Friday, October 27, 2017

Monsanto attacks scientists after studies show trouble for weedkiller Dicamba...

In a normal year, Kevin Bradley, a professor of weed science at the University of Missouri, would have spent his summer testing new ways to control a troublesome little plant called water hemp.

This has not been a normal year.

"I don't even talk about weed management anymore," Bradley tells me, and he sounds disgusted. "Nobody calls me and ask me those questions. I barely have time to even work with my graduate students. Everything is about dicamba. Every single day."

Dicamba, an old weedkiller that is being used in new ways, has thrust Bradley and a half-dozen other university weed scientists into the unfamiliar role of whistleblower, confronting what they believe are misleading and scientifically unfounded claims by one of the country's biggest seed and pesticide companies: Monsanto.

"It's not comfortable. I'm like anybody else, I don't like [it when] people are unhappy with me," says Mike Owen, a weed specialist at Iowa State University. Then he chuckles. "But sometimes, like John Wayne said, a man's got to do what a man's got to do!" Full story...

Related posts:
  1. Monsanto was its own ghostwriter for some safety reviews...
  2. One million sign petition for EU Monsanto weedkiller ban...
  3. Monsanto's Roundup gave us cancer as EPA official helped...
  4. Glyphosate: Can you handle the truth?
  5. How long have vaccines been tainted with Monsanto's Roundup's
  6. Is Monsanto responsible for a 90 percent drop in the bumblebee population?

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