I showed this report to my partner and asked for her opinion as a journalist. She told me that everything about how they present themselves is emotive and built to persuade, in this case that the GMO tested is unsafe with the implied sidenote that all GMO is bad. Point being, whoever presented the evidence on the site and wrote all the stuff on there is on the anti-GMO side and not even hiding it well.
But, we both conceded that neither of us were biologists so our criticism was therefore somewhat limited.
So, I met two of my friends the next day, one studying biology, and the other pharmacology. Inevitably, this report came up and they told me they simply didnt trust the report. An hours free time with internet and they showed me why:
- Wrong kind of rat. If my freinds did that in their work, they would barely pass. This is either a serious full-retard accident or deliberate.
- Concentrations of roundup far above anything actually used in industry.
- CRIIGEN continues to suppose that effects on cells in petri dishes transcribe automatically to effects on humans.
- The lead researcher, Prof Serelini, seems to have made killing GMO his personal crusade. Bias, corruption of scientific method, etc.
- Complete ignorance of bioaccumulation in methodology.
- Too media savvy. Normally, scientists release their research to the right journal, then thats it. This was released with far too much fanfare. The team wants to whip up a storm and knew exactly how to go about it.
- Its not unusual for journalists to be given lab studies under embargo. What IS unusual is that they have to sign an NDA that they wont show it to any independent scientist, research body etc. The lack of peer review of Serelini's paper is astounding.
- Questionable backers. Not to say that Serelini is being funded by Al-quaeda, or taking bribes from the mafia, but more that the study has backers with a clear agenda, i.e. Sustainable Food Trust UK.
- It just happens to be published close to a major referendum in California on labelling GM food. Normally, just coincidence. Given all the above, however, I'm far more sceptical.
In conclusion, this study stinks from a mile off. I'll admit, I have strong personal bias towards GMO, but while I'd normally concede that this study has a point, I just cant take it as serious science anymore.
Sorry to say Lyn, but this study has a clear agenda and they are playing to the "Look at us, we're not monsanto!" tune.