Featured in Weekly Newsletter
Viewpoint: Challenging more misinformation about glyphosate: No, it does not cause Celiac disease or alter gluten structure
I can’t wait for the day when anti-science activists decide to cling to an entirely different pesticide to fixate on ...
Viewpoint: The Greens are wrong — Here’s why humanity is good for nature
Over the past few years, we have been subject to endless media reports on the devastating impact humanity is having ...
Viewpoint: Nuclear power, pesticides, obesity and global warming: Examining the politics behind four contentious science debates
Gaslighting has now become a popular term again based on telling people not to believe what their lying eyes are telling them ...
28 years of research: Rebuking claims by many environmental groups, cell phones do not cause cancer
A systematic review into the potential health effects from radio wave exposure has shown mobile phones are not linked to ...
Viewpoint: ‘Complaining about failing crop yields in Africa without posing a solution is whining’ — Here’s what’s needed to reverse it
A recent research article— “Crop yields fail to rise in smallholder farming systems in sub-Saharan Africa” — uses 7 models, ...
Viewpoint: Probiotics are not regulated by the FDA. Do they even work?
Probiotics, also referred to as live biotherapeutic products (LBPs), are products that contain live organisms, such as bacteria, that are found naturally ...
Is glyphosate weedkiller a danger to humans, bees and the environment? Addressing 10 controversial claims
Agricultural advances have made farming and our foods safer and more abundant than at any other time in history. Everyone ...
Viewpoint: Science colonialism — Europe and the United Nations are blocking crop biotechnology poised to address global hunger
Wealthy countries with natural 'breadbaskets' - places where it is easy to grow food - have so much abundance they ...
Genetic research and consent: Revisiting the Human Genome Project and ethical concerns
One person’s DNA became the centerpiece of a genetic sequence used by biologists the world over. Did he agree to ...
Glucose monitoring wearables for type 1 diabetes sufferers are a fad for athletes, and others are following. Let’s weigh the benefits—and dangers
Blood sugar monitors (aka continuous glucose monitors or CGMs) have been ubiquitous for people with diabetes. But now they are ...
Viewpoint: Here’s a reform roadmap to guide regulators as they seek to modernize oversight of the fast-innovating agricultural biotechnology industry
In 1986, the United States established a “Coordinated Framework for the Regulation of Biotechnology.” In the decades since, this policy ...
Clickbait viral headlines claim that chemicals are sending cancer rates soaring. That’s not what the science says
Cancer is widely misunderstood by most people. If you talk to anyone, they would know the term cancer. Most people ...
Reducing the impact of agricultural chemicals: Accelerated adoption of IPM—Integrated Pest Management—reduces the threat of weed resistance and chemical overuse
Modern pesticides have boosted agricultural efficiency and yields, reducing labor while controlling pests. However, regulatory pressures and inevitable pest resistance ...
How anti-Semitism shaped the genes of Jewish people
Evidence of past outrages is not only in the history books. It's also written in our genomes ...
Fool me once: What is ‘genomic surveillance’ and how might it help predict the next global pandemic?
COVID took the world by stunned surprise – but, to quote an old Who song, we won’t be fooled again ...
Colchicine surprise: As America’s heart disease crisis escalates, repurposing an older drug originally designed to address a different malady could save millions of lives
“Live long and prosper?” Maybe that Star Trek Vulcan blessing needs a rethink in the United States. ...
GLP podcast: Treating brain diseases with parasites; FDA rejects ecstasy treatment for PTSD; $6 billion—the cost of baby powder lawsuits
A parasite that causes deadly infections may help doctors treat Parkinson's Disease. The FDA wants better evidence before it approves ...
The Human Genome Project: Inside the ‘most important biomedical research undertaking of the 20th Century’
The Human Genome Project was a landmark global scientific effort whose signature goal was to generate the first sequence of ...
Viewpoint: Weaponized incompetence? The ethical and science contradictions of the International Agency for Research on Cancer’s controversial ‘probable carcinogen’ assessment of glyphosate
A plaintiff lawyer in a recent glyphosate litigation produced an International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) document claiming that ...
Viewpoint: The word “toxic” brandished by Environmentalist crusaders causes fear and anxiety — but chemistry has proven that dose makes the poison
I’m sure you’ve heard someone say: “oh, I don’t use product [X], that is toxic!” Maybe you’ve even uttered a similar ...
Mosquito massacre: Can we safely tackle malaria with a CRISPR gene drive?
CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing quickly decimated two caged populations of malaria-bearing mosquitoes (Anopheles gambiae) in a recent study, introducing a new ...
Debunking the ‘MSG is harmful’ myth: How baseless stories spawn enduring food fears
Monosodium Glutamate (MSG) is the poster child for food additive fear, chemophobia, and the harms of using anecdotes as evidence ...
Is your cheese GMO? The Non-GMO Project and other activists claim 90% of cheeses in America are ‘tainted’. Here are the facts
In cheese production, the need to use traditional rennet obtained from calf stomachs has largely been removed because of a ...
Viewpoint: A ‘rolling wave of local media stories’ claim PFAS chemicals are toxic and contaminate drinking water. What are the facts?
Articles in a local newspaper in New Jersey and North Carolina demonstrate a national “pandemic” – stories describing widespread PFAS contamination in drinking ...
GLP podcast: China bans ‘irresponsible’ germline editing; losing weight causes cancer? Modern culture could drive mental health issues
China has banned germline gene editing, calling the technology, "irresponsible and not permitted." A recent study suggested that losing weight ...
Hidden threat to wild bees? Honeybees, including those raised by well-meaning suburbanites and city-dweller hobbyists believing they are helping the environment
Canada is home to more than 800 species of wild bees — few may have noticed the diversity of native ...
Viewpoint: How vaccine rejectionists lie to you — and what are the consequences?
There have been at least 10 outbreaks of measles across twenty states already this year, an alarming and dramatic surge ...