Moonbear said:
Les Sleeth said:
You probably can't tell I share your opinion that there seems to be no reason for not going ahead with GMO.
Oh, I didn't take that from your earlier posts at all.
The resistance you see in me is to the attitude that because "experts" say to do it, the population should automatically go along (plus the occasional insinuation that it's only due to ignorance/stupidity that the public doesn't agree with experts).
I have offered several posts to explain that experts can and have been wrong, that experts aren't always unbiased because of personal beliefs or agendas, and that experts can be bought by one side of an argument.
Secondly, while the experts may have devoted a lot of time to studying a subject, the average voting person hasn't. So when the experts come in totally sure of themselves because all they've done for the last couple of years is look at one thing, there is no way a layperson is going to be able to evaluate expert's claims so quickly.
Third, a community is run by the decisions of community leaders and voters. We all live here and have to live with the results of our decisions, while experts can move on to the next research project. The agriculture here is important (grapes mostly, then organic farms, and some Gravenstein apples - hey, I live in a vineyard myself). There is no way anybody is going to be rushed into a potentially dangerous decision until they understand all the issues.
And that last point is really what I think it's all about . . . needing to understand before deciding, and not yet having enough time/information to do it. It isn't so much an extraordinary amount of distrust of experts, it just a healthy skepticism by business people who know expert opinions aren't always what they appear.
Moonbear said:
And let's not forget there IS a lot of scaremongering going on, and people believe it, so how do you counter that?
Well, I think some people do get scared when if feels like something is being rushed past them before they really understand the consequences. I read this opinion in the editorial section yesterday entitled "Time to Pause":
"[a reader's] Oct. 22 letter on the issues surrounding genetically modified plants and other oranisms unfortunately misrepresented the level of independent scientific investigations into GMO safety, as well as scientific concerns about environmental hazards from broadscale cultivation of genetically engineered crops.
The Department of Agriculture's Animal and Plant Healthy Inspection Service procedures for approving new GMOs not only allow their creators to run all the safety tests on their own organisms but also prevents independent scientific reviews of the data from those tests, and evaluates fewer than 10% of the field tests of previously-approved crops. Approval requires only the applicant's declaration that the intended uses of the GMO have no 'intent' to harm other organisms. The GMO creators can apply for approval to commercialize a product via a 'petition,' which is basically a disclaimer of the need for any government oversight.
Through this regulatory framework, unrestricted transgenic plant cultivation goes on with effectively no organized monitoring. Other nation's GMO experts, including some who support genetic engineering, have ridiculed the USDA's process. It is time to pause and take a close look at the experiment we are running on ourselves and on our children."
To me, that's just how a democracy works, and a smart way too. When people want to be sure about what they are voting for, there is nothing wrong with slowing things down.