Which shell was that under?   That bean just keeps moving.

 

REH

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of D and N
Sent: Monday, August 08, 2011 6:08 PM
To: Keith Hudson; RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION
Subject: Re: [Futurework] GM foods - the US experiment

 

Even if there weren't, just having chemistry Nobel Prize winner Mario J.
Molina on board (CFCs threat to Earth's ozone layer) or biological
oceanographer James J. McCarthy, Nobel winning member for IPCC should lend
ample credibility. 

However, at least two board members are geneticists; Anne R. Kapuscinski,
specializing in fish conservation genetics (escaped GMO Atlantic salmon not
only out-competing wild stock but being able to mate with with stock and,
may have the ability to cross-mate at the genus level), and Ellyn R. Weiss,
specializing in cellular development biology, and in genetics and molecular
biology.

But your concern initially was whether or not there were any (accredited)
scientists on board.

Darryl

On 8/8/2011 11:02 AM, Keith Hudson wrote: 

There are no genetic scientists among them.

Keith

At 18:04 08/08/2011, you wrote:



FOR THOSE ON THE LIST WHO APPARENTLY HAVE DIFFICULTY SEARCHING WEBSITES.
 
FROM THE WEBSITE BELOW:




UCS Board Members




James J. McCarthy (Chair) is Alexander Agassiz Professor of Biological
Oceanography at Harvard University and past president of the American
Association for the Advancement of Science. Dr. McCarthy serves on many
panels and commissions relating to oceanography, polar science, and the
study of climate and global change. He chaired the committee that oversees
the International Geosphere-Biosphere Program, and served as co-chair of the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Working Group II.

Peter A. Bradford (Vice-Chair) advises and teaches on utility regulation and
energy policy in the United States and overseas. A former member of the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission and former chair of the New York and Maine
utility commissions, he has advised many states on utility restructuring
issues. He has taught energy law and policy at the Yale School of Forestry
and Environmental Studies and the Vermont Law School.  He served on a panel
advising the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development on how best to
replace the remaining Chernobyl nuclear plants. He was also part of an
expert panel advising the Austrian Institute for Risk Reduction on issues
associated with the opening of the Mochovche nuclear power plant in
Slovakia. He is the author of Fragile Structures: A Story of Oil Refineries,
National Security and the Coast of Maine.

James A. Fay (Board Member Emeritus) is professor emeritus of mechanical
engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. A UCS board member
since 1978, Dr. Fay is former chair of the Massachusetts Port Authority, a
fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the American Physical
Society, and the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and a
member of the National Academy of Engineering. His published works on the
environmental impact of energy technologies include (with Dan Golomb) Energy
and the Environment.

Richard L. Garwin is a National Medal of Science laureate and Fellow
Emeritus at IBM. He has done a wide range of research in fundamental and
applied physics. He was involved with the development of the first
thermonuclear weapons and the first photo-intelligence satellites and is a
leading expert on many arms control matters. He has served on the
President's Scientific Advisory Committee, the Defense Science Board, and
the 1998 Rumsfeld Commission to Assess the Ballistic Missile Threat to the
United States. He also was Philip D. Reed Senior Fellow for Science and
Technology at the Council of Foreign Relations. He is a member of the
National Academy of Sciences, the National Academy of Engineering, and the
Institute of Medicine. His most recent book (with Georges Charpak) is
Megawatts and Megatons: The Future of Nuclear Power and Nuclear Weapons.

Kurt Gottfried (Chair Emeritus) is emeritus professor of physics at Cornell
University. A co-founder of UCS and Chair of the Board of Directors during
1999-2009, he has served on the senior staff of the European Center for
Nuclear Research in Geneva, is a former chair of the Division of Particles
and Fields of the American Physical Society, and is a member of the American
Academy of Arts and Sciences and the Council on Foreign Relations. He has
published widely on theoretical physics and national security issues,
authoring Quantum Mechanics, Concepts of Particle Physics, The Fallacy of
Star Wars, and Crisis Stability and Nuclear War.

Andrew Gunther is executive director of the Center for Ecosystem Management
and Restoration, the executive coordinator of the Bay Area Ecosystems
Climate Change Consortium, and a founding partner of Applied Marine
Sciences, Inc. He has published research in the field of ecotoxicology and
has extensive experience in applying science to the development of air,
water, and endangered species policy. Dr. Gunther also served as the
assistant chief scientist for the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill Restoration Program
from 1991 to 2002.

Geoffrey Heal is a Paul Garrett Professor of Public Policy and Corporate
Responsibility at the Graduate School of Business at Columbia University,
where he was previously Senior Vice Dean.  He is a Fellow of the Econometric
Society, past President of the Association of Environmental and Resource
Economists, and a member of the Environmental Protection Agency's Scientific
Advisory Board. His 16 books include Nature and the Marketplace and Valuing
the Future. He is also a Director of Petromin Holdings PNG Ltd. and chairs
the Advisory Board of the Coalition for Rainforest Nations.

James S. Hoyte (Treasurer) is the assistant to the president/associate vice
president for Equal Opportunity Programs, lecturer in environmental sciences
and public policy at Harvard College, and adjunct lecturer in public policy
at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. He is also a
member of the University Committee on Environment at Harvard. Mr. Hoyte is a
lawyer who has served as secretary of Environmental Affairs for
Massachusetts and as chair of the Massachusetts Water Resources Authority.

Anne R. Kapuscinski is the inaugural Sherman Fairchild Distinguished
Professor of Sustainability Science at Dartmouth College and environmental
scientist known for her research on fisheries conservation, ecological risk
assessment of genetically modified organisms, and sustainable aquaculture.
She has advised the U.S. Secretary of Agriculture under three
administrations and written several influential scientific reports for the
U.S. government, the National Academy of Science, the World Health
Organization, the Food and Agriculture Organization, and the state of
Minnesota. Kapuscinski has received a Pew fellowship in marine conservation,
a USDA honor award for environmental protection and the distinguished
service award from the Society for Conservation Biology for extraordinary
contributions to conservation policy and interdisciplinary analysis of
sustainability issues. 

Jessica T. Mathews is president of the Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace, an international research organization with offices in Washington,
D.C., Moscow, Beijing, Beirut and Brussels.  Her career includes posts in
the executive and legislative branches of government, in management and
research in the nonprofit arena and in journalism; including director of the
Office of Global Issues on the staff of the National Security Council in the
White House; deputy to the undersecretary of State for Global Affairs;
founding vice president and director of research ('82-'93) of the World
Resources Institute; professional staff member - House Interior Committee;
Subcommittee on Energy and Environment; and, member of the Editorial Board
of The Washington Post; and Washington Post columnist ('91-'95). 

Edward L. Miles is the Virginia and Prentice Bloedel Professor of Marine
Studies and Public Affairs at the University of  Washington. He holds joint
appointments in the School of Maine Affairs of the College of Ocean and
Fisheries Sciences and the Evans School of Public Affairs. He is also a
senior fellow in JISAO where he serves as the co-director of the Center for
Science in the Earth System and leader of the Climate Impacts Group. Dr.
Miles has been a participant in the work of the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change (IPCC) since 1994. In 2003 he was elected to membership in
the U.S. National Academy of Sciences and in 2005 he was elected to the rank
of Fellow of AAAS. Dr. Miles' fields of specialization are international
science and technology policy, marine policy and ocean management, and the
impacts of climate variability and change at global and regional scales.

Mario J. Molina is professor at the University of California-San Diego and
president of the Mario Molina Center for Strategic Studies in Energy and the
Environment. He has served on the U.S. President's Committee of Advisors in
Science and Technology, and is a member of the U.S. Academy of Sciences and
the Institute of Medicine. Dr. Molina and two colleagues shared the 1995
Nobel Prize in chemistry for their research on the depletion of
stratospheric ozone.

Stuart L. Pimm is Doris Duke Chair of Conservation Ecology at Duke
University. His work focuses on conservation biology and the protection of
biodiversity. He is a Pew scholar and the author of The World According to
Pimm: A Scientist Audits the Earth and The Balance of Nature? Ecological
Issues in the Conservation of Species and Communities. Dr. Pimm was awarded
the Dr. A.H. Heineken Prize for Environmental Sciences in 2006.

Louis Salkind serves on the Executive Committee of D.E. Shaw & Co., a global
investment and technology firm.  Dr. Salkind received his A.B. from
Princeton University in 1978, where he studied mathematics and physics, and
his Ph.D. from the Courant Institute in 1990, where he studied computer
science and robotics.  He is a recipient of the USENIX Lifetime Achievement
Award and the NYU Distinguished Alumni Award.  Dr. Salkind is also President
of Bright Horizon Foundation, a nonprofit that focuses on sustainability,
global security, and education.

Adele Simmons is vice chair of Chicago Metropolis 2020, a regional planning
group, and co-chair of the task force preparing Chicago's Climate Action
Plan. She serves on the boards of Marsh & McLennan Companies, the Chicago
Council on Global Affairs, and the Field Museum. Mrs. Simmons was president
of the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation and president of
Hampshire College. She has also served on the president's Commission on
Environmental Quality and the Commission on Global Governance.

Nancy Stephens is an actress and political activist. A California
gubernatorial appointee to the Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy Advisory
Board, Ms. Stephens also serves on the executive board of the Earth
Communications Office and the advisory board of the Liberty Hill Foundation.
She is a longtime member of the Environmental Leadership Forum of the
California League of Conservation Voters and also serves as president of the
Rosenthal Family Foundation.

Thomas H. Stone (Secretary) is chair and CEO of Stone Capital Group, Inc, a
family investment company. He devotes significant time to nonprofit
organizations that work on global environmental problems, with young people
in underserved communities, with the disabled, and with music organizations.
Mr. Stone is an arbitrator for FINRA Dispute Resolution and the National
Futures Association. He teaches disabled skiers and also serves on the
boards of the Ravinia Festival Association and the Merit School of Music.

Ellyn R. Weiss is an artist, a retired partner in the law firm of Foley,
Hoag & Eliot, and former general counsel to UCS. Ms. Weiss has also served
as assistant attorney general for environmental protection for the
Commonwealth of Massachusetts, special counsel and director of the Secretary
of Energy's Human Radiation Experiments Initiative, and deputy assistant
secretary of the Office of Environment, Safety, and Health within the U.S.
Department of Energy.


On 8/8/2011 6:14 AM, Keith Hudson wrote: 



Barry,

At 13:09 08/08/2011, you wrote:



You may want to look at some of the information at
http://www.ucsusa.org/food_and_agriculture/science_and_impacts/impacts_genet
ic_engineering/impacts-of-genetic.html 


I'm afraid that I'd take no notice of the Union of Concerned Scientists.
Worthy though it seems, attractive though its website is, there isn't a
single scientist mentioned as a patron or a researcher or a member. Is that
not a teeny weeny bit odd?

As I wrote before on this thread to Mike, there are thousands of scientists
who work outside the GM industries and whose career depends not one little
bit on whatever they might say about GM food who would have something to say
(and would be prepared to give their name to) if there was any specific
danger that is presently conceivable.

Keith







Barry


Keith Hudson, Saltford, England http://allisstatus.wordpress.com/2011/08/
  



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