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Halloween Genes

Rotters Newsire | 28.10.2001 16:26

Time to "lighten" up! :)



Halloween Genes

London, Oct 24, (Rotters Newswire) - According to this story, the beleaguered biotech company Monsinto plan to patent a pumpkin which glows in the dark. A leaked report from Monsinto's HQ apparently reveals that the company aims to corner the lucrative Halloween market by adding jellyfish genes to pumpkins to make them emit a yellowish light. The report also outlines plans to introduce a 'terminator' gene to ensure that the pumpkins stop glowing once Halloween is over.

Monsinto refused to confirm the leaked report. However a spokesman told us that luminous pumpkins have been in the pipeline for some time. When asked what possible benefits such pumpkins could provide for mankind, he replied that they would save energy because they don't require candles.

Monsinto's PR department dismissed claims that large fields of GM pumpkins glowing eerily at night would confirm the publics' worst fears about Monsinto's 'Frankenstein food' image, and could further weaken the company's poor share performance.

Trick or treat indeed!

Rotters Newswire 2001. Anti(-C)copyright (Rb:)

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Seriously though boys and girls. Do try and avoid eating yellow crookneck squash from the USA (unless it's organic) because those scary biotech people have laced some varities with foreign genes; and although they may not glow in the dark (just yet), they could well be bad for you.
(See: "EDF Condemns USDA Approval of Genetically Engineered Squash")
 http://www.edf.org/pubs/NewsReleases/1994/Dec/d_asgrow.html
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"Swapping genes between organisms can produce unknown toxic
effects and allergies that are most likely to affect children"
- Dr Vyvyan Howard: expert in infant toxico-pathology at Liverpool
University, UK. (Ref: The Guardian: 19/3/98)

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"If you look at the simple principle of genetic modification it spells ecological disaster. There are no ways of quantifying the risks...The solution is simply to ban the use of genetic modification in food."
-Dr Harash Narang, microbiologist and senior research associate at the University of Leeds, who originally caused a scientific and political storm by claiming a link between mad cow disease and CJD in humans.


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Rotters Newsire

Comments

Hide the following 2 comments

some people will fall for anything

28.10.2001 19:18

Hey Rotter
you know they have removed gullible from the most recent dictionary :>

L.O.L.


no, this is true

29.10.2001 18:31

i am afraid that this isn't a joke LOL, but absolutely true. This type of engineering has already happened in the US. Companies want to create Christmas trees with glowing jellyfish genes so that they will glow in the dark, and presumabley sell better. The assumption is that consumers will pay big $$$ for the novelty of having a glowing Xmas tree. I'm not sure if they've already been created, but they are definitely being worked on. There is also an American artist (whose name escapes me) who, in the name of "art", wants to crossbreed a glowing bunny rabbit by breeding these same genes into it. His "art" display will consist of a luminescent rabbit in a cage. If you do a little searching online you will find info about these stories in the American press-- they are not hidden-- the individuals and companies involved are pretty open about what they're trying to do.

This type of shit is why the biotech industry is so scary. It goes a lot further than corn and soybeans, they want to taint all kinds of plants (and even animals) with stuff like this.

yank activist