way the FDA ever believed Monsanto's claim that BT "corn" and REAL Corn were the same, without any data the way, was the fact that Michael Taylor was a commissioner at the FDSA at the time. Google Michael Taylor folks. He's the Ex-Monsanto exec was working at the FDA with the express purpose of getting GMO food into the food supply so Monsanto could make huge profits. And why do you think Monsanto/Bayer makes farmers sign agreements that they will never allow their GMO products to be tested? Wake up everybody! Eat organic food whenever you can, it's the only way to know that it's not intentionally laced with neurotoxic poisons. @t

  • @M-Soares
    @M-Soares3 жыл бұрын

    Nice video, finally some nuanced discussion about GMOs, sorely needed. If you guys could do a video just on glyphosate, it would be great, I've tried to find studies about its effects but all of them point to different findings and I couldn't find any conclusive arguments on it, not to mention it is a highly polarizing topic. It all makes it way more difficult to find object answers.

  • @guessdog4871

    @guessdog4871

    3 жыл бұрын

    I believe it's carcinogenic at some level of exposure. Maybe it's good that we eat so much "Roundup Ready" corn because the fact the corn is resistant has allowed them to drench with it excessively and later in the harvest stage, with a sometimes questionable "rinse" process. If it's getting through to the food supply, maybe humans who've eaten enough GMO corn will be resistant - "Roundup Ready" people!

  • @M-Soares

    @M-Soares

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@guessdog4871 From what I've read, yes, it is carcinogenic at high concentrations, concerning particularly people who apply it, but as long as there are guidelines for PPE use and safety measures, it shouldn't be a problem. If it is getting through to the consumer, we should enforce strict regulations to ensure it doesn't, be it better rinsing or establishing limits to how much can be used. I think in the future we should focus on greener mathods of agriculture where glyphosate isn't needed, but until then, I believe its use is ok as long as there is regulation and oversight by a competent organ.

  • @charlesmrader

    @charlesmrader

    Жыл бұрын

    @@guessdog4871 I see this use of the word "drench" is anti-GMO comments so often. It's dishonest! The word is carefully chosen to give the impression that the farmers are using huge quantities of the herbicide. A farmer who did that would go broke. It's really something like a quart per acre. Usually that quart is dissolved in a whole lot of ordinary water so it is easy to spray it. Even the word "spray" is misleading. A more accurate word would be the verb "to mist".

  • @leopensaa
    @leopensaa3 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for explain this huge and important topic!

  • @Boumante
    @Boumante2 жыл бұрын

    thank you for this video but...why have audible sponsored it?

  • @franciscorichard1975
    @franciscorichard19753 жыл бұрын

    Good video. Bicol is pronouned as Bee-kol and not as buy-kol. How big some companies are growing globally is scary. It really is a double-edged sword as it takes massive financial resources to instigate change but the changes have to be tempered with ethics which is usually forgotten in today's business world and their profit/growth at all costs mentality.

  • @bumpusjones.1978

    @bumpusjones.1978

    3 жыл бұрын

    Excellent post life or death who cares, when you can focus on something REALLY important.

  • @zwithabun
    @zwithabun3 жыл бұрын

    Just to clarify, Bicol is pronounced as Bee-col, short i sound. Great video thank you for shedding light to this issue!

  • @fishlivesmatter

    @fishlivesmatter

    3 жыл бұрын

    Ulol walang may pake

  • @iKassie2002

    @iKassie2002

    3 жыл бұрын

    Hahahahaha

  • @zwithabun

    @zwithabun

    3 жыл бұрын

    Sa tama lang hahaha

  • @EightFigga

    @EightFigga

    4 ай бұрын

    Baycol

  • @iminni3459
    @iminni34593 жыл бұрын

    Very informative, thank you.

  • @philjohnson4607
    @philjohnson46073 жыл бұрын

    This is incredibly interesting. I’m 17 and have been interested in environmentalism. Where our food comes from and how it’s grown is more complicated than I thought.

  • @DukeGMOLOL

    @DukeGMOLOL

    3 жыл бұрын

    You picked the wrong video Phil, from 7 minutes on it is nonsense.

  • @philjohnson4607

    @philjohnson4607

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@DukeGMOLOL How so?

  • @DukeGMOLOL

    @DukeGMOLOL

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@philjohnson4607 From about 6:25 on pick a few items that get your attention and I'll explain if you wish.

  • @almostbutnotentirelyunreas166

    @almostbutnotentirelyunreas166

    3 жыл бұрын

    Read the UN Codex Alimentarius on GMO Food safety protocols, then ask: Why have the most important of these NEVER been implemented? *ISBN 978-92-5-105914-2* Excerpts: Pg 16. "46: ….. consideration should be given to the potential impacts on human health using conventional procedures for establishing the safety of such metabolites *(e.g. procedures for assessing the human safety of chemicals in foods)* .” i.e. Human Safety Studies, YET: None ever. Pg 3, “19. Risk management measures may include, as appropriate, food labelling8 conditions for marketing approvals and post-market monitoring.” Pg 18, “56: Gene transfer from plants and their food products to gut micro-organisms or human cells is considered a rare possibility because of the many complex and unlikely events that would need to occur consecutively. Nevertheless, the possibility of such events cannot be completely discounted.6” Pg 10, “ 15: Unintended effects can result from the random insertion of DNA sequences into the plant genome, which may cause disruption or silencing of existing genes, activation of silent genes, or modifications in the expression of existing genes. Unintended effects may also result in the formation of new or changed patterns of metabolites. For example, the expression of enzymes at high levels may give rise to secondary biochemical effects or changes in the regulation of metabolic pathways and/or altered levels of metabolites”

  • @davidadcock3382

    @davidadcock3382

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@almostbutnotentirelyunreas166 NO FOOD-SAFETY SCIENCE INSTITUTIONS or COUNTRY has FELT the NEED to and has NEVER RATIFIED, NEVER EMBRACED, NEVER ADHERED TO the CODEX ALIMENTARIUS ,DO HUMAN TESTING For GMO technology and Organic foods that are breed with radiation induced mutagenesis? They are FREE to do so if they wished. Nice to see a Russian who cares about what goes on in America.

  • @LemberTheMember
    @LemberTheMember3 жыл бұрын

    Good Video! Finally someone that scientifically evaluates the use of gmo's and doesn't starts a rant fueled by their poltical views.

  • @seankilburn7200

    @seankilburn7200

    3 жыл бұрын

    his political leanings and bias are clear though. watch his videos on racist climate change and vertical farms

  • @Kefemu

    @Kefemu

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@seankilburn7200 Every source of information has a political leaning, whether or not they realize or disclose it. I guess it's really hard to tell the difference between a reasonable and well-supported leaning, and a bias that filters out inconvenient information.

  • @seankilburn7200

    @seankilburn7200

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@Kefemu Any individual creating videos such as these should strive to be neutral and simply present the facts for both sides. This creator does anything but that and is quite obviously left wing, making points that are far more opinionated than informative.

  • @Kefemu

    @Kefemu

    3 жыл бұрын

    ​@@seankilburn7200 One of my favorite quotes comes to mind: "Some say the Sun rises in the east. Some say it rises in the west. The answer must lie somewhere in between." I bring this up because most of the time, one or more sides of a debate are clearly wrong. To present the opinion that the Sun rises in the west as legitimate is dishonest. Some opinions are wrong, and we shouldn't be afraid to recognize that. In your claim that all informational videos should be neutral, you are taking a non-neutral stance. Your comment leaves out any reasoning for the stance you hold, and also leaves out information that would support the opinion of someone like me who disagrees. The standard you're holding the video author to is one that you fail to live up to yourself. That failure is inevitable, since true neutrality is impossible.

  • @seankilburn7200

    @seankilburn7200

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@Kefemu What you seem to fail in understanding is that most people will simply watch these videos in order to ascertain the pros and cons of certain technologies such as vertical farming and GMOs. This author, however, leaves out key facts and arguments for use of a technology if it does not fit his narrative with the benefits of vertical farms being almost entirely ignored as the creator wishes to encourage less meat eating which was not at all relevant in such a video. As for my supposed failings, it is perfectly fair to hold this creator to higher standards as he is deciding to post videos that have received a considerable number of views and therefore has a duty to publish unbiased content and this is not a matter of opinion (Real engineering is a very informative channel with no political leanings). Please do feel free to elaborate on how my request for truly informative and evaluative language makes my stance non-neutral and how true neutrality is impossible( you seem to have left out facts in support of these claims).May I also ask if you yourself are a fan of this channel?

  • @claudebbg
    @claudebbg3 жыл бұрын

    Showing a growth in sales of an incoming product doesn't make a balance of risks or impact if you forget to show the outgoing decrease / impact. Farmers who are badly using herbicide X was badly using worst herbicide Y before (and perhaps farmers know farming, the ones that don't could be trained, and perhaps those using mystical practices should also be). Using manipulative reasoning is also manipulation (the goal of normalizing fruits or reducing your taste of food for other considerations has nothing to do with using GMO or not, it predates, by decades, their use). Perhaps read a bit about apples as you used this example, how and why this fruit variety shrink in the US while volumes increased dramatically (and in the meantime you'll see that new apples are made by grafting, and apple trees are not usually grown from seeds anymore after centuries of human induced mutations).

  • @DukeGMOLOL

    @DukeGMOLOL

    3 жыл бұрын

    Good stuff.

  • @rebelwilson9936
    @rebelwilson99362 жыл бұрын

    4:39 The sceen show 1 things and audio says another So is GMO the same as other GM or the same as natrually grown food

  • @LogicGated
    @LogicGated3 жыл бұрын

    I remember when I was younger and this debate came to the fore.

  • @zac_in_ak
    @zac_in_ak3 жыл бұрын

    very interesting but now I want to know more about golden rice.

  • @almostbutnotentirelyunreas166

    @almostbutnotentirelyunreas166

    3 жыл бұрын

    www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2682994/ Efficacy study, not safety study. 3rd-last paragraph: "It should be noted that we closely monitored our subjects for any possible adverse effects after the consumption of Golden Rice and found no evidence of any problems, including allergic reactions or gastrointestinal disturbance. Although this attests to the *probable safety* of Golden Rice, we acknowledge that *only a single serving was fed to each study subject. A much longer exposure with a larger cumulative consumption of Golden Rice would be needed to make definitive assertions regarding the inherent safety of this food for human use* . Sounds yum, right?

  • @lolz6337
    @lolz63372 жыл бұрын

    GMO foods is very common in Mexico especially in the corn and modern tortillas

  • @idkwatchasay
    @idkwatchasay11 ай бұрын

    does any one know where nemo is?

  • @michaelamckasson6790
    @michaelamckasson67902 жыл бұрын

    I did my senior thesis on this topic and this video encompasses it in a nutshell lol

  • @davidpeppers551
    @davidpeppers5513 жыл бұрын

    The problem of ownership? You can just drop a gene into a currently existing variety and you own it and its seeds.

  • @gdesatyavrata
    @gdesatyavrata3 жыл бұрын

    I would love to see a video from you about "paper bottles". Is it actually sustainable or does it just harm the environment as much as normal plastic bottles. You could probably cover Will and Jaden Smith's JUST Water company for reference. Thank you so much

  • @maknyc1539

    @maknyc1539

    3 жыл бұрын

    Reusable better

  • @gdesatyavrata

    @gdesatyavrata

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@maknyc1539 True, using your own bottle daily is the best and only good choice, but then again there are a lot of people who still buy plastic bottles daily, so yea wanted to know if some paper bottle alternatives are good or not

  • @IonianGarden
    @IonianGarden3 жыл бұрын

    Most farms don't want to reuse seed anyway as many farms use F1 hybrids. If you reuse that seed, the next generation would have inconstancies in growth, quality and most concerning resistances (lack there of).

  • @MalenaFlowingGlow
    @MalenaFlowingGlow2 жыл бұрын

    I'd like to reference this video but can't find the author's name. please help!

  • @alexandere9928
    @alexandere99282 жыл бұрын

    People fear what they don't understand, thats it

  • @epochstories
    @epochstories3 жыл бұрын

    I love the work you do! It's so important! I'm not sure if you've made a video about this before (if so, I apologise), but I would love you to talk about organic foods and organic cotton. Are they really sustainable? Or are they just less environmentally impactful, but not the solution for our problem? Also, this is a long shot, but I would love in the future to collaborate with you for us to make an impactful documentary regarding the environment. Keep the amazing work!

  • @Marczking

    @Marczking

    3 жыл бұрын

    Had a look at what you do and watched Filipes story, amazing! Reading the titles of your other videos I already know I'll watch them all, omg SUCH cool topics just from reading the titles!! I've just watched one video, but can already say I love your work and what you do! Thank you =D I often wonder why people focus so much on "famous" people and the like, instead of looking around and seeing the amazing stories and lives of people around you. Gonna sub and share your channel & videos, happy discovery! Your channel name is the same as my favourite magazine (GEO EPOCHE), so jumped out :))

  • @epochstories

    @epochstories

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@Marczking I wasn't expecting that! Thank you so much :)

  • @epochstories

    @epochstories

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@popeyegordon yeah, I agree with your point. Organic is very inefficient. But its inefficient for the amount of demand we have right? If, for example, we worked on our food waste and reduced it significantly, maybe organic could be an interesting solution. Or at least the gmo's should definitely take into consideration some organic practices where there's no such a strong solution of the soil with chemicals.

  • @epochstories

    @epochstories

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@popeyegordon thank you. I'll read the article carefully. Unfortunately, sustainability is not a simple answer. There are a lot of things that we need to take into consideration, and it can be overwhelming dealing with so much different information. There's really no right or wrong answer here. It's all a matter of "what method does the least harm". The important thing is that we are discussing it.

  • @johnmarshall6599

    @johnmarshall6599

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@popeyegordon At the @ mark they state that there is no difference between GMO and conventional crops. Well here's evidence that there is a big difference between BT "corn" and real Corn. Apparently Roundup has the ability to severely reduce all the good aspects of corn and in place of them poisons are added. THIS IS WHAT GLYPHOSATE DOES. IT IS AN INDUSTRIAL PIPE DESCALER THAT KILLS EVERYTHING IT TOUCHES. It's used to remove metals that build up on the inside of industrial pipes. Notice below how most of the beneficial metals are significantly reduced? THAT'S WHAT GLYPHOSATE WAS MADE TO DO! And when it is in your body, guess what it continues to do? The only way the FDA ever believed Monsanto's claim that BT "corn" and REAL Corn were the same, without any data the way, was the fact that Michael Taylor was a commissioner at the FDSA at the time. Google Michael Taylor folks. He's the Ex-Monsanto exec was working at the FDA with the express purpose of getting GMO food into the food supply so Monsanto could make huge profits. And why do you think Monsanto/Bayer makes farmers sign agreements that they will never allow their GMO products to be tested? Wake up everybody! Eat organic food whenever you can, it's the only way to know that it's not intentionally laced with neurotoxic poisons. @t

  • @robmaule4025
    @robmaule40253 жыл бұрын

    At 9:45 it says that "This increase could result in a total reduction of 14.5 - 22.3 gigatons of carbon dioxide". The global total emissions are only around 50 gigatons so this one change would result in a 50% drop in co2 emissions? Am I understanding that correctly? If so, that's an insane level of return on investment!

  • @luzi29
    @luzi293 жыл бұрын

    You could create hydroponic rice that is only grows 10cm high with GMO. Just imagine the impact would be tremendous. We would be able to produce starchy compounds in factories with a fraction of resources.

  • @michaelmccarthy4077
    @michaelmccarthy40773 жыл бұрын

    I'm going to make a quibble here. Seed saving hasn't been a thing for a long, long, long time. If you read Laura Ingalls Wilder, Pa bought his seed. Why? Because the process of drying and storing the seed is both risky and time consuming for crops such as corn, wheat, barley. And universities have had breeding programs since the 1830's to give farmers access to newer, better varieties of crops. Additionally, patent protected crops existed long before GE crops. Those patents were rarely enforced in the way that Monsanto (and others) have done, but it definitely isn't new. If you're going to complain about it, then you better gripe about Honeycrisp (and other) apples, where you have to pay a royalty for the life of the tree, on every harvest.

  • @matthiasknutzen6061

    @matthiasknutzen6061

    3 жыл бұрын

    I agree with you almost entirely except for the notion that Monsanto have excessively sued farmers. There was a court case in California I think we're they "tried" to prove that notion and they failed miserably, they have filed relatively few lawsuits compared to the amount of farms in us.

  • @michaelmccarthy4077

    @michaelmccarthy4077

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@matthiasknutzen6061 I didn’t say they have excessively sued.

  • @matthiasknutzen6061

    @matthiasknutzen6061

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@michaelmccarthy4077 I assumed that was what you meant with ... enforced the way Monsanto (and others) have done

  • @michaelmccarthy4077

    @michaelmccarthy4077

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@matthiasknutzen6061 nope. In the past, patent protected was more of a gentleman’s agreement that you wouldn’t propagate without authorization. The big seed companies went a step further with a written contract. That being said, to my knowledge no one was ever sued for patent infringement prior to GM crops.

  • @bencanaya382
    @bencanaya3823 жыл бұрын

    Another great video. I was interested in GMOs before and was always confused about why it’s so controversial and the reason from opposing GMOs from people didn’t make any sense but this video showed me the true benefits and limits of GMOs like never before I actually got a better grasp of GMOs now

  • @johnmarshall6599

    @johnmarshall6599

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@popeyegordon At the @ mark they state that there is no difference between GMO and conventional crops. Well here's evidence that there is a big difference between BT "corn" and real Corn. Apparently Roundup has the ability to severely reduce all the good aspects of corn and in place of them poisons are added. THIS IS WHAT GLYPHOSATE DOES. IT IS AN INDUSTRIAL PIPE DESCALER THAT KILLS EVERYTHING IT TOUCHES. It's used to remove metals that build up on the inside of industrial pipes. Notice below how most of the beneficial metals are significantly reduced? THAT'S WHAT GLYPHOSATE WAS MADE TO DO! And when it is in your body, guess what it continues to do? The only way the FDA ever believed Monsanto's claim that BT "corn" and REAL Corn were the same, without any data the way, was the fact that Michael Taylor was a commissioner at the FDSA at the time. Google Michael Taylor folks. He's the Ex-Monsanto exec was working at the FDA with the express purpose of getting GMO food into the food supply so Monsanto could make huge profits. And why do you think Monsanto/Bayer makes farmers sign agreements that they will never allow their GMO products to be tested? Wake up everybody! Eat organic food whenever you can, it's the only way to know that it's not intentionally laced with neurotoxic poisons. @t

  • @judahelisha6637
    @judahelisha66373 жыл бұрын

    I just wanna say I haven't even started watching the video and I know you'll be showing the truth behind the truth, I'm frustrated , every time I watch something this informative I can't shake the feeling I'm not the one who should be seeing and understanding this but then again I could be a small peice to the puzzle as well as you.

  • @houbenbub
    @houbenbub3 жыл бұрын

    Great Video. Really nice points!

  • @AddictedGamer4Ever
    @AddictedGamer4Ever3 жыл бұрын

    30% and 37% is a large difference. I wonder why you said thirthy instead of thirthyseven (around 3:00)

  • @redtsun67
    @redtsun672 жыл бұрын

    "Trust the scientists!" Scientist: GMOs are perfectly safe "No not you"

  • @elibullockpapa9012
    @elibullockpapa90122 жыл бұрын

    @8:04, I thought that roundup is not highly toxic but one of the least toxic pesticides available?

  • @Praisethesunson
    @Praisethesunson3 жыл бұрын

    The most prevalent GMO is BT cotton. The focus on GM technology is on making more profitable cash crops. The major corporations seizing control of the field have Feeding people as an afterthought at best.

  • @almostbutnotentirelyunreas166

    @almostbutnotentirelyunreas166

    3 жыл бұрын

    Only in your country...look a litttle further, the malignancy is growing...

  • @user-bp8yg3ko1r
    @user-bp8yg3ko1r3 жыл бұрын

    I'm so glad that this channel exists...

  • @fitnow2037

    @fitnow2037

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@popeyegordon paid

  • @mohitdhanwani6431
    @mohitdhanwani64313 жыл бұрын

    I remember reading a few studies which claimed GMOs are harmful in the long run and most GMOs lose the nutrition and medicinal qualities of the plant. I got my moringa tree leaves and that of my neighbour checked at a lab mine had 3-4times nutrition compared to his. The difference being i have an organic farm with desi (heirloom) moringa while his was a conventional farm with GMO. I will grow one GMO moringa aswell to compare the both but difference is clear

  • @robertreznik9330
    @robertreznik9330 Жыл бұрын

    Farming, modern farming is more complex than most professions. Can you name one that is?

  • @mossy_6475
    @mossy_64752 жыл бұрын

    1:53 This partially wrong, because apples have a genetic condition referred to as “extreme heterozygosity” which means that the alleles (which can come from natural mutations) of a gene can be very different from each other. The chromosomes don’t quite line up perfectly, so you can get lots of different kinds of apples when you plant from seed. Part of the reason lots of American cites have those useless Crab Apple trees is because someone tried to plant an apple tree from seed. And this is why apples are often cloned via cutting/grafting.

  • @travelerfinder7840
    @travelerfinder78403 жыл бұрын

    I appreciate the nuance of this video as someone who is pro GMO I think the video gives me something to think about.

  • @travelerfinder7840

    @travelerfinder7840

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@popeyegordon which claim made in the video is wrong and why?

  • @johnmarshall6599

    @johnmarshall6599

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@popeyegordon At the @ mark they state that there is no difference between GMO and conventional crops. Well here's evidence that there is a big difference between BT "corn" and real Corn. Apparently Roundup has the ability to severely reduce all the good aspects of corn and in place of them poisons are added. THIS IS WHAT GLYPHOSATE DOES. IT IS AN INDUSTRIAL PIPE DESCALER THAT KILLS EVERYTHING IT TOUCHES. It's used to remove metals that build up on the inside of industrial pipes. Notice below how most of the beneficial metals are significantly reduced? THAT'S WHAT GLYPHOSATE WAS MADE TO DO! And when it is in your body, guess what it continues to do? The only way the FDA ever believed Monsanto's claim that BT "corn" and REAL Corn were the same, without any data the way, was the fact that Michael Taylor was a commissioner at the FDSA at the time. Google Michael Taylor folks. He's the Ex-Monsanto exec was working at the FDA with the express purpose of getting GMO food into the food supply so Monsanto could make huge profits. And why do you think Monsanto/Bayer makes farmers sign agreements that they will never allow their GMO products to be tested? Wake up everybody! Eat organic food whenever you can, it's the only way to know that it's not intentionally laced with neurotoxic poisons. @t

  • @johnmarshall6599

    @johnmarshall6599

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@popeyegordon At the @ mark they state that there is no difference between GMO and conventional crops. Well here's evidence that there is a big difference between BT "corn" and real Corn. Apparently Roundup has the ability to severely reduce all the good aspects of corn and in place of them poisons are added. THIS IS WHAT GLYPHOSATE DOES. IT IS AN INDUSTRIAL PIPE DESCALER THAT KILLS EVERYTHING IT TOUCHES. It's used to remove metals that build up on the inside of industrial pipes. Notice below how most of the beneficial metals are significantly reduced? THAT'S WHAT GLYPHOSATE WAS MADE TO DO! And when it is in your body, guess what it continues to do? The only way the FDA ever believed Monsanto's claim that BT "corn" and REAL Corn were the same, without any data the way, was the fact that Michael Taylor was a commissioner at the FDSA at the time. Google Michael Taylor folks. He's the Ex-Monsanto exec was working at the FDA with the express purpose of getting GMO food into the food supply so Monsanto could make huge profits. And why do you think Monsanto/Bayer makes farmers sign agreements that they will never allow their GMO products to be tested? Wake up everybody! Eat organic food whenever you can, it's the only way to know that it's not intentionally laced with neurotoxic poisons. @t

  • @almostbutnotentirelyunreas166

    @almostbutnotentirelyunreas166

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@popeyegordon Yeah Popeye, which claim made in the video is wrong and why? C'mon....can you do it?? Useless troller?

  • @matthewmellor7072
    @matthewmellor70723 жыл бұрын

    Great video, I expected a very one-sided GMO hating video but I was very impressed by the unbiased nature and the use of studies and review to back the points!

  • @johnmarshall6599

    @johnmarshall6599

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@popeyegordon At the @ mark they state that there is no difference between GMO and conventional crops. Well here's evidence that there is a big difference between BT "corn" and real Corn. Apparently Roundup has the ability to severely reduce all the good aspects of corn and in place of them poisons are added. THIS IS WHAT GLYPHOSATE DOES. IT IS AN INDUSTRIAL PIPE DESCALER THAT KILLS EVERYTHING IT TOUCHES. It's used to remove metals that build up on the inside of industrial pipes. Notice below how most of the beneficial metals are significantly reduced? THAT'S WHAT GLYPHOSATE WAS MADE TO DO! And when it is in your body, guess what it continues to do? The only way the FDA ever believed Monsanto's claim that BT "corn" and REAL Corn were the same, without any data the way, was the fact that Michael Taylor was a commissioner at the FDSA at the time. Google Michael Taylor folks. He's the Ex-Monsanto exec was working at the FDA with the express purpose of getting GMO food into the food supply so Monsanto could make huge profits. And why do you think Monsanto/Bayer makes farmers sign agreements that they will never allow their GMO products to be tested? Wake up everybody! Eat organic food whenever you can, it's the only way to know that it's not intentionally laced with neurotoxic poisons. @t

  • @almostbutnotentirelyunreas166

    @almostbutnotentirelyunreas166

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@popeyegordon You provided the usual, unsubstantiated, boring Corporate GMO narrative...no more. REAL FACTS: *ISBN 978-92-5-105914-2* UN CODEX ALIMENTARIUS: Pg 3, “19. Risk management measures may include, as appropriate, food labelling8 conditions for marketing approvals and post-market monitoring.” Pg 18, “56: Gene transfer from plants and their food products to gut micro-organisms or human cells is considered a rare possibility because of the many complex and unlikely events that would need to occur consecutively. Nevertheless, the possibility of such events cannot be completely discounted.6” Pg 10, “ 15: Unintended effects can result from the random insertion of DNA sequences into the plant genome, which may cause disruption or silencing of existing genes, activation of silent genes, or modifications in the expression of existing genes. Unintended effects may also result in the formation of new or changed patterns of metabolites. For example, the expression of enzymes at high levels may give rise to secondary biochemical effects or changes in the regulation of metabolic pathways and/or altered levels of metabolites” Pg 16. "46: ….. consideration should be given to the potential impacts on human health using conventional procedures for establishing the safety of such metabolites *(e.g. procedures for assessing the human safety of chemicals in foods)* .” i.e. Human Safety Studies, YET: None ever. www.fao.org/fao-who-codexalimentarius/about-codex/faq/faq-detail/en/c/454784/ Codex is strongly committed to promote safe foods. Amongst safe foods, Codex does not give any preference to certain kinds of foods over others. *Such choice belongs to consumers* . Codex has adopted principles and guidelines to assess food safety of foods derived from recombinant-DNA plants, animals and microorganisms. *If a government chooses to build a regulatory mechanism* to address the food safety of so-called GM foods, then they *can use Codex text as a basis* for it. This being said, *each government is free to adopt its own policy* as to the use of GM organisms in the agriculture and other sectors. At the moment, *there are no internationally-agreed recommendations on the food labelling of GM foods. Governments are therefore applying their own regulations* .” Regulations that are 'voluntary....and the FDA chose 3 of 80 pages....

  • @laralebeu36
    @laralebeu363 жыл бұрын

    Hey Charlie, I'd love to see a video about the resource based economic system.

  • @Bee_Healthier

    @Bee_Healthier

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thats some pretty advanced shit for a climate change channel; even though resource usage and environmentalism are interlinked of course. What country you from and do you recognize my name as im pretty involved?

  • @laralebeu36

    @laralebeu36

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@Bee_Healthier Why do you ask? I don't recognize your name.

  • @bumpusjones.1978

    @bumpusjones.1978

    3 жыл бұрын

    Move on from flawed science and politically motivated nonsense that by its design will allow people to die needlessly that’s being endorsed by people who use smiley faces in a discussion about a life and death issue to an economic argument that’s meaningless in comparison. Way to fight the good fight after that maybe we should move on to wether dogs or cats are better.

  • @Sunflowrrunner
    @Sunflowrrunner3 жыл бұрын

    Woah, a nuanced opinion on the internet. I have to say, I enjoyed this novelty.

  • @uninstaller2860
    @uninstaller28603 жыл бұрын

    The reason I feel reservations against gmo's is the potential lack of foresight. If we modify crops and vegetables into pest resistant, draught resistant, make them able to grow in harsh conditions we should balance it out with making them sterile or at least harder to spread. The reason I hold this position is because of an eventual post-human future where there are crops that resist everything but is poison to every pest and animal, except humans. If it spreads more easily than other, more delicate wild plants, then they have no place to grow. I know I'm talking in millions of years, but we have a responsibilty for every possible future. I know this view is pretty dystopian, probably uninformed, too. What do you think, am I overly pessimistic?

  • @ignemuton5500

    @ignemuton5500

    2 жыл бұрын

    This is not how it would play out, its not really poasible to create a food that only humans can consume, in addition many of the plants we use today could not really exist without us, every seedless variety and every variety that has reduced seed size would probably either go instantly extinct once humans are gone or massively reduce in population.

  • @DemonZest

    @DemonZest

    2 жыл бұрын

    There is no need for that because agricultural plant already don't survive without human help, since their whole purpose is to produce big fruits/roots/etc.. they get targeted by every pest possible and need a lot of water/fertilizer !

  • @elibullockpapa9012

    @elibullockpapa9012

    2 жыл бұрын

    yeah your being overly pessimistic. These plants aren't designed to reproduce and spread - natural selection already solved that problem the best it can be. Instead they are designed to produce ridiculously large fruits / grains with a specific combination of artificial fertilizers and irrigation.

  • @collan580

    @collan580

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@DemonZest And then we get to another problem, what if our GMO foods becomes like fast food, where you modify food to be more addictive.

  • @DemonZest

    @DemonZest

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@collan580 We can dot it without GMO with selection (and that's why our modern fruits are so sugary), but GMO can mean also healthier food like nutrient-fortified fruits, grains and vegetables.

  • @EmilePainchaud
    @EmilePainchaud3 жыл бұрын

    Love your videos! I was wondering how you can accept a sponsorship from audible and encourage their business, since they’re owned my amazon, which we all know is not ethically and environmentally very friendly.

  • @rafaelsaopauloyeah1327
    @rafaelsaopauloyeah13272 жыл бұрын

    One of the most problematic issues concerning GMOS are the so called "terminator seeds", wich are seeds genetically modified to not give fertille crops. So in that way the farmer stays completely dependent on big companies. But there's nothing really problematic about gmos, the problem relies really in how they are applied and who controls this technology. Im a biology student btw

  • @kolliwanne964

    @kolliwanne964

    2 жыл бұрын

    Farmers mostly buy new crops every year anyways and are bound to patents in bred crops as well...

  • @jackyjack9660

    @jackyjack9660

    Жыл бұрын

    That's corporate problem... That's not what idiots run behind.. They support idea of gmo=bad for health..

  • @charlesmrader

    @charlesmrader

    Жыл бұрын

    Oh come on. There is no such thing as a terminator seed. There's a patent for how to make such a plant, but no seed company sells such a plant. If you are a biology student, you ought to know about hybrid crops, which are a huge part of farm practice. Seeds from hybrid crops are not sterile, but they are not saves for replanting because they don't produce desirable 2nd generation crops, so farmers who plant hybrid seeds have been buying new seeds each year for a long time and profiting from doing that.

  • @mayacortina7219
    @mayacortina72193 жыл бұрын

    Thank you. This is so educational.

  • @hirayagray388
    @hirayagray3883 жыл бұрын

    I had to doublecheck if I was on the same channel I had clicked on, because I was surprised to see a video from my country featured here. It does make sense though, considering how much of the environmental defenders and people in the agricultural industry get either ignored/killed here.

  • @gcvrsa
    @gcvrsa3 жыл бұрын

    It's not BYE-kol, it's BEE-kol.

  • @flowerondiscord4254
    @flowerondiscord42543 жыл бұрын

    Can companies say their product is not gmo but it actually is? Just a wuestion

  • @joshmorcombe4907
    @joshmorcombe49072 жыл бұрын

    The pro GMO example you used at the start is by no means an extreme case, in fact you agreed with him only a few seconds later. He wasn't suggesting that GMOs are a silver bullet, he specifically said they can HELP us deal with these issues. I get that you're trying to appear un-biased, and that is admirable, but the reality is that there are very few pro-GMO people who hold extreme and unreasonable views (outside of those who profit from the sale of dangerous GMOs)

  • @siddhant3945
    @siddhant39453 жыл бұрын

    One of the things the video doesn't talk about is that GM crops are unsustainable by design. Imagine putting in a crop that kills entire fleets of insect populations, thereby killing their prey too. The loss of biodiversity caused by GM crops is disastrous. Besides, they aren't that efficient at keeping crops protected also. The Bt Cotton that was introduced in India is just another cotton crop now as the bollworm insect has grown resistant. Apart from this, GM crops aren't farmer friendly as the seeds have to bought only from Monsanto. It is a double-edged sword.

  • @albert8513
    @albert85133 жыл бұрын

    There is also a risk that genetically modified plant could escape farm/greenhouse and interbreed for example with a weed plant and pass on traits that would give unfair advantages and harm diversity and ecosystem(s) and kill many plant species thus extinguish many other animal species that depend on those extinct plant species

  • @blairbrown4812
    @blairbrown48123 жыл бұрын

    I'm not inclined to support the destruction of foodstuffs,as I don't necessarily dream of sustainable,"clean,"organic food and am more inclined to care about whether or not the end result will taste good and whether or not I live to see tomorrow. So yeah,pro-GMO.

  • @rridderbusch518

    @rridderbusch518

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Blair Brown About GMOs, I'm 65+ and remember delicious fruits & veggies. They varied in flavor depending on the grower, but were all great. I remember how amazing watermelon tasted, but that flavor doesn't exist anymore. It's bred for transport now.

  • @TrollCarl
    @TrollCarl2 жыл бұрын

    My school is using your videos to teach us students. Thank you lol

  • @perking5617
    @perking56173 жыл бұрын

    I really don’t understand peoples problems with gmos(and that is plant ones, not animals) Yes. They can create problems, but if used correctly, they will solve so many more than they potentially can create.

  • @mihajlovucic8037

    @mihajlovucic8037

    3 жыл бұрын

    >>if used correctly

  • @WahyuSetiawan-sz4lc

    @WahyuSetiawan-sz4lc

    3 жыл бұрын

    If....

  • @sheldz501
    @sheldz5012 жыл бұрын

    So basically your problem with GMO's is really just profit and the use of round up? Your concerns have nothing to do with actual GMOs. Hybrid crops, that companies make profit on have existed long before GMO's, the overuse of pesticides is an issue with or without GMO's.

  • @j.a.velarde5901
    @j.a.velarde590110 ай бұрын

    Wonderful video. Thank you! I subbed.

  • @andrewkilman3271
    @andrewkilman32713 жыл бұрын

    You should do an audiobook!!

  • @OurChangingClimate

    @OurChangingClimate

    3 жыл бұрын

    Hahaha hello drew..... maybe I will :)

  • @piapolzin1852
    @piapolzin18523 жыл бұрын

    Amazing video;short but precise. I think the problem is that most people dont like GMOs due to a mistrust towards the science behind them, but the real reasons we should be sceptical is more due to capitalism ( patents, destroying bio-diversity, looking at profits instead of impact on nature).

  • @shroomz11

    @shroomz11

    3 жыл бұрын

    Why is it that we fret about patents of seeds(while farmers are free to use non-gmo as well, no one is forcing them) but are okay with patents on fertilizers, insecticides, farming equipment like tractors, etc

  • @piapolzin1852

    @piapolzin1852

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@shroomz11 Personally, I'm kind of oppossed to the idea of patents in general - I get that this is a nuanced debate, but especially regarding food and medicine it would just be better for our society/ world if everybody could use new and better inventions, ideas, concepts etc instead of having to pay someone/ a cooperation a shitton of money.

  • @intosomethingsometimes2193
    @intosomethingsometimes21933 жыл бұрын

    Everyone should have realized this already

  • @johnmarshall6599

    @johnmarshall6599

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@popeyegordon At the @ mark they state that there is no difference between GMO and conventional crops. Well here's evidence that there is a big difference between BT "corn" and real Corn. Apparently Roundup has the ability to severely reduce all the good aspects of corn and in place of them poisons are added. THIS IS WHAT GLYPHOSATE DOES. IT IS AN INDUSTRIAL PIPE DESCALER THAT KILLS EVERYTHING IT TOUCHES. It's used to remove metals that build up on the inside of industrial pipes. Notice below how most of the beneficial metals are significantly reduced? THAT'S WHAT GLYPHOSATE WAS MADE TO DO! And when it is in your body, guess what it continues to do? The only way the FDA ever believed Monsanto's claim that BT "corn" and REAL Corn were the same, without any data the way, was the fact that Michael Taylor was a commissioner at the FDSA at the time. Google Michael Taylor folks. He's the Ex-Monsanto exec was working at the FDA with the express purpose of getting GMO food into the food supply so Monsanto could make huge profits. And why do you think Monsanto/Bayer makes farmers sign agreements that they will never allow their GMO products to be tested? Wake up everybody! Eat organic food whenever you can, it's the only way to know that it's not intentionally laced with neurotoxic poisons. @t

  • @kate8160
    @kate81603 жыл бұрын

    Actually, GMO is not necessarily an organism with gender of another organism. It also can be an organism with some of its genes removed. For example, there is a gmo sort of tomatoes that last longer because a certain gene was removed. I think this is important to mention because many ppl can change their negative opinion at least for some GMOs after knowing this.