MSG Is Being Sprayed On Fruits, Veggies,  Nuts, Grains And Seeds As They 
Are Growing...Even Those Used In Baby  Food 
_http://www.rense.com/general85/msg.htm_ 
(http://www.rense.com/general85/msg.htm)  
 
Truth In Labeling.org 
4-20-9 
 
In the 1970s, reluctant food processors **voluntarily** took  processed 
free glutamic acid (MSG) out of baby food. Today it*s back, in  fertilizers 
called **Omega Protein Refined/Hydrolyzed Fish Emulsion** and  **Steam 
Hydrolyzed Feather Meal,** both of which contain hydrolyzed proteins;  and in a 
product called AuxiGro WP Plant Metabolic Primer (AuxiGro) produced by  Emerald 
BioAgriculture (formerly Auxein Corporation), which contains both  
hydrolyzed protein(s) and **monosodium glutamate.** AuxiGro is being sprayed on 
 some 
of the vegetables we and our children will eat, into the air we and our  
children must breath, and onto the ground from which it can move into drinking 
 water. Head lettuce, leaf lettuce, tomatoes, potatoes, and peanuts were 
among  the first crops targeted. On September 12, 2000, the Auxein Corporation 
Web site  gave the following information: 
 
Crops registered include: Celery; Fresh Market Cucumbers;  Edible Navy and 
Pinto Beans; Grapes; Bulb Onions; Bell, Green and Jalapeno  Peppers; Iceberg 
Head Lettuce; Romaine and Butter Leaf Lettuce; Peanuts;  Potatoes; Snap 
Beans; Strawberries; Processing Tomatoes; Fresh Tomatoes; and  Watermelons. 
Today, there is no crop that we know of that has not been approved  for 
treatment with MSG by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). 
 
Even in California -- the only state where there are any  restrictions on 
the use of AuxiGro -- AuxiGro has been approved for use on a  number of 
crops, and Emerald BioAgriculture continues to push for more. Field  tests in 
California have been -- and may continue to be -- conducted on a  variety of 
crops, and those AuxiGro treated crops may be sold in the open market  without 
revealing that they have been treated. We can't tell you which crops  those 
are because the CDPR has refused to send records of test trials (which are  
public information) to the Truth in Labeling Campaign. 
 
As of June 13, 2002, AuxiGro was registered for use in  California on 
tomatoes, almonds, apricots, cherries, plums, nectarines, peaches,  prunes, 
grapes (including grapes to be used in wine), and onions. At that time,  the 
California Department of Pesticide Regulation said they were not aware of  any 
testing of AuxiGro for use on other crops. They also said that they did not  
have any proposals presently in house to register additional crops for 
AuxiGro.  It would appear, however, that what the CDPR said was not true, for 
the 
CDPR  subsequently announced that Emerald BioAgriculture had applied for 
permission to  use AuxiGro on tomatoes (new use), and on melons (new crop) -- 
and, to the best  of our knowledge, approval is always preceded by field 
testing. 
 
On July 7, 2004, Emerald BioAgriculture requested approval of  use of 
AuxiGro as a desiccant, disinfectant, fertilizer, fungicide, growth  regulator 
- 
for increased yield and prevention of powdery mildew in various  crops such 
as almonds, grapes, and melons. They also asked to add cole crops  
(including broccoli, brussels sprouts, cabbage, cauliflower, kale, collards,  
turnips, rutabaga, mustard, watercress, and kohlrabi) to the list of crops  
approved for AuxiGro use. 
 
Approval for use on organic crops--in all states--has been  requested. 
 
What*s wrong with using glutamic acid, an amino acid found in  protein, as 
a spray on crops? 
 
- In protein, amino acids are found in balanced combinations.  Use of free 
glutamic acid as a spray on crops throws the amino acid balance out  of 
kilter. - It*s not the glutamic acid found in protein that is being sprayed  on 
crops, it*s a synthetic product. The spray being used most widely is called  
AuxiGro. The **free glutamic acid** or so called **L-glutamic acid** 
component  being used by its manufacturer, Emerald BioAgriculture, contains 
L-glutamic  acid, an amino acid found in protein; but it also contains 
D-glutamic 
acid,  pyroglutamic acid, and other chemicals referred to in the industry as 
 **contaminants.** The free glutamic acid used in AuxiGro is processed free 
 glutamic acid. It is manufactured -- in chemical plants -- where certain  
selected genetically engineered bacteria -- feeding on a liquid nutrient 
medium  -- excrete the free glutamic acid they synthesize outside of their cell 
membrane  into the liquid medium in which they are grown. In contrast, the 
free glutamic  acid found in protein, and the free glutamic acid involved in 
normal human body  function, are unprocessed. free glutamic acid, and 
contain no contaminants. 
 
- No one knows what the long term effects of spraying  processed free 
glutamic acid on crops will be. 
 
- That the processed free glutamic acid (MSG) will be absorbed  into the 
body of the plant and into the fruit, nuts, seeds, or vegetable it  produces 
seems undeniable. If it were not, the plant would not be stimulated to  grow. 
Neither Emerald BioAgriculture or the EPA will address this issue. 
 
- That there will be residue left on crops has not been  disputed by 
Emerald BioAgriculture. But no study of either the amount of that  residue, or 
the 
least amount of processed free glutamic acid needed to cause a  reaction in 
an MSG-sensitive person, has ever been done. **It should wash off**  
doesn't mean it will wash off. **It seems unlikely that such a small amount  
would 
cause a reactions** doesn*t mean that a small amount will not cause a  
reaction or have long term health effects. 
 
- Free glutamic acid is known to be toxic to the nervous  system. But the 
neurotoxic effects that processed free glutamic acid will have  on animals 
that consume the plants on which it is sprayed - effects over and  above any 
effects caused by external glutamic acid residue - have never been  
evaluated. Neither are there data on the effects that spraying processed free  
glutamic acid will have on drinking water. 
 
- Consider, also, that children are most at risk from the  effects of 
processed free glutamic acid. Their undeveloped blood-brain barriers  leave 
them 
most at risk from exposure to processed free glutamic acid. It has  been 
repeatedly demonstrated that infant animals fed processed free glutamic  acid 
when young develop neuroendocrine problems such as gross obesity, stunted  
growth, and reproductive disorders later in life, and that they also develop  
learning disabilities. Emerald BioAgriculture did not address that 
particular  safety issue in its application to the EPA. 
 
- No one knows how little glutamic acid is needed to kill a  single brain 
cell or to trigger an adverse reaction. 
 
- Free glutamic acid is a neurotransmitter. It causes nerves  to fire, 
carrying nerve impulses throughout the nervous system. 
 
- Free glutamic acid is a neurotoxin. Under certain  circumstances, free 
glutamic acid will cause nerves to fire repeatedly, until  they die. 
 
- Processed free glutamic acid kills brain cells. The free  glutamic acid 
ingested by laboratory animals that caused brain lesions and  neuroendocrine 
disorders was very often given in the form of the food ingredient  
**monosodium glutamate.**  **Monosodium glutamate** is the name of a  
particular food 
additive. Processed free glutamic acid is the reactive component  in 
**monosodium glutamate,** just as processed free glutamic acid is a reactive  
component in AuxiGro. 
 
The glutamate industry research done in the 1970s that was  submitted to 
the EPA by the Auxein Corporation, that pretended to find that  processed free 
glutamic acid is "safe," has been long refuted by independent  scientists. 
Indeed, at the present time, neuroscientists attempting to develop  drugs to 
block the toxic effects of free glutamic acid are using processed free  
glutamic acid to selectively kill certain kinds of brain cells. 
 
- Processed free glutamic acid causes neuroendocrine disorders  in maturing 
animals that ingest processed free glutamic acid early in life. 
 
- Processed free glutamic acid causes learning disorders in  maturing 
animals that ingest processed free glutamic acid early in life. 
 
- Processed free glutamic acid crosses the placental barrier  and causes 
learning disabilities in animal offspring of dams that ingest it. 
 
- Processed free glutamic acid has access to the brain through  the 
blood-brain barrier, which is not impervious to the unregulated flow of  
processed 
free glutamic acid. The blood-brain barrier is immature at birth and  may 
continue to develop up to puberty. In certain areas called the  
circumventricular organs, the blood barrier is never impervious to the  
unregulated flow 
of free glutamic acid. In addition, the blood-brain barrier is  easily 
damaged by such events as high fever, a blow to the head, drug use,  stroke, 
ingestion of processed free glutamic acid, and the normal process of  aging. 
 
- The National Institutes of Health recognize glutamic acid as  being 
associated with addiction, stroke, epilepsy, degenerative disorders such  as 
Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, and ALS, brain trauma, neuropathic  
pain, schizophrenia, anxiety, and depression. 
 
- For years, free glutamic acid has been produced and used in  food 
additives with names such as monosodium glutamate, sodium caseinate, and  
hydrolyzed soy protein. In some people, the processed free glutamic acid in 
food  
additives causes adverse reactions that include migraine headache, asthma,  
arrhythmia, tachycardia, nausea and vomiting, depression, and disorientation.  
The processed free glutamic acid in prescription and non-prescription drugs, 
 food supplements, and cosmetics can also cause adverse reactions. 
 
There are badly flawed industry-sponsored studies that have  pretended to 
find that processed free glutamic acid does not cause adverse  reactions. 
Inappropriate procedures used by the glutamate industry have included  limiting 
subjects to people virtually guaranteed not to be sensitive to  processed 
free glutamic acid, and/or using processed free glutamic acid or other  
similarly reactive substances in placebos as well as in test material. The Food 
 
and Drug Administration (FDA) has based its claim that processed free 
glutamic  acid causes only mild and transitory reactions on those badly flawed  
industry-sponsored studies. 
 
- Even the EPA admits that the food additive called  **monosodium 
glutamate** causes adverse reactions. 
 
- Even the FDA admits that the food additive **monosodium  glutamate** 
contains processed free glutamic acid. 
 
- Even the FDA admits that many consumers refer to all free  glutamic acid 
as **MSG.**  
 
The EPA*s approvals of use of MSG in agriculture are simple,  
straightforward, and in violation of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act 
 
In reviewing the application of Auxein Corporation (now  Emerald 
BioAgriculture) for use of processed free glutamic acid in a spray to be  
applied to 
crops as they grow, the EPA failed to conform to the requirements of  the 
Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act, which require, in part, that the EPA  
review any proposed action for validity, completeness, reliability, and  
relationship to human risk. The EPA also ignored Executive Order 13045 which  
requires government agencies to consider available information concerning the  
variability of the sensitivities of major identifiable subgroups of consumers, 
 including infants and children. For example, Auxein Corporation sent the 
EPA 14  industry-sponsored toxicological studies from the literature, all 
done in the  1970*s, but failed to mention hundreds of studies in the 
literature that refuted  those 14 studies. Auxein Corporation even failed to 
send the 
EPA independent  studies that appeared in the same book(s) as the 
industry-sponsored studies sent  to the EPA. For example, although processed 
free 
glutamic acid causes brain  lesions and neuroendocrine disorders in infant 
animals, this special hazard  faced by infants was ignored by Auxein 
Corporation. It would appear that Auxein  Corporation restricted its 
consideration of 
**available information** to  information made available by the glutamate 
industry; and the EPA, even after  having been sent abstracts from other 
**available information,** has not  challenged the Auxein Corporation 
applications. A more complete discussion of  the shortcomings of the EPA 
approvals 
granted to Auxein Corporation has been  submitted to the EPA. 
 
Questions about the safety of spraying processed free glutamic  acid on 
plants and into the environment have been raised by the Truth in  Labeling 
Campaign and by individual consumers. The EPA has refused to address  those 
concerns. The EPA, and, in particular, EPA spokesperson Dr. Janet  Andersen, 
has 
failed to respond to allegations that in approving the spraying of  
processed free glutamic acid, the EPA failed to consider the reliability,  
validity, and completeness of the Auxein Corporation application or comply with 
 
Executive Order 13045 entitled Protection of Children from Environmental Health 
 Risks and Safety Risks, except to say that the EPA had complied with 
executive  order 13045. Moreover, while responding to letters that asked direct 
questions  of the EPA, Andersen failed to respond to most, if not all, of the 
direct  questions contained in those letters. 
 
AuxiGro, the first MSG-laced plant **growth enhancer** to hit  the market, 
has been approved for spraying on every crop we know of, with no  
restrictions on the amount of processed free glutamic acid (MSG) that may 
remain  in 
and/or on crops when brought to market. Even before consumers had an inkling  
that crops were being sprayed, the Truth in Labeling Campaign received 
reports  that MSG-sensitive consumers had gotten sick from head lettuce and 
potatoes. 
 
Federal Register notices chronicling the application and  approval of 
processed free glutamic acid are available on the Web via GPO  Access, the 
Federal Register, through: 
<_http://www.gpoaccess.gov/fr/index.html>http://www.gpoaccess.gov/fr/index.html_
 
(http://www.gpoaccess.gov/fr/index.html>http://www.gpoaccess.gov/fr/index.html) 
. 
 
Application for approval of use of AuxiGro was made to the EPA  in 1997. 
Testing of the product was also approved in that year, and many of the  test 
crops sprayed with AuxiGro were brought to market without notifying  
consumers. Glutamic acid was granted an exemption from establishment of a  
tolerance 
limit in January, 1998. AuxiGro was also approved for use on a number  of 
crops in January, 1998, and approved for use on other crops later. No  
announcement of these approvals was made in the Federal Register. 
 
Due to a technical glitch in the system, the glutes came to  need one more 
approval to make their California registrations work. The glutes  were 
asking for AuxiGro to be approved for use as a fungicide in California, but  
the 
EPA had only approved AuxiGro for use as a pesticide produce or plant growth 
 enhancer. And when application was made for this addition to their 
approvals,  the application was brought to our attention; and the Truth in 
Labeling 
Campaign  filed a formal protest to this approval of AuxiGro. 
<_http://truthinlabeling.org/msg-objection-s1.html>The_ 
(http://truthinlabeling.org/msg-objection-s1.html>The)  Formal Objection of the 
Truth in Labeling Campaign 
was filed on August  16, 2001 with the EPA. 
 
By law, formal objections filed in a timely manner must be  responded to 
within six months. Also, by law (we were told) even though the  Final Rule had 
not been promulgated, this additional use of AuxiGro would be  considered 
approved unless and until the EPA determined that it should be  otherwise. In 
July, 2004, we received a conference call from Dr. Andersen and a  number 
of other EPA players, including an EPA lawyer -- a **courtesy call**  telling 
us that our objections had been discounted and that the Final Rule  
allowing use of AuxiGro as a fungicide would be published shortly in the 
Federal  
Register. 
 
What*s wrong at the EPA? 
 
Neither the EPA nor Janet Andersen, Ph.D., director of the  Biopesticides 
and Pollution Prevention Division (BPPD), are stupid. Rather, all  evidence 
would appear to suggest that the EPA, which is charged with protecting  the 
health of Americans, says it is protecting the health of Americans, when in  
fact the EPA acts to protect the bottom line of big business. Don't think 
for a  moment that MSG is the only toxin unleashed on the American public by 
the EPA.  Let the words **methyl parathion** and **DDT** jog your memory. The 
EPA, in  granting the chemical referred to as **L-glutamic acid** an 
exemption from the  requirement of a tolerance for residues of **L-glutamic 
acid** 
on all food  commodities when applied/used in accordance with good 
agricultural practices  (thereby allowing unrestricted amounts of processed 
free 
glutamic acid (MSG)  residue to remain in and on any and all food crops that 
come under the EPA's  jurisdiction) violated Section 408(c)(2)(A)(i), Section 
408(c)(2)(ii), Section  408(c)(2)(B), and Section 408(b)(2)(D) of the 
Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic  Act. 
 
Neither **L-Glutamic Acid and Gamma Aminobutyric Acid;  Exemptions from the 
Requirement of a Tolerance; Final Rule**  (Federal  Register June 21, 2001) 
nor **Glutamic Acid; Pesticide Tolerance Exemption;  Final Rule** (Federal 
Register January 7, 1998), which preceded it, met the  criteria established 
by law for granting exemptions from the restriction of a  tolerance. 
 
How did spokesperson Andersen excuse the fact that the EPA  approved 
processed free glutamic acid for use in an EPA approved spray? First,  said 
Andersen, the free glutamic acid used in the spray is naturally occurring,  and 
it*s 99.3 per cent pure pharmaceutical grade L-glutamic acid. Yet, in  
admitting that the free glutamic acid in AuxiGro is not 100 per cent pure  
L-glutamic acid, and that it is pharmaceutical grade, Andersen contradicted  
herself, and actually made the point that 
1) if the free glutamic acid used in AuxiGro were truly  natural, it 
wouldn*t be **pharmaceutical grade** ; and 
2) if the free glutamic acid used in AuxiGro were truly  natural it would 
be 100 per cent, not 99.3 per cent pure L-glutamic acid. 
 
Andersen said something else very interesting. She said that  the EPA is 
well aware of the fact that MSG causes adverse reactions. However,  when 
Andersen used the term **MSG** she was referring to the one food ingredient  
called **monosodium glutamate**, and not to the free glutamic acid in  
**monosodium glutamate** that causes adverse reactions. Failure to define 
terms,  as 
Anderson did (and does) so handily, is both deceptive and misleading. 
 
What Andersen did is very clever. What she said makes no sense  at all. No 
one has ever claimed that the processed free glutamic acid in AuxiGro  comes 
out of a box labeled **monosodium glutamate.**  So for her to say it  
doesn*t, is meaningless. On the other hand, the claim has been made that the  
free glutamic acid in AuxiGro will cause the same brain lesions, neuroendocrine 
 disorders, adverse reactions and other diverse disease conditions that are 
 caused by the free glutamic acid in **monosodium glutamate** and the other 
food  additives that contain processed free glutamic acid. That claim is 
true, but  Andersen does not address it. How do you refute someone who ignores 
legitimate  questions and spews out irrelevant statements as though they 
pertained to your  legitimate questions? You don't. The EPA defense of its 
approval of use of  processed free glutamic acid in plant **growth enhancers** 
and its registration  of AuxiGro has two parts to it: 
1) ignoring those who question EPA actions, and 
2) making the irrelevant statement that AuxiGro does not  contain MSG 
(monosodium glutamate). 
 
Neither Andersen nor anyone else at the EPA ever addressed the  criticism 
that approvals given by the EPA to allow the use of free glutamic acid  and 
the product AuxiGro were inappropriate. 
The EPA, which approved the used of processed free glutamic  acid in plant 
**growth enhancers**,  made a grievous error. But instead of  recognizing 
and remedying that error once it was pointed out to them, the EPA  began a 
cover-up. That cover-up included use of ambiguous words and phrases,  
half-truths, and downright lies told to consumers. The cover-up continued (and  
continues still) with a variation of those ambiguous words and phrases,  
half-truths, and downright lies told to legislators who inquire about spraying  
MSG 
into the environment. 
 
You might find the Emerald BioAgriculture sales literature  interesting. 
 
Sales literature promoting AuxiGro was once found on their Web  site, but 
is now long gone. While Federal Register notices included the fact  that 
there is processed free glutamic acid (MSG) in AuxiGro, the sales  literature 
from Auxein Corporation did not mention the fact that their product  contains 
free glutamic acid until the Truth in Labeling Campaign began to  broadcast 
that information. In November, 1999, Auxein added deceptive,  misleading, 
and untrue statements in an elaboration of its Product Page, wherein  they 
essentially make the untrue assertion that the glutamic acid used in  AuxiGro 
is chemically and biologically identical to that found in plants and  
animals. 
 
Sales literature did (on September 12, 2000), however, contain  the 
following: 
 
**PRECAUTIONARY STATEMENTS 
 
HAZARDS TO HUMAN AND DOMESTIC ANIMALS &shy; CAUTION** 
 
If you think you might be reacting to AuxiGro sprayed on  crops, you might 
want to try to (contact Emerald BioAgriculture (formerly Auxein  
Corporation) at the addresses that follow. (A friend recently told us that he  
tried to 
contact them by e-mail, but his e-mail was returned unopened.) By law,  the 
company is required to forward reports of adverse reactions to the EPA. You 
 might want to ask the EPA if Emerald BioAgriculture did so. 
 
John L. Mclntyre, Ph.D. 
President & CEO 
Emerald BioAgriculture (formerly Auxein Corporation) 
3125  Sovereign Drive, Ste. B 
Lansing, MI 48911-4240 
Phone (888) 828-9346 
Fax (517) 882-7521 
_mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] (mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED])  

(From time to time, their web page, _http://www.auxein.com_ 
(http://www.auxein.com)  , can be accessed by password only.) 
Please feel free to copy and distribute this material,  including our Web 
address, for those who might be interested.
 _http://truthinlabeling.org/msgsprayed.html_ 
(http://truthinlabeling.org/msgsprayed.html) 
 
 (http://www.papercut.biz/emailStripper.htm)  
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