Photo: London Permaculture/cc/flickrIt's time for Monsanto's Roundup to stop poisoning our food.
That was the message
brought to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency on Tuesday by a group of concerned mothers who say that
glyphosate, the active ingredient in the widespread herbicide made by the chemical and biotechnology giant, is putting public health in jeopardy.
The group of 11, which included scientists, a lawyer and health worker, urged the agency to look at the results of a recent
pilot study commissioned by their group,
Moms Across America, and Sustainable Pulse. Their study found glyphosate present in human breast milk, indicating — contrary to industry claims — that the herbicide may build up or "bioaccumulate" in women's bodies.
The results of that study were "considerable and shocking," Zen Honeycutt, Founder and Director of Moms Across America, told Common Dreams.
Honeycutt pointed to a previous
study which looked at on Roundup's negative effects on gut bacteria and pointed to possible links between those effects and a number of diseases. She said that in her group's breast milk study, the sample with the highest levels of Roundup detected had levels that were higher than was shown to destroy gut bacteria in the earlier study.
Her group is asking the EPA to revoke the license for glyphosate, recall foods sprayed with it, call for its use as a drying agent to be stopped, and to include in the EPA review of glyphosate the results from the breast milk study.
Photo: Light Brigading/cc/flickrHoneycutt said that the EPA met with the group for two hours, "fully listened" to what they said, and it even appeared that "we have some people on our side." The EPA also said that they would include the milk study in their review "when protocols are met," Honeycutt said. The EPA indicated that the had contacted Monsanto to provide information on its own breast milk study, which may be in the works.
It also follows a phone campaign organized by Moms Across America that urged supporters to call the EPA because "we wanted them to understand how bad glyphosate is," Laurie Olson, West Coast Leader with the group, explained to Common Dreams.
"We just called and called," Olson said. She estimates the group made about 10,000 calls over about a week period. "We got their attention," she said.
"We're not some giant corporation. We're real people with real stories and real lives, and we want it to stop," Olson said, referring to glyphosate's effects.
It might seem like a David vs. Goliath battle, but Honeycutt is confident.
"We will do this," she said. "We will get Roundup recalled, and we will have an impact on the chemical treadmill."
For those interested in the ongoing campaign, she says the next steps will be on the group's
Facebook page.
For now, she said, "Keep talking and sharing. Moms are making a difference."
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