 America's Favorite Weed Killer Linked to Cancer
 America's Favorite Weed Killer Linked to Cancer 
by Jamie Reno BREAKING NEWS:
Monday, July 1, 2013
It's
 shameful how few American media outlets have written about the latest 
scientific studies linking Roundup, the world's most popular and 
profitable weed killer, and cancer. Might it be because Monsanto, makers
 of Roundup and as we all know a generally bad corporate citizen with a 
litany of alleged crimes against humanity, spends billions in 
advertising and marketing and dedicates a good portion of that budget to
 print and television ads?  
Monsanto
 spent $1.28 billion on its various marketing programs in fiscal 2012, 
according to the company’s annual report. All that money seems to have 
had an impact. I am only speculating, of course. But why else would the 
American media ignore the mounting evidence of links between Roundup and
 cancer? 
The latest is a groundbreaking study showing that the active ingredient in the hugely popular herbicide fuels breast cancer by increasing the number of breast cancer cells through cell growth and cell division. This should be front-page news.
The latest is a groundbreaking study showing that the active ingredient in the hugely popular herbicide fuels breast cancer by increasing the number of breast cancer cells through cell growth and cell division. This should be front-page news.
The study, which is to be published in the journal Food and Chemical Toxicology,
 focused on glyphosate, Roundup's primary chemical ingredient. After 
comparing how hormone-dependent and hormone-independent breast cancer 
cell lines were affected by glyphosate, researchers found that 
glyphosate fuels cancer cell lines that are hormone dependent.
There
 are in fact several recent studies that show glyphosate’s potential to 
be an endocrine disruptor, which are chemicals that can interfere with 
the hormone system in mammals. These disruptors can cause cancer tumors.
A new peer-reviewed report in the journal Entropy, co-authored
 by Dr. Stephanie Seneff at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology 
(MIT), argues that glyphosate residues, found in most commonly consumed 
foods in the Western diet, “enhance the damaging effects of other 
food-borne chemical residues and toxins in the environment to disrupt 
normal body functions and induce disease.”
None of this comes as a surprise to me. Roundup has already been linked to non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. A study published back in 1999 in the Journal of American Cancer Society by
 eminent oncologists Dr. Lennart Hardell and Dr. Mikael Eriksson 
revealed that exposure to glyphosate "yielded increased risks for 
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma." This alarming study was curiously not widely 
publicized.
Monsanto has tried to downplay the links between its products and diseases by putting big money into contract research companies like Exponent,
 which spews its scientific research findings on behalf of corporate 
clients, many of which are facing product liability concerns. 
A study published in the journal Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology titled "Epidemiologic studies on glyphosate and cancer: A review,"
 which suggests there is no link, was apparently directly supported by 
Monsanto. The study's author has reportedly served as a paid consultant 
to Monsanto.
In 2009, a French court reportedly found Monsanto guilty of lying, falsely declaring that Roundup is "biodegradable," "environmentally friendly" and leaves the soil "clean."
Monsanto
 clearly does not want the world to know the truth about Roundup, one of
 its fattest cash cows. But what would you expect from a company that in
 the past brought us DDT, PCBs, and Agent Orange? 
Bottom line: You may not read about it in your local newspaper or hear about it on your favorite TV news show, but Roundup has been repeatedly linked in scientific studies to cancer, as well as many other diseases including Autism. Is there any reason why anyone should believe at this point that Monsanto can be trusted?
Bottom line: You may not read about it in your local newspaper or hear about it on your favorite TV news show, but Roundup has been repeatedly linked in scientific studies to cancer, as well as many other diseases including Autism. Is there any reason why anyone should believe at this point that Monsanto can be trusted?
 
 
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