So, let’s see what we have to cover today--the legal status
of biotech, genetically modified organisms, transhumanism, human genetics, and
agriculture. I should be able to
tackle that in one blog post, right?
Okay, background first. I’m writing this in response to a threaded discussion on
Facebook, which I will provide for you so that you know the context of my
thoughts. Since I haven’t asked
permission to repost any of this, I will replace names with initials (I don’t
want to be a dick and put people’s names on my corner of cyperspace without
asking first).
Here’s the conversation:
RMB: This is something TRULY disturbing… I hope the Supreme
Court -- for once -- weighs in on the side of PEOPLE rather than CORPORATIONS…
In short, a corporation has claimed that it can PATENT a HUMAN GENE. Watch the video and be chilled to your
soul imagining what happens if this claim is upheld.
LS: This is old news, [RMB]. The transhumanist movement is already well underway. Mansanto [sic] and the other elitist
corporations are already changing our DNA through GMO crops, especially
corn. Check out www.2045.com for the global agenda to turn us
all into robots. This is not a
joke. Is anybody awake out there?
RMB: [LS] -- You understand that GMO crops CAN’T change
HUMAN DNA, right? Perhaps Robert
Lewis or [MP] might want to weigh in on the GMO thing -- they both have strong
feelings on the matter, they are both scientists, and neither is what I would
call a corporate apologist -- not by a LONG shot.
Well, indeed I do want to weigh in on this, because there
are a lot of things that need to be said here. The science can get a little complicated, and so can the
legalities. The good news is, in
order to be sufficiently informed to make educated decisions, the general
public doesn’t need to fully grasp the fiddly details of the science; the
issues can be distilled for the non-scientist without dumbing them down, which
is what I’m going to try to do here.
First, let me tackle some personal issues. I AM a transhumanist, at least in
philosophy. I have some questions
about practicality, but I think pursuing certain human modifications is
definitely worthwhile. In this
post, I will try to explain why I’m a transhumanist and why I think you should
be too. I say this now not to
reveal a bias, but so that you know what perspective I’m coming from as you
read. But I will certainly explain
myself fully, to demonstrate that my position is solid, and not just the result
of some political ideology. I do
support GMOs (and plenty of other areas of biotech research as well). Again, if you read on, I’ll explain why
GMOs are not only much safer than many people think but also a necessary part
of agriculture in the coming decades.
And finally, in response to RMB’s comment, it is true, I certainly am
not a corporate apologist. Neither
am I anti-corporation. I am a
capitalist, and I think corporations do plenty of good things, but I’m also not
afraid to call them out when they get up to shenanigans. Which is to say, while I support the
work of plenty of corporations, I do not have any sort of pro- or
anti-corporate bias. I judge
issues on their merits rather than on the size of the corporations involved.
Now, let’s start with patenting genes, since that’s what
started this whole thing off (and also because it’s the part of this I have the
least to say about). First of all,
I’m not overly familiar with the
particular legal battle referenced here, so you’ll have to forgive me for
offering only some generalized thoughts instead of an in depth commentary. It sounds very much like the sort of
thing I’d like to read more about, but as I haven’t yet done so, I don’t want
to pretend to offer expertise on something about which I’m not qualified to do
so.
My general position on the matter is that intellectual
property law has done a poor job of keeping pace with expanding technologies. Patent law, as with the rest of the
body of intellectual property law, is meant to protect and encourage the
efforts of creators. When it comes
to biotech, I think it is perfectly reasonable to issue patents to individuals
or to corporations who have synthesized new genes, certainly.
The difficulty comes when it’s a matter not of actually
synthesizing a new gene, but simply describing one that evolved naturally. Certainly it seems perfectly reasonable
to offer some protections to the individuals who are responsible for particular
discoveries, even if they don’t create the genes, but it also seems somewhat
unreasonable to grant a patent for something that exists naturally. I tend to be of the opinion that the
best (far from perfect, but the best I can think of) method is to grant patents
for the specific applications of the discoveries. One should get a patent for the method of isolating a
gene. One should get a patent for
any biotech that uses the gene as a component. One should get a patent for any direct medical applications
of the isolation of the gene. But
one should not get a patent for the gene itself unless it is the product of a
new synthesis in the laboratory.
I don’t know the history of Myriad Genetics or this legal
battle beyond the one video that I linked to above, so I don’t know if that’s
an accurate portrayal of the reality.
Assuming it is, I think I’m in agreement that this is an abuse of the
law. The BRCA genes are present in
every human genome, and mutations of those genes have been implicated in
increased risk for breast cancer.
I think Myriad Genetics should be perfectly entitled to patent all of
their techniques for testing these genes, but not the genes themselves. So I agree with the original post
(though I don’t find it quite as “chilling”). What I would like to add to that, however, is that I would
hope the Supreme Court wouldn’t err too far on either side. Yes, we absolutely need them to protect
people (in this case, by vacating a patent that probably should not have been
granted). But we also need them to
protect corporations. It is the
corporation, after all, that has the resources necessary to actually do much of
this research. It’ll likely be a
biotech company of some sort that finally cracks the cancer puzzle. So we don’t want to loosen the
REASONABLE protections that corporations enjoy for work produced in their
laboratories.
Here’s the gray area that I don’t quite know how to
handle. Say there is a unique
mutation on someone’s genome that has some medical application. It evolved naturally, as mutations do,
but is not present in all humans.
It’s only been isolated in one person. Scientists are capable of isolating and amplifying this
gene, and perhaps then inserting it into another genome in order to develop the
treatment of some disease. This is
all stuff we can do. So, who owns
that? Is the patient who developed
the mutation assumed to have ownership of this mutation? I can see arguments in favor of that,
but at the expense of the medical researchers. What about the doctors who found it and want to use it for
medical research? That might
provide the greatest social good, but at the expense of the individual. Can one claim complete ownership of
one’s genetic information? I don’t
know. When it’s part of one’s
body, sure. But when it’s been
extracted (with consent) during a medical procedure and is then sequenced by
someone else, who (if anyone) can claim ownership? There’s an economic incentive to want to assign ownership in
such cases, but there’s a practical difficulty about it.
I don’t know the answer to those questions, so I’m open to
other people’s thoughts. It’s
something I intend to do more reading on, because I think it’s an important
issue. What’s more, it’s of
critical importance that when we finally do get around to updating laws to keep
pace with technology, we need to get it right. In this issue, there are no less rewards at stake than the
individual right to oneself and the future of biomedical research.
If anyone reading out there has some insight in regards to
how to find an appropriate balance between these competing interests, both of
which are worthy of legal protection, please join the conversation. I’m curious what everyone has to say
about the matter.
Now let’s talk about GMOs for a while. GMOs, or genetically modified
organisms, are organisms that have been modified specifically through the
modern techniques of biotechnology.
It’s actually a really interesting field, and I encourage all of you to
read up on some of the techniques scientists can use in the laboratory to move
genetic information around in a specific and targeted manner. I won’t go into the specifics here,
however. It’s not really necessary
to understand exactly HOW genes can be modified. It’s sufficient to know that they can be.
Before I tell you why I think GMOs are both desirable and
necessary, let’s have a look at some of the concerns people have about these organisms,
specifically when marketed as food crops.
There are several concerns, some valid and some not, and they generally
fall into a few broad categories: safety for human consumption, environmental
safety, and political and economic consequences. As we go along, you’ll see that I freely admit there are
some legitimate concerns--however, we simply do a basic risk-benefit analysis
and find that it’s easy to compensate for what few valid concerns there are.
First, let’s talk about the safety of these food crops for
human consumption. The simple fact
of the matter is, there’s no evidence that there is any more danger from these
crops than any others.
I’ll start with the assertion that GMO crops can change
human DNA. As RMB pointed out,
this isn’t really possible. DNA is
just a molecule, and the DNA sequence of a human is determined before birth,
and doesn’t change based on what one eats. Now, it is true that mutations do occur throughout life, but
because the “blueprint” of the human is laid out at the time of conception, all
of these changes are localized.
They don’t really change “your” DNA--they are mutation in specific
somatic cells. Every cell has a
sophisticated DNA repair mechanism (or actually a series of mechanisms) that do
a good job of correcting these mutations as they occur, but a few always slip
through. Almost all of these are
benign. On occasion, they can lead
to cancers. Those are the only
kinds of things that cause changes in an individual’s DNA. Now, how does this relate to GMOs? The simple answer is, it doesn’t. Cancer isn’t fully understood, though
we do know of certain substances that are carcinogenic (that doesn’t mean they
“cause cancer,” as cancer isn’t a single thing--instead, it means they increase
the likelihood of mutation in the somatic cells). If there were any danger to DNA from eating GMOs, it would
be of this variety (not some nebulous “changing” of DNA). However, there’s no evidence (really:
none--not a shred) that GMOs are any more likely to cause such a mutation than
any other crop.
You must remember that DNA is a molecule. It is a sequence of nucleotides, which
consist of nitrogenous bases (adenine, thymine, cytosine, and guanine--A, T, C,
and G) attached to a sugar-phosphate backbone. Any genetic modification does not change the chemical nature
of the gene (a gene being nothing more than a specific sequence of DNA). What that means is that the DNA of GMOs
still consists of the very same nucleotides, just in a slightly altered
sequence. Whenever you eat
something, you are consuming a large number of DNA molecules. They’re broken down in your digestive
tract, and the products of this process of digestion are used as the raw
materials for the construction of your own biomass. Slightly different ratios of one nucleotide to another does
nothing to increase or decrease potential toxicity of the food product.
Now, in order to build a body, you need more that just
DNA. In many ways, DNA is just the
recipe. It codes for specific
protein (proteins are sequences of amino acids) products that result in the
complex biochemistry that produces bodies. Perhaps it is these protein products that are
dangerous. Indeed, if there is to
be any danger from GMOs, it will not come from the DNA itself, but from the
protein products, just as the danger in any crop would come from the protein
products. And that danger would
most likely be more of a general toxicity rather than carcinogenesis. But here’s the thing. Wild crops (those you would call
“natural”) have random mutations, just as all organisms do. It’s possible that these crops could
produce the toxic product. GMOs
are specifically engineered and tested to ensure that they do not produce toxic
products. Is it possible that,
once deployed in the field, they could further mutate and eventually come to
produce undesired effects? Sure,
but the same can be said of literally any other food crop, too. Mutations will happen. The probability of developing a toxin
are extremely remote, so it’s nothing to worry about. More importantly, GMOs have no more risk of this than any
other food product.
To further put the issue to rest, consider that GMOs, before
they’re approved for the market, are extremely well tested. They’re tested by the companies and
laboratories producing them (if you don’t trust these companies, consider that
there isn’t a very good business in producing products that are harmful to the
consumers). They’re also tested by
independent scientists and regulatory bodies. No tests have ever been done that can demonstrate any added
risk in GMOs that is absent in other crops.
I know the phrase “genetically modified” is scary to a lot
of people (personally, I find these kinds of technological breakthroughs
exciting rather than scary), but the simple fact of the matter is, there is no
such thing as an organism that is not genetically modified. The only difference is that in this
case, humans are selecting for and engineering desired traits, rather than
simply leaving everything to the evolutionary combination of chance and natural
selection. What’s more, humans
have been genetically modifying crops since the agricultural revolution. We selectively breed food crops. We hybridize plants to produce desired
phenotypes. The simple truth of
the matter is, there is no food item that reaches anyone’s table that is not
the product of human engineering of the genome.
Safety of the food products is simply not a good reason to
oppose GMOs. They are perfectly
safe.
But what about the ecological concerns? That’s where there may be some more
valid concerns, but I think I can briefly show you why it’s really nothing to
worry about. Basically, all of
these issues come down to unintended consequences not directly related to the
crops themselves.
First, there is a risk that crops that have been engineered
to include pesticides could potentially damage non-target species. In other words, if someone has
engineered a crop to keep a particular kind of insect away, it could be harmful
to other species of insects like butterflies. Indeed, there was some thought that particular GM crops were
harmful to Monarch Butterflies.
However, properly controlled studies have found that, in this case,
there is a negligible risk, and indeed that deployment of the GM crops has
coincided with an increase in the butterfly population. So that particular scare was
nonsense. Does that mean that
there’s no cause for concern here?
No. It just means that
scientists must be careful to consider potential ecological consequences when
developing crops. Indeed, GM crops
may be better for insect species than non-GM crops. How? Well think
of it this way: farmers are going to do whatever they can to keep harmful
insects away from their crops.
Traditional methods include spraying pesticides. But if a nontoxic deterrent is
engineered directly into a crop, it can be possible to keep the pests away
without actually causing harm to the insect populations.
The second type of unintended consequence is the creation of
new selective pressures that drive the evolution of other species. This is probably the one and only
problem that needs to be addressed, and it does not apply only to GMOs either,
but to any exotic factor introduced into an ecosystem. There are two basic types of this that
can occur. First is a rise in
secondary pests. It is possible
that a crop is resistant to a particular species of pest could suddenly (in the
absence of competition) become particularly attractive to a secondary pest
which is not targeted by the pesticide.
Secondly, as has actually happened, herbicide resistance may promote the
evolution of other herbicide resistant species. The idea is that farmers plant herbicide resistant crops so
that they can spray for weeds without damaging their desired crops. If they over-spray, they risk creating
a new selective pressure that causes the emergence of weed species that are
also resistant to herbicides. Both
of these are valid concerns.
However, both can be addressed by carefully monitoring ecological
consequences. Risk can also be
minimized simply by not over-spraying fields with herbicides (or by varying the
chemical composition of the herbicides to avoid having a single selective
pressure on the weed species).
Then there’s the matter of the possibility of gene flow to
neighboring crops. This does
happen, as plants interbreed, and can lead to the introduction of novel genetic
material into otherwise unaltered crops.
However, I fail to see the problem here. First of all, genetically modified crops, as with most
crops, are fairly well contained, so while this can happen, it’s unlikely to be
a common problem. Furthermore,
unless you have an irrational fear of GMOs, I fail to see why anyone
cares. All it’s likely to do is
make the neighboring farm more productive.
If anyone else can come up with other objections or
concerns, I would be curious to hear them so that I can do some further
research and determine their validity.
With that, we turn our attention to political or economic
objections, of which I can think really only of two basic categories. First is the idea that GMOs are
economically harmful to “small” farmers.
Second is a matter that has to do with intellectual property.
The matter that modified crops may be harmful to the farmers
of non-modified crops is, as far as I’ve been able to tell, largely unverified. Probably the most famous of these
claims is the accusation that once Monsanto entered the Indian seed market,
hundreds of thousands of Indian farmers have committed suicide, allegedly due
to economic hardship caused by Monsanto.
First of all, while any suicide is tragic, economic hardship is the risk
of doing business. If someone
sells a superior product at a better price, there should be no special protections
for the competition.
However, there’s good news: it’s a complete myth. Monsanto entered the Indian market in
2002. Between 1997 and 2007, there
was a rise in suicide rates in India from about 100,000 to 120,000. However, despite this rise in suicide
rates (already hardly the “hundreds of thousands” claimed by GMO opponents),
suicide rates among farmers remained constant, at around 20,000 per year. Indeed, farmers actually benefitted
from Monsanto’s entry into the Indian marketplace. Between 2002 and 2008, farmers’ yields increased by nearly
25%, with corresponding profit increases of about 50%.
So, at least in India, it seems that transgenic crops have
been a boon for farmers. And
that’s the way it generally is in other markets as well. If transgenic crops were to be widely
deployed around the world, the only people whose business would suffer would be
those silly enough to resist technological advance. Monsanto, for just one example, does its primary business
selling products to farmers. It’s
not just corporate giants, but “Farmer Jim” who benefits from biotechnology,
because the farmers are able to buy seeds capable of producing higher yields
(and higher profits) at lower cost.
Intellectual property claims are the worst-sounding of the
lot. People claim that companies
like Monsanto have filed lawsuits to protect their patents against farmers
whose crops were accidentally contaminated by patent-protected crops. However, this has not happened. Of Monsanto’s 145 lawsuits against
farmers, 11 defendants alleged that Monsanto’s crops had accidentally
contaminated their fields, and that they were being wrongfully sued for
something over which they had no control.
In fact, Monsanto won all eleven cases, and this defense has never been
shown to have any validity at all.
Monsanto’s policy (as with every other biotech company I’m aware of) is
not to sue farmers unless the infringement was deliberate. This is a perfectly reasonable business
practice, as biotech companies have a right to protect their patents--otherwise
there would be no profit to motivate research. Incidental growing of patented crops does not land farmers
in legal trouble.
Now, here’s why GMOs are essential: we don’t have enough
food. Billions of people around
the world are hungry. Millions die
of starvation, many of them children.
Genetically modified food crops are able to grow in locations other
crops would not. Furthermore,
genetic modification can allow for higher yields from the same amount of land.
Let me introduce you to Norman Borlaug--The Greatest Human
Being Who Ever Lived. He is one of
only seven people to have received a Nobel Peace Prize, the Presidential Medal
of Freedom, and the Congressional Gold Medal. He also received the Padma Vibhushan, India’s second highest
civilian honor. What did Dr.
Borlaug do to receive such honors, and to be known by many (including myself)
as the greatest human being in all of history? He developed semi-dwarf, high-yield, disease-resistant wheat
strains, which he then spent his life introducting to Mexico, Pakistan, India,
and much of Asia and Africa. What
was the result of this work? It is
generally estimated that his work saved a BILLION lives from starvation.
A BILLION people.
That’s what people who oppose genetic modification of food crops
advocate losing. And with the
human population expected to exceed 9 billion people by 2050, without a new
agricultural revolution, that number can only continue to increase. I don’t see several billion people willing
to die of starvation because of a few Westerners with more food than brains.
But the importance of biotechnology and GMOs is not limited
to prevention of doom and gloom.
Imagine a world in which the entire world has a surplus of food. Imagine what we could produce. Imagine the contribution to world
peace! Or if you prefer to think
small, think about the novel food items we could introduce to your local supermarket. Selective breeding produced fruits and
vegetables we like to eat (the desert banana does not even remotely resemble
its wild ancestor, for instance)--imagine what we could bring to the dinner
table without having to spend so many generations of selective breeding that
amounts to little more than trial and error!
What about opponents to GMOs? They’re not harmless.
As I already mentioned, if they are successful, they will cause a
holocaust of starvation in the developing world. But their effects are closer to home, too. They cost farmers more money and labor
to produce the same yield of crops, which is harmful to local and global
economies. Near and dear to my
heart, though, is the effect on science.
Anti-GMO activists have regularly destroyed crops, including those used
for research and not actually intended to be food crops.
Activists in India recently had a chilling effect. They persuaded the powers-that-be to
ban a particular genetically modified food crop, even though all evidence is
that it’s perfectly safe and generally speaking a good thing. But that’s not the end of it. While this only extended to particular
food crops, it had a chilling effect on Indian science. Researchers, who are perfectly within
their legal rights to conduct genetic experiments under Indian law, have found
that their funding has dried up as everyone is afraid of the politics now. I should not have to point out that
this is disastrous!
That all said, let’s go with a more dramatic change of
direction and talk about something completely different: transhumanism. Transhumanism is basically the perspective
that humans can and should be improved through technological advance. Like any technology, the technologies
involved in transhumanism can be used for good or for evil. Hitlerian ideals of a master race, for
instance, could be considered transhumanist, but are not representative of the
transhumanist movement, of which I am a member.
To me, transhumanism is just the logical next step of a
rational humanist philosophy. I am
first a humanist, and a transhumanist second. I believe that increasing technological capabilities can and
should be used to improve the human condition, both mentally and physically.
We all know Moore’s Law which has to do with the progression
of computer technology, and most of us are familiar with Ray Kurzweil’s related
Law of Accelerating Returns. The
idea is that technology begets new technology at an increasing pace, such that
things that are science fiction today may be science fact in the near
future. Philosophically, I
agree. Practically, I think much
of the transhumanist movement is overly optimistic. We probably will not see the singularity Kurzweil has been
waiting for within our lives. We
will probably not see radical life extension anytime soon. But these are admirable goals to aim
for.
Imagine a world in which people live much longer than they
do today. Perhaps a world in which
humans can achieve a sort of immortality by uploading their consciousness into
a computer system. Imagine a world
in which humans are physically improved and can do tasks only machines can do
today. This is transhumanism, and
it’s a good thing.
It seems that LS fears that transhumanism will turn us into
the Borg. Admittedly, because
technology is amoral and can be used toward good or evil ends, we must be
vigilant. However, there is no
reason to assume the worst, especially when considering that the vast majority
of the transhumanist movement share my ideals and philosophy.
Now, I’m unfamiliar with the linked Project 2045, so I can’t
comment on that, except to say that at a quick glance, I fail to see what’s
wrong with it (except perhaps that they’re overly optimistic about their
timeline).
If anyone can tell me why they might object to
transhumanism, or even just ask me questions about it, I would be happy to have
that discussion. As it stands, I
don’t understand the objections, so I feel ill equipped to lay misconceptions
to rest.
Now that I’ve laid out some of my thoughts, let us have
another look at that original post that I’m primarily responding to, with my
(brief) commentary interspersed:
“This is old news, [RMB]. The transhumanist movement is already well underway.”
If by “well underway,” you mean that there are a lot of
people thinking about it, then this is true. But the fundamental goal for much of transhumanism is radical
life extension, which is not within our grasp. As it stands, we have significantly extended average human
life expectancy, but if you think that’s the same thing, then you’re confusing
an increasing average for an increasing maximum. Humans just don’t live much beyond 100 years, and that
hasn’t changed throughout human history.
We just don’t die prematurely as much anymore.
I also fail to see how this might be construed as a bad
thing.
“Mansanto [sic] and the other elitist corporations”
I get it--Monsanto is the “villain du jour” these days,
though I don’t quite understand why.
But I’d like to know what “elitist corporations” means. As RMB pointed out, I’m not a corporate
apologist, but neither am I anti-corporate, and I fail to see anything elitist
about biotech companies that can “do good by doing well” and significantly
improve the lives of millions or billions of people.
If by “elitist” you simply mean that they value education
above superstition, then I can’t speak for the corporations, but I would
personally wear the “elitist” badge with pride.
“…are already changing our DNA through GMO crops, especially
corn.”
Nope. As I
explained above, this is untrue.
And I’m especially uncertain what corn has to do with anything, as most
GMOs are rice or wheat strains engineered to grow in different climates or with
an increased yield. Other
improvements have been herbicide resistance or natural pesticides.
“Check out www.2045.com
for the global agenda to turn us all into robots.”
Robots? While I
personally welcome the merger of humanity with technology (consider the “smart”
prosthetics currently hitting the market and tell me that’s a bad thing), I
fail to see this as anyone’s goal.
Robots, by most definitions, are not human, and so humans cannot become
robots. No one is trying to make
cornbots, so I really don’t know where you’re getting your information.
“This is not a joke.”
If you’re not joking, then I wish you were.
“Is anybody awake out there?”
Clearly, SOME people are, but I obviously cannot speak for
everyone.
Because of the magnitude of what I’ve been talking about, I’ll
let the late, great Dr. Borlaug have the last word: “Some of the environmental
lobbyists of the Western nations are the salt of the earth, but many of them
are elitists. They’ve never experienced the physical sensation of hunger. They
do their lobbying from comfortable office suites in Washington or
Brussels. If they lived just one month
amid the misery of the developing world, as I have for fifty years, they’d be
crying out for tractors and fertilizer and irrigation canals and be outraged
that the fashionable elitists back home were trying to deny them these things.”
6 comments:
One issue I seem to remember is that of "killer genes"; genes that make the crops infertile, so that the farmer can't take some of one harvest's yield to sow the next one, but instead must buy anew from the company. If such a gene would spread to neighboring non-GMO fields, it might significantly harm those farmers' economic structures. And what if the company supplying the sowable seeds for some reason fails to do so one season?
Now, I don't know how common these killer genes really are, but at first glance it does seem like something the GMO companies have an economic incentive to introduce - why teach a man to fish, if you instead can become his life-long fish merchant?
It doesn't really seem necessary, for one thing. Patent law protects biotech firms and they only license their customers on a season-by-season basis (in fact, that's what most of those Monsanto lawsuits had to do with). I'll admit it's not something that I'm familiar with, so I'd need to do some digging (or you could send me some sources).
Here's the thing, though. If they're infertile, there will be no gene flow to neighboring crops--infertile means no seeds get blown over. Horizontal gene transfer is possible but rare in multicellular organisms, and the odds of any particular modified locus being the site of such a transfer is essentially zero.
Oh, derp. Of course.
I do suppose it could be possible to engineer scenarios that counter that - suppose that the killer gene is transmitted on the pollen, but only renders the carpel infertile?
(It should be noted that I am not a biologist.)
I do not have any sources; this conjecture is based purely on vague recollection, flawed as it is.
Difficult to say. It's possible (but quite unlikely) that something could be transmitted on the pollen that would fertilize a neighboring plant and produce infertile offspring--but then all you've really done is pestered the neighboring farm with one generation of infertile weeds, without actually affecting the fertility of the crops as a whole.
I never like to say "impossible" because there are plenty of exceptions to damn near everything in biology. But I can't honestly think of a way off the top of my head that one would be able to have any real effects on neighboring crops.
Now, if one wanted to, one could engineer a virus or bacterium that, when released, could kill off a crop--or perhaps even infect plants and affect their fertility. But that would be a biological weapons technology, not an agricultural one.
Oh look, I did find a link: here you go.
Interesting. Though a quick reading just of that page (haven't looked at sources yet) confirms my thought that it isn't really much to worry about. As I suspected (above), Monsanto doesn't use them because their licensing contracts preempt the need for them. And it seems that the seeds just produce sterile plants so farmers couldn't save seeds and replant in perpetuity, which shouldn't have any further impact on other crops.
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