HAGELIN STUNS THE EPA WITH STIRRING "STARLINK" TESTIMONY

On Tuesday, November 28, Dr. John Hagelin presented a powerful 
statement about the hazards of genetically engineered foods 
to an open meeting of an Environmental Protection Agency panel 
in Arlington, Virginia.

The Scientific Advisory Panel for the Federal Insecticide, 
Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA) held the meeting to 
consider the possible allergenic effects of StarLink corn on 
human health. Starlink, a variety of genetically engineered 
corn that has not been approved by the EPA for human 
consumption, was recently discovered to have contaminated 
corn products being sold at supermarkets around the country.

Dr. Hagelin's testimony created an explosion of concern among 
the largely pro-genetic engineering audience at the open 
meeting and created a fresh wave of scientific scrutiny about 
the hazards of GE foods. His testimony is reprinted below, 
along with an editorial from the Providence Journal about 
his leadership in the effort to protect our food supply. 



STATEMENT FOR THE FIFRA SCIENTIFIC ADVISORY PANEL
OPEN MEETING ON STARLINK CORN
Arlington, Virginia
November 28, 2000
 
JOHN HAGELIN, Ph.D.
Director, Institute of Science, Technology and Public Policy

I speak to you as a scientist who is striving to ensure that 
our best scientific knowledge be applied for the solution--
and prevention--of society's problems. I am a nuclear physicist 
who has published extensively in superstring theory and, 
during the last three elections, I have been the Presidential 
candidate of the Natural Law Party. 

I want to address an issue much deeper than whether the CRY9C 
protein in StarLink corn is likely to be allergenic. I want 
to address the assumptions that underlie the entire agricultural
bioengineering enterprise. I am deeply concerned that life 
scientists are implementing bioengineering technologies without
adequately understanding the lessons we have learned from the
physical sciences. One of the key revelations of modern physics
is that phenomena unfold in a far less linear and predictable 
fashion than eighteenth and nineteenth century thinkers assumed.
Today we know that there are inherent limitations on our ability 
to make precise predictions about the behavior of a system, 
especially for microscopic systems and nonlinear systems of 
great complexity.

Numerous eminent molecular biologists recognize that DNA is a 
complex nonlinear system and that splicing foreign genes into 
the DNA of a food-yielding organism can cause unpredictable 
side effects that could harm the health of the human consumer.
Yet, the genetic engineering of our food--and the widespread 
presence of genetically altered foods in American supermarkets
--is based on the premise that the effects of gene-splicing are 
so predictable that all bioengineered foods can be presumed
safe unless proven otherwise. This refusal to recognize the 
risks of unintended and essentially unpredictable negative 
side effects is just plain bad science. It is astounding that 
so many biologists are attempting to impose a paradigm of 
precise, linear, billiard-ball predictably onto the behavior 
of DNA, when physics has long since dislodged such a paradigm 
from the microscopic realm and molecular biological research 
increasingly confirms its inapplicability to the dynamics of 
genomes. 

Moreover, the premise of predictability is not just 
scientifically unsound; it is morally irresponsible. The 
safety of our food is being put at risk in a cavalier, if 
not callous, fashion, not only in disregard of scientific 
knowledge, but in disregard of recent technological history. 
Here, too, lessons should have been learned from the physical 
sciences. Time and again, the overhasty application of nuclear 
technologies led to numerous health and environmental disasters. 
For example, in the early days of nuclear technology, the rush 
to commercialize led to the sale of radium tipped wands designed
to remove facial hair. Nine months later the cancers came. 
Similarly, the failure to comprehend the full range of risks 
and to proceed with prudence has led to many disasters in the 
nuclear power industry. 

In the case of genetic engineering, even greater caution is 
called for: a nuclear disaster only lasts 10,000 years, whereas 
gene pollution is forever--self-perpetuating and irreversible. 

The irresponsible behavior that permitted the marketing of 
bioengineered foods has not been limited to the scientific 
community, but includes the executive branch of the federal 
government. The FDA's internal records reveal that its own 
experts clearly recognized the potential for gene-splicing 
to induce production of unpredicted toxins and carcinogens 
in the resultant food. These same records reveal that these 
warnings were covered up by FDA political appointees operating 
under a White House directive to promote the biotech industry. 
It is unconscionable that the FDA claimed itself unaware of 
any information showing that bioengineered foods differ from 
others, when its own files are filled with such information 
from its scientific staff. And it is unconscionable that it 
permits such novel foods to be marketed based on the claim 
they are recognized as safe by an overwhelming consensus 
within the scientific community, when it knows such a 
consensus does not exist. 

The StarLink fiasco further demonstrates the shoddiness of 
the government's regulation, since the system failed to keep 
even an unapproved bioengineered crop out of our food. Indeed,
the contamination was discovered not by the government, but 
by public interest groups. The FDA had no clue and had taken 
no measures to monitor. This incident also demonstrates how 
difficult it will be to remove a bioengineered product from 
our food supply if it is eventually found to be harmful and, 
therefore, how important it is to prevent the introduction 
of new ones and to phase out those currently in use.   

It is high time that science and the truth be respected, and 
that the false pretenses enabling the commercialization of 
bioengineered foods be acknowledged and abolished. I call 
upon the members of this panel to uphold sound science so 
that you can hold your own heads up as the facts about the 
hazards of bioengineered food become increasingly well known. 
I call upon you not only to resist the pressures to approve 
the pesticidal protein in StarLink Corn; I call upon you to 
honestly acknowledge the inherent risks of genetic engineering 
and to affirm that, due to these risks, neither StarLink nor 
any other bioengineered food can be presumed safe at the 
present stage of our knowledge.  

 
THE PROVIDENCE JOURNAL
Editorial
November 9, 2000

ONLY HAGELIN SAW GENETIC PERIL

One of the key issues that never got discussed in the 
presidential debates this campaign season was the most 
serious one facing us today. The fact is that our democracy 
has been stolen by the powerful lobbies of the special 
interests. The most conclusive and blatant example of this 
has been the dangerous experiment being conducted by the 
biotech industry on the American people. They have genetically 
manipulated our food supply so that 60 percent of the food 
on our supermarket shelves has been genetically engineered. 
The most outrageous thing is that they did it without the
knowledge or consent of the American people.

Forty years ago, most scientists thought DDT a safe and 
promising addition to agriculture. Thalidomide was given 
to pregnant women by their doctors. Nuclear power was touted 
as the cleanest energy source on Earth. Marketed prematurely, 
each of these technological innovations brought unforeseen,
unwanted and tragic consequences that could have been easily 
avoided through proper long-term safety testing. Haven't 
we learned anything from our mistakes?

>From soil to superviruses: In 1994, a genetically engineered 
bacterium developed to aid in the production of ethanol 
produced residues that rendered the land infertile. New crops 
planted on this soil grew three inches tall and fell over dead.

The food chain: In 1996, scientists discovered that ladybugs 
that had eaten the aphids that had eaten genetically engineered 
potatoes died.

The immune system: In 1998, research by Dr. Arpad Pusztai 
uncovered the potential for genetically altered DNA to weaken 
the immune system and stunt the growth of baby rats.

Monarch butterflies: In May 1999, researchers at Cornell 
University discovered that monarch butterflies died unexpectedly 
from eating milkweed plants that had been dusted with the pollen 
of genetically engineered Bt corn.

Pregnant mice: A 1998 study showed that DNA from the food fed 
to pregnant mice ended up in their intestinal lining, white 
blood cells, brain cells,and their fetuses. This suggests that 
the genetically engineered DNA in the food we eat can end up 
in our own cells.

Honeybees: Last May, a leading European zoologist found the 
genes from genetically engineered canola jumped the species 
barrier and were picked up by the bacteria in the digestive 
tracts of bees. This indicates that antibiotic-resistant genes 
in genetically engineered foods can cause the bacteria in our 
own intestines to mutate into superbugs that cannot be killed 
by antibiotics.

Superviruses: Viral promoters are invasive agents used by 
genetic engineers to trick a cell into accepting and integrating 
an alien gene into the cell's own DNA. Some scientists predict 
that releasing viral promoters into the gene pool could lead 
to the creation of superviruses and novel infectious diseases 
for organisms at every level of life--from bacteria to humans.

These are just some of the dangers that are discernible in the 
premature marketing of genetically engineered products. The 
biotech industry is eager to point to their so-called successes 
while keeping their failures under raps.

Next is the story of rBGH, recombinant bovine growth hormone 
(or the story of genetically engineered milk). A Monsanto 
lawyer drafted a letter to the FDA to get rBGH approved. He 
then stepped down from Monsanto and took an appointment as 
FDA deputy commissioner for policy. He then opened his own
letter and helped draft the FDA's 1992 policy on genetically 
engineered food and rBGH. The law that followed, in true 
violation of First Amendment rights, states that it's illegal 
to say rBGH is in milk and it's illegal to state that it's not 
in milk. The lawyer returned to corporate life and became 
Monsanto's vice president for public policy.

Incidentally, rBGH is banned in Canada, Europe, Australia, 
and New Zealand--all major dairy producers. It is also banned 
in other countries. I quote Neal D. Barnard, M.D., president 
of the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, from a 
magazine entitled Safe Food News (to get this magazine and to 
sign the national Genetically Engineered Food Alert petition, 
call 1-800-REAL-FOOD).

"Monsanto's rBGH increases milk production. It also increases 
udder infections (mastitis) and reproductive problems in cows 
and shortens their life span. To treat the mastitis, farmers 
have to give their cows antibiotics. Studies have shown that 
milk from rBGH cows often contains residues from those antibiotics.
And because rBGH-induced mastitis leads to increased amounts of 
white blood cells--or pus--this is also secreted into rBGH milk. 
But the risks of rBGH go far beyond even this. More troublesome 
is the fact that rBGH has been linked to increased risk of
breast, prostate and colon cancers."

>From pizza to chips, soda to infant formula, ice cream to 
cookies, vitamins to candies, genetically engineered organisms 
are in the foods we feed our kids every day. Virtually every 
food you can think of is in the genetically engineered pipeline.
And coming soon . . . rat genes in your lettuce, cows that make 
human milk, and bananas with vaccines.

The only presidential candidate who brought this issue to the 
forefront of his campaign and informed the American people of 
the hazards of genetically engineered foods has been the quantum 
physicist John Hagelin of the Natural Law/Independent Party. 
As he traveled the country during the campaign speaking in 
public forums, he talked frankly about the long-term consequences
of such experimentation, asking the question:

"Who gave the biotech companies the right to threaten our 
food and environment? The Clinton-Gore administration and our 
'Republicrat' Congress, awash in biotech money. We need mandatory
labeling and safety testing of genetically engineered foods, 
plus a moratorium on the release of these experimental lifeforms
into the environment until proven safe."

John Hagelin's message is urgent and of utmost importance. It is 
essential that the American people act without delay to preserve 
their own health and that of future generations.


Don Lovejoy, who has a doctorate in health and human services, 
is an educator based in Cranston.

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