This is the same chemical that was advertised as "safer than table salt" and "practically nontoxic" in earlier Roundup marketing campaigns.
If you've ever used it even for killing weeds in your yard, you surely know that this stuff kills almost anything in its path. It's not something you want on your body, let alone inside of it.
> If you've ever used it even for killing weeds in your yard, you surely know that this stuff kills almost anything in its path. It's not something you want on your body, let alone inside of it.
Neither would you want most organic pesticides inside your body.
I'm not sure if this is sarcasm... but if you actually trust/believe that farmers don't cheat during facility inspections, I don't know what to tell you. Every USDA organic farm I've ever had an inside track on is guilty, and that's quite a few. There is no random testing of domestic crops, only imports.[1] Domestic producers are subject to compliance, but the process is scheduled, typically sampling happens onsite, and the FDA makes announcements about crops it plans to investigate.[2]
My understanding from talking with experts is that imported produce in particular is subject to significantly greater oversight than domestic produce.
>>but if you actually trust/believe that farmers don't cheat during facility inspections, I don't know what to tell you. Every USDA organic farm I've ever had an inside track on is guilty, and that's quite a few
This is how half the country feels about election officials.
The people who feel that way about election officials have missed the forest for the trees. The US is a one party state, elections don't matter because the runners are decided by those with the capital to finance them
According to this pdf[1] they may take soil or tissue samples, but primarily the inspection leans on self-reporting. I’d wager that the (3rd party) inspector is mostly checking that you are following your Organic System Plan. There is also nothing stopping the certifier from sending out a separate consultant the week before to make sure their customer has all their ducks in a row. I know thats a thing for ISO certificates.
Fwiw, most regulatory agencies I’m familiar with in the US rely heavily on self-reporting.
Glyphosate interferes with the shikimate pathway which is not found in animals. It takes large ingested quantities to cause any side effects probably related to the preservatives not the Glyphosate itself.
Would you drink a glass water mixed with organic fertilizer (manure)? Just because something is good or bad for a plant does not mean its is good or bad for humans. Pure water will kill you if you drink enough, toxicity is all about the dose and we do not get enough dose of glyphosate through any mean to cause health problems through any known mechanism.
I get your point, I just think the idea of drinking roundup is humorous. Mostly because I did a lot of landscaping in my teenage years and wouldn't be caught near that chemical without excess PPE. The answer seems to be 85ml though:
If you've ever used it even for killing weeds in your yard, you surely know that this stuff kills almost anything in its path. It's not something you want on your body, let alone inside of it.