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Date: | Fri, 5 Oct 2007 11:50:52 GMT |
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>>...why anyone would want to bother to
irradiate honey if the honey was to be eaten by
humans ... expensive way to feed bees ....
While I agree with the above position...
>>... consumers have a very negative reaction
to food that has been irradiated even though the
process does nothing but good. (Yet another example of
the price of a of basic science education.)
...I don't agree that it is conclusive that irradiated food is safe for consumption (www.ccnr.org/food_irradiation.html).
The groups pushing for irradiation also have requested that irradiated food be label as pastuarized since the 'process is essentially the same.'
As a consumer, my demand is to have every food, processed or otherwise, to be clearly labelled as having been irradiated, containing GMOs, etc. And to have a choice.
I don't accept the FDA's position as the absolute truths. They have reversed their positions way too many times.
As for science and scientists I respect good science and scientists with integrity (the same goes for medicine and its pratitioners).
My wish is that the design of scientific experiments be done more rigorously; good science should be R&R (repeatable and reproduceable). If I, as a non-scientific person, look up scientific studies that tested a particular hypothesis and find 8,000 studies with one conclusion and 2,000 studies with an opposite conclusion which group do I trust? How do I determine which group applied better methodology and controls without repeating their experiments myself? It does not take much to skew a study to lead to one's expected conclusion.
Waldemar
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