I have to add that IMHO it had a lot to do also because many did ignore or willfully ignored that evolution is a real thing.
Yes, and widespread and uncontrolled use leads to insects being resistant.
You don’t have to look hard at all. This stuff has been spewing out of anti-GMO and pseudo-environmental websites for months. It has all the perfect ingredients such as Monsanto (though the larvacide is not made by Monsanto or any company it owns or controls), government coverup etc.
What’s irresponsible is pretending that embracing pseudoscience and its accompanying conspiracy theories is only a right-wing foible.
Sorry that the mention of anti-GMOers latching onto the larvacide meme sent you into elliptical orbit. But it’s been linked with anti-GMO sentiment from the beginning.
*"The leader of Médicos de Pueblos Fumigados, Dr. Ávila Vazquez has come under fire for making giant albeit unfounded scientific leaps. In 2014 for example, Dean of Agricultural Sciences at the National University of Cordoba, Juan Marcelo Conrero called for an investigation into Vazquez’s research, for overreaching conclusions in a study linking genetically engineered crops and agrochemicals to cancer, infertility and birth defect rates in the town of Monte Maiz, 300 kilometers from Cordoba.
Médicos de Pueblos Fumigados is far from a scientifically sound organization. With its (translated) “Manifesto Against Pesticides” asserting that pesticide use is malicious, and a website littered with citations from the oft-ridiculed, retracted rat study from Gilles-Eric Seralini claiming a since thoroughly-debunked link between herbicides, GMOs and cancer, Vazquez’s group of physicians is more fringe than credible; more biased than objective.
Shortly after Conrero requested the administrative inquiry for spreading fear without evidence that agrochemicals cause cancer and other health problems, a group of academics, scientific authorities and social leaders from twelve countries wrote a letter in Vazquez’s defense. With signatories like Zen Honeycutt, head of anti-GMO group Moms Across America, who believes that organic food can cure autism, international anti-GMO leader Vandana Shiva, known for butchering science and deemed a “dangerous fabulist” and part of the “lunatic fringe,” and anti-GMO leader and yogic levitator Jeffrey Smith, the letter featured the cream of the agricultural conspiracy theorist crop."*
While I haven’t yet read the more recent study Breitbart et al are embracing, one of its authors is a colleague of Nassim Taleb, a financial risk analyst turned anti-GMO advocate. They were co-authors on an earlier paper (written under the auspices of an “extreme risk initiative”) warning of “ruin in the future” from using genetically modified crops (unless we follow their advice on dealing with “systemic risk” of GMOs, which they eloquently equated to a “gambler’s ruin problem”).
So maybe the “precautionary principle” is advisable in evaluating this latest work, not to mention acknowledging that the link between Zika and microcephaly is on solid ground. ![]()