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History of Technology 3: Monsanto and Toxin Resistant Crops 5 Views


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Description:

Toxin resistant crops sounds like something straight out of a Marvel movie. ...Actually, we'd watch that movie. Have your people call ours, Marvel.

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English Language

Transcript

00:00

Shmoop! Agriculture, well corporations and scientists were chomping at the bit to

00:07

use our DNA, to change the DNA of Crops. Because you never know there could have

00:13

been a huge market for glow-in-the-dark corn. Well the very first genetically

00:18

altered plant to hit the market was called, the flavor saver tomato. Popping

00:24

up in 1994, the flavor saver was super popular, for a hot second at least. The not [tomatoes on shelf in store]

00:29

so mad scientist, who invented the flavor saver, altered its DNA, so that it would

00:34

stay riper for a longer period of time and rumor has it that they actually

00:39

tasted pretty good. Way to go Franken tomato. Unlike most genetically

00:45

modified foods in America today, the flavor saver was labeled as a GMO, meaning a

00:51

genetically modified organism. If you slapped in a pair of bolts in it would

00:56

have scared too many people off. Well regardless, consumers totally knew

01:00

what they were getting. Because the company was transparent about the whole

01:03

thing. There were still critics who said, that it was too early, to be marketing [people rioting with posters]

01:06

GMOs, there hadn't been long-term testing. What if the flavor saver caused cancer,

01:12

or scrambled human DNA. Turning us into half human, half tomato monsters? Well

01:18

unfortunately, we never got to find out. Yep, unfortunately, how cool would be if

01:23

being a half human, half tomato being. Well that begs the question, would [man wearing a tomato in an Italian restaurant]

01:28

eating marinara be considered cannibalism? Anyway the company that made

01:33

flavor savor didn't last to long. It was bought out by Monsanto, a mega

01:37

corporation that's now one of the kingpins, of GMOs, herbicides and

01:42

pesticides. No one's seen a flavor saver since they bought them out. Though they

01:46

may be lurking in a Monsanto basement somewhere. Well pop that thing up on eBay [crate full of tomatoes]

01:51

we bet it would make a fortune. Well one of the big things that corporations like

01:54

Monsanto started experimenting with, was the ability to have plants that just

01:59

naturally produced pesticides. Wait, what? What kind of black magic is

02:05

that? Well it turns out there.this bacteria called, Bacillus thuringiensis

02:11

or BT, which produces a toxin that kills bugs and guess what, those evil sorcerers,

02:17

we mean scientist, figured out how to make corn, cotton and potatoes, that have

02:22

BT already inside of them. Farmers all over the world, have been growing them

02:27

like crazy and then they're still controversial. Because come on, plants

02:31

infuse with the traits of a deadly bacteria. That sounds like a horror novel [man in wheat field with live bush]

02:36

just waiting to happen. BT fans say, these kind of crops make

02:41

more food and reduce the need to spray pesticides. But critics say that BT crops

02:47

will kill all the nice species of bugs like, monarch butterflies and Charlotte, from Charlottes

02:52

Webb. Yeah try living with that death on your conscience. Well they also say that

02:58

a lot of pests, will become resistant to the toxin. So there's no simple answers

03:02

here and may mean world destruction, or it may mean nothing at all. [man beating on computer]

03:06

Another majorly successful experiment for Monsanto, has been making what they

03:10

call, Roundup Ready crops. Basically once they had crops that killed bugs, they

03:16

needed cross that were resistant to herbicides. The idea was that farmers

03:20

would spray their whole field with herbicides and only their genetically

03:24

modified crops would be able to survive, leaving the weeds to die in drove. That's [corn field]

03:30

exactly what Monsanto made, there are now varieties of corn, soybeans, canola,

03:34

alfalfa and cotton, that are totally resistant to glyphosate, the main poison

03:39

in roundup, from Monsanto's herbicide. In 2010, more than 70% of the corn grown in the

03:44

US, was Roundup Ready. Yep Monsanto might as well go ahead and smack its

03:49

label on the entire US. It's probably no shock that there's some controversy here.

03:53

Some people think herbicide resistant plants, let farmers use more and more

03:57

herbicides, which could hurt the environment. Plus they worry that Roundup

04:01

Ready crops might not be safe for humans to eat. Monsanto of course says its opponents

04:06

are overreacting and need to take chill pills and inside sources say that

04:10

Monsanto is already working towards cornering the market on chill pills. [woman scientist in lab]

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