As someone who is passionate about science and dispelling misinformation, i thought I'd take the opportunity to start a thread where people can ask questions about GM crops and have a rational discussion about the pros and cons, and to try to address some of the common propaganda and misinformation the public has on this subject.
Let me start out by saying that we grow GM corn for chicken feed. And no I'm not a shill for Monsanto
My husband and i are small scare farmers living in Macedonia in South Eastern Europe. My husband is also an agronomist in his day job, so he knows a lot about this subject. He has degrees in agronomy and sustainable agriculture. I lack an agricultural diploma but i make up for it with my passion for science and genuine interest in the subject. My degree is in biology/zoology, so it's within the same general group of science subjects. I just studied animals instead of plants. My husband and I make a great team actually. He knows all about the crops and i know about the live stock
I haven't studied biotechnology so i never knew that much about it, but i was never really all that concerned about GMO's. I was on the fence. I remember when i was in high school, 15 + years ago, and hearing the scare stories on the news but i never gave it much thought. As i got a bit older and my interest in biology developed, i had some slight concerns about the environmental effects. I thought that GM crops could spread into the wild and cross pollinate with other plants, and i thought this could have potential negative effects on the environment. I have always been an environmentalist and a nature lover, and i didn't know anything about agriculture at this point so i thought this must be a bad thing. The scientists develop their GM crops in quarantine right? So that must mean that it will be bad if they spread into the wild, right? Or else why would they bother keeping them separated? I knew about evolution, about cross pollination, i knew it was possible, and i didn't like the idea of 'messing with nature' or 'playing God'. But that was before i knew anything about agriculture or biotechnology. The more i learned the more my fears were put to rest. I discovered that GM crops are not something to be feared. That they are very tightly regulated and tested over decades before they are approved for use. I learned that there is scientific consensus on the safety of GM crops both for human and animal consumption and for the environment. When i learned this i was pretty much convinced, because every major scientific organization in the world, who are comprised of scientists expert in their field, have agreed they are safe and i as a lay person trust their combined expert option over the claims of some activists who don't even have a degree in this subject and don't fully understand it. I don't even fully understand it! But i trust the experts because they have spent their life studying GMO's and they are the ones who know most about it. I know when there is a combined consensus on something that means that all of the scientists have reviewed the evidence and come to the same conclusion, and that they are probably right.
So I've managed to do a 180, from having some concerns when i didn't know much about it, to becoming genuinely interested in this subject and confident of it's benefits and it's safety. I trust in science. And you know something that probably made all the difference and shoved me forward into becoming a skeptic was reading Ben Goldacre's book 'Bad Science', and then others like it, where he explains all about the scientific method, study designs and how to spot the red flags of bad science. Because there are lots of bad quality studies out there with no control groups, too small sample sizes, missing data and lots of bias which distorts the results and renders them useless. So having a good grasp of science and how good quality research is conducted is a must in order to be able sift through it all with a skeptical eye.
So, do we agree I'm not a shill for Monsanto?
Please use this space to ask and answer questions on GMO's and to have a rational discussion based on science and facts instead of propaganda. And there is a lot of propaganda on this subject to tackle, so lets get started!
Let me start out by saying that we grow GM corn for chicken feed. And no I'm not a shill for Monsanto

My husband and i are small scare farmers living in Macedonia in South Eastern Europe. My husband is also an agronomist in his day job, so he knows a lot about this subject. He has degrees in agronomy and sustainable agriculture. I lack an agricultural diploma but i make up for it with my passion for science and genuine interest in the subject. My degree is in biology/zoology, so it's within the same general group of science subjects. I just studied animals instead of plants. My husband and I make a great team actually. He knows all about the crops and i know about the live stock

I haven't studied biotechnology so i never knew that much about it, but i was never really all that concerned about GMO's. I was on the fence. I remember when i was in high school, 15 + years ago, and hearing the scare stories on the news but i never gave it much thought. As i got a bit older and my interest in biology developed, i had some slight concerns about the environmental effects. I thought that GM crops could spread into the wild and cross pollinate with other plants, and i thought this could have potential negative effects on the environment. I have always been an environmentalist and a nature lover, and i didn't know anything about agriculture at this point so i thought this must be a bad thing. The scientists develop their GM crops in quarantine right? So that must mean that it will be bad if they spread into the wild, right? Or else why would they bother keeping them separated? I knew about evolution, about cross pollination, i knew it was possible, and i didn't like the idea of 'messing with nature' or 'playing God'. But that was before i knew anything about agriculture or biotechnology. The more i learned the more my fears were put to rest. I discovered that GM crops are not something to be feared. That they are very tightly regulated and tested over decades before they are approved for use. I learned that there is scientific consensus on the safety of GM crops both for human and animal consumption and for the environment. When i learned this i was pretty much convinced, because every major scientific organization in the world, who are comprised of scientists expert in their field, have agreed they are safe and i as a lay person trust their combined expert option over the claims of some activists who don't even have a degree in this subject and don't fully understand it. I don't even fully understand it! But i trust the experts because they have spent their life studying GMO's and they are the ones who know most about it. I know when there is a combined consensus on something that means that all of the scientists have reviewed the evidence and come to the same conclusion, and that they are probably right.
So I've managed to do a 180, from having some concerns when i didn't know much about it, to becoming genuinely interested in this subject and confident of it's benefits and it's safety. I trust in science. And you know something that probably made all the difference and shoved me forward into becoming a skeptic was reading Ben Goldacre's book 'Bad Science', and then others like it, where he explains all about the scientific method, study designs and how to spot the red flags of bad science. Because there are lots of bad quality studies out there with no control groups, too small sample sizes, missing data and lots of bias which distorts the results and renders them useless. So having a good grasp of science and how good quality research is conducted is a must in order to be able sift through it all with a skeptical eye.
So, do we agree I'm not a shill for Monsanto?
