MSG is now sprayed on most
food & Baby Food
~ the incredible art of poison...? |
|
May
3, 2009 MSG Is
Being Sprayed On
Fruits, Veggies, Nuts,
Grains And Seeds
As They Are Growing...Even
Those Used In Baby Food
Truth In
www.Labeling.org
4-20-9
- In
the 1970s, reluctant food processors
"voluntarily" took processed free
glutamic acid (MSG) out of baby food.
Today it's back, in fertilizers called
"Omega Protein Refined/Hydrolyzed Fish
Emulsion" and "Steam Hydrolyzed Feather
Meal," both of which contain hydrolyzed
proteins; and in a product called
AuxiGro WP Plant Metabolic Primer (AuxiGro)
produced by Emerald BioAgriculture
(formerly Auxein Corporation), which
contains both hydrolyzed protein(s) and
"monosodium glutamate." AuxiGro is being
sprayed on some of the vegetables we and
our children will eat, into the air we
and our children must breath, and onto
the ground from which it can move into
drinking water. Head lettuce, leaf
lettuce, tomatoes, potatoes, and peanuts
were among the first crops targeted. On
September 12, 2000, the Auxein
Corporation Web site gave the following
information:
-
- Crops registered
include: Celery; Fresh Market Cucumbers;
Edible Navy and Pinto Beans; Grapes;
Bulb Onions; Bell, Green and Jalapeno
Peppers; Iceberg Head Lettuce; Romaine
and Butter Leaf Lettuce; Peanuts;
Potatoes; Snap Beans; Strawberries;
Processing Tomatoes; Fresh Tomatoes; and
Watermelons.
- Today, there is no
crop that we know of that has not been
approved for treatment with MSG by the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA).
-
- Even in California --
the only state where there are any
restrictions on the use of AuxiGro --
AuxiGro has been approved for use on a
number of crops, and Emerald
BioAgriculture continues to push for
more. Field tests in California have
been -- and may continue to be --
conducted on a variety of crops, and
those AuxiGro treated crops may be sold
in the open market without revealing
that they have been treated. We can't
tell you which crops those are because
the CDPR has refused to send records of
test trials (which are public
information) to the Truth in Labeling
Campaign.
-
- As of June 13, 2002,
AuxiGro was registered for use in
California on tomatoes, almonds,
apricots, cherries, plums, nectarines,
peaches, prunes, grapes (including
grapes to be used in wine), and onions.
At that time, the California Department
of Pesticide Regulation said they were
not aware of any testing of AuxiGro for
use on other crops. They also said that
they did not have any proposals
presently in house to register
additional crops for AuxiGro. It would
appear, however, that what the CDPR said
was not true, for the CDPR subsequently
announced that Emerald BioAgriculture
had applied for permission to use
AuxiGro on tomatoes (new use), and on
melons (new crop) -- and, to the best of
our knowledge, approval is always
preceded by field testing.
-
- On July 7, 2004,
Emerald BioAgriculture requested
approval of use of AuxiGro as a
desiccant, disinfectant, fertilizer,
fungicide, growth regulator - for
increased yield and prevention of
powdery mildew in various crops such as
almonds, grapes, and melons. They also
asked to add cole crops (including
broccoli, brussels sprouts, cabbage,
cauliflower, kale, collards, turnips,
rutabaga, mustard, watercress, and
kohlrabi) to the list of crops approved
for AuxiGro use.
-
- Approval for use on
organic crops--in all states--has been
requested.
-
- What's wrong with
using glutamic acid, an amino acid found
in protein, as a spray on crops?
-
- - In protein, amino
acids are found in balanced
combinations. Use of free glutamic acid
as a spray on crops throws the amino
acid balance out of kilter.
- - It's not the
glutamic acid found in protein that is
being sprayed on crops, it's a synthetic
product. The spray being used most
widely is called AuxiGro. The "free
glutamic acid" or so called "L-glutamic
acid" component being used by its
manufacturer, Emerald BioAgriculture,
contains L-glutamic acid, an amino acid
found in protein; but it also contains
D-glutamic acid, pyroglutamic acid, and
other chemicals referred to in the
industry as "contaminants." The free
glutamic acid used in AuxiGro is
processed free glutamic acid. It is
manufactured -- in chemical plants --
where certain selected genetically
engineered bacteria -- feeding on a
liquid nutrient medium -- excrete the
free glutamic acid they synthesize
outside of their cell membrane into the
liquid medium in which they are grown.
In contrast, the free glutamic acid
found in protein, and the free glutamic
acid involved in normal human body
function, are unprocessed. free glutamic
acid, and contain no contaminants.
-
- - No one knows what
the long term effects of spraying
processed free glutamic acid on crops
will be.
-
- - That the processed
free glutamic acid (MSG) will be
absorbed into the body of the plant and
into the fruit, nuts, seeds, or
vegetable it produces seems undeniable.
If it were not, the plant would not be
stimulated to grow. Neither Emerald
BioAgriculture or the EPA will address
this issue.
-
- - That there will be
residue left on crops has not been
disputed by Emerald BioAgriculture. But
no study of either the amount of that
residue, or the least amount of
processed free glutamic acid needed to
cause a reaction in an MSG-sensitive
person, has ever been done. "It should
wash off" doesn't mean it will wash off.
"It seems unlikely that such a small
amount would cause a reactions" doesn't
mean that a small amount will not cause
a reaction or have long term health
effects.
-
- - Free glutamic acid
is known to be toxic to the nervous
system. But the neurotoxic effects that
processed free glutamic acid will have
on animals that consume the plants on
which it is sprayed - effects over and
above any effects caused by external
glutamic acid residue - have never been
evaluated. Neither are there data on the
effects that spraying processed free
glutamic acid will have on drinking
water.
-
- - Consider, also,
that children are most at risk from the
effects of processed free glutamic acid.
Their undeveloped blood-brain barriers
leave them most at risk from exposure to
processed free glutamic acid. It has
been repeatedly demonstrated that infant
animals fed processed free glutamic acid
when young develop neuroendocrine
problems such as gross obesity, stunted
growth, and reproductive disorders later
in life, and that they also develop
learning disabilities. Emerald
BioAgriculture did not address that
particular safety issue in its
application to the EPA.
-
- - No one knows how
little glutamic acid is needed to kill a
single brain cell or to trigger an
adverse reaction.
-
- - Free glutamic acid
is a neurotransmitter. It causes nerves
to fire, carrying nerve impulses
throughout the nervous system.
-
- - Free glutamic acid
is a neurotoxin. Under certain
circumstances, free glutamic acid will
cause nerves to fire repeatedly, until
they die.
-
- - Processed free
glutamic acid kills brain cells. The
free glutamic acid ingested by
laboratory animals that caused brain
lesions and neuroendocrine disorders was
very often given in the form of the food
ingredient "monosodium glutamate."
"Monosodium glutamate" is the name of a
particular food additive. Processed free
glutamic acid is the reactive component
in "monosodium glutamate," just as
processed free glutamic acid is a
reactive component in AuxiGro.
-
- The glutamate
industry research done in the 1970s that
was submitted to the EPA by the Auxein
Corporation, that pretended to find that
processed free glutamic acid is "safe,"
has been long refuted by independent
scientists. Indeed, at the present time,
neuroscientists attempting to develop
drugs to block the toxic effects of free
glutamic acid are using processed free
glutamic acid to selectively kill
certain kinds of brain cells.
-
- - Processed free
glutamic acid causes neuroendocrine
disorders in maturing animals that
ingest processed free glutamic acid
early in life.
-
- - Processed free
glutamic acid causes learning disorders
in maturing animals that ingest
processed free glutamic acid early in
life.
-
- - Processed free
glutamic acid crosses the placental
barrier and causes learning disabilities
in animal offspring of dams that ingest
it.
-
- - Processed free
glutamic acid has access to the brain
through the blood-brain barrier, which
is not impervious to the unregulated
flow of processed free glutamic acid.
The blood-brain barrier is immature at
birth and may continue to develop up to
puberty. In certain areas called the
circumventricular organs, the blood
barrier is never impervious to the
unregulated flow of free glutamic acid.
In addition, the blood-brain barrier is
easily damaged by such events as high
fever, a blow to the head, drug use,
stroke, ingestion of processed free
glutamic acid, and the normal process of
aging.
-
- - The National
Institutes of Health recognize glutamic
acid as being associated with addiction,
stroke, epilepsy, degenerative disorders
such as Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's
disease, and ALS, brain trauma,
neuropathic pain, schizophrenia,
anxiety, and depression.
-
- - For years, free
glutamic acid has been produced and used
in food additives with names such as
monosodium glutamate, sodium caseinate,
and hydrolyzed soy protein. In some
people, the processed free glutamic acid
in food additives causes adverse
reactions that include migraine
headache, asthma, arrhythmia,
tachycardia, nausea and vomiting,
depression, and disorientation. The
processed free glutamic acid in
prescription and non-prescription drugs,
food supplements, and cosmetics can also
cause adverse reactions.
-
- There are badly
flawed industry-sponsored studies that
have pretended to find that processed
free glutamic acid does not cause
adverse reactions. Inappropriate
procedures used by the glutamate
industry have included limiting subjects
to people virtually guaranteed not to be
sensitive to processed free glutamic
acid, and/or using processed free
glutamic acid or other similarly
reactive substances in placebos as well
as in test material. The Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) has based its claim
that processed free glutamic acid causes
only mild and transitory reactions on
those badly flawed industry-sponsored
studies.
-
- - Even the EPA admits
that the food additive called
"monosodium glutamate" causes adverse
reactions.
-
- - Even the FDA admits
that the food additive "monosodium
glutamate" contains processed free
glutamic acid.
- - Even the FDA admits
that many consumers refer to all free
glutamic acid as "MSG."
-
- The EPA's approvals
of use of MSG in agriculture are simple,
straightforward, and in violation of the
Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act
-
- In reviewing the
application of Auxein Corporation (now
Emerald BioAgriculture) for use of
processed free glutamic acid in a spray
to be applied to crops as they grow, the
EPA failed to conform to the
requirements of the Federal Food, Drug
and Cosmetic Act, which require, in
part, that the EPA review any proposed
action for validity, completeness,
reliability, and relationship to human
risk. The EPA also ignored Executive
Order 13045 which requires government
agencies to consider available
information concerning the variability
of the sensitivities of major
identifiable subgroups of consumers,
including infants and children. For
example, Auxein Corporation sent the EPA
14 industry-sponsored toxicological
studies from the literature, all done in
the 1970's, but failed to mention
hundreds of studies in the literature
that refuted those 14 studies. Auxein
Corporation even failed to send the EPA
independent studies that appeared in the
same book(s) as the industry-sponsored
studies sent to the EPA. For example,
although processed free glutamic acid
causes brain lesions and neuroendocrine
disorders in infant animals, this
special hazard faced by infants was
ignored by Auxein Corporation. It would
appear that Auxein Corporation
restricted its consideration of
"available information" to information
made available by the glutamate
industry; and the EPA, even after having
been sent abstracts from other
"available information," has not
challenged the Auxein Corporation
applications. A more complete discussion
of the shortcomings of the EPA approvals
granted to Auxein Corporation has been
submitted to the EPA.
-
- Questions about the
safety of spraying processed free
glutamic acid on plants and into the
environment have been raised by the
Truth in Labeling Campaign and by
individual consumers. The EPA has
refused to address those concerns. The
EPA, and, in particular, EPA
spokesperson Dr. Janet Andersen, has
failed to respond to allegations that in
approving the spraying of processed free
glutamic acid, the EPA failed to
consider the reliability, validity, and
completeness of the Auxein Corporation
application or comply with Executive
Order 13045 entitled Protection of
Children from Environmental Health Risks
and Safety Risks, except to say that the
EPA had complied with executive order
13045. Moreover, while responding to
letters that asked direct questions of
the EPA, Andersen failed to respond to
most, if not all, of the direct
questions contained in those letters.
-
- AuxiGro, the first
MSG-laced plant "growth enhancer" to hit
the market, has been approved for
spraying on every crop we know of, with
no restrictions on the amount of
processed free glutamic acid (MSG) that
may remain in and/or on crops when
brought to market. Even before consumers
had an inkling that crops were being
sprayed, the Truth in Labeling Campaign
received reports that MSG-sensitive
consumers had gotten sick from head
lettuce and potatoes.
-
- Federal Register
notices chronicling the application and
approval of processed free glutamic acid
are available on the Web via GPO Access,
the Federal Register, through:
<http://www.gpoaccess.gov/fr/index.html>http://www.gpoaccess.gov/fr/index.html.
Application for approval of use of
AuxiGro was made to the EPA in 1997.
Testing of the product was also approved
in that year, and many of the test crops
sprayed with AuxiGro were brought to
market without notifying consumers.
Glutamic acid was granted an exemption
from establishment of a tolerance limit
in January, 1998. AuxiGro was also
approved for use on a number of crops in
January, 1998, and approved for use on
other crops later. No announcement of
these approvals was made in the Federal
Register.
-
- Due to a technical
glitch in the system, the glutes came to
need one more approval to make their
California registrations work. The
glutes were asking for AuxiGro to be
approved for use as a fungicide in
California, but the EPA had only
approved AuxiGro for use as a pesticide
produce or plant growth enhancer. And
when application was made for this
addition to their approvals, the
application was brought to our
attention; and the Truth in Labeling
Campaign filed a formal protest to this
approval of AuxiGro.
<http://truthinlabeling.org/msg-objection-s1.html>The
Formal Objection of the Truth in
Labeling Campaign was filed on August
16, 2001 with the EPA.
-
- By law, formal
objections filed in a timely manner must
be responded to within six months. Also,
by law (we were told) even though the
Final Rule had not been promulgated,
this additional use of AuxiGro would be
considered approved unless and until the
EPA determined that it should be
otherwise. In July, 2004, we received a
conference call from Dr. Andersen and a
number of other EPA players, including
an EPA lawyer -- a "courtesy call"
telling us that our objections had been
discounted and that the Final Rule
allowing use of AuxiGro as a fungicide
would be published shortly in the
Federal Register.
-
- What's wrong at the
EPA?
-
- Neither the EPA nor
Janet Andersen, Ph.D., director of the
Biopesticides and Pollution Prevention
Division (BPPD), are stupid. Rather, all
evidence would appear to suggest that
the EPA, which is charged with
protecting the health of Americans, says
it is protecting the health of
Americans, when in fact the EPA acts to
protect the bottom line of big business.
Don't think for a moment that MSG is the
only toxin unleashed on the American
public by the EPA. Let the words "methyl
parathion" and "DDT" jog your memory.
- The EPA, in granting
the chemical referred to as "L-glutamic
acid" an exemption from the requirement
of a tolerance for residues of
"L-glutamic acid" on all food
commodities when applied/used in
accordance with good agricultural
practices (thereby allowing unrestricted
amounts of processed free glutamic acid
(MSG) residue to remain in and on any
and all food crops that come under the
EPA's jurisdiction) violated Section
408(c)(2)(A)(i), Section 408(c)(2)(ii),
Section 408(c)(2)(B), and Section
408(b)(2)(D) of the Federal Food, Drug,
and Cosmetic Act.
-
- Neither "L-Glutamic
Acid and Gamma Aminobutyric Acid;
Exemptions from the Requirement of a
Tolerance; Final Rule" (Federal Register
June 21, 2001) nor "Glutamic Acid;
Pesticide Tolerance Exemption; Final
Rule" (Federal Register January 7,
1998), which preceded it, met the
criteria established by law for granting
exemptions from the restriction of a
tolerance.
- How did spokesperson
Andersen excuse the fact that the EPA
approved processed free glutamic acid
for use in an EPA approved spray? First,
said Andersen, the free glutamic acid
used in the spray is naturally
occurring, and it's 99.3 per cent pure
pharmaceutical grade L-glutamic acid.
Yet, in admitting that the free glutamic
acid in AuxiGro is not 100 per cent pure
L-glutamic acid, and that it is
pharmaceutical grade, Andersen
contradicted herself, and actually made
the point that 1) if the free glutamic
acid used in AuxiGro were truly natural,
it wouldn't be "pharmaceutical grade;"
and 2) if the free glutamic acid used in
AuxiGro were truly natural it would be
100 per cent, not 99.3 per cent pure
L-glutamic acid.
-
- Andersen said
something else very interesting. She
said that the EPA is well aware of the
fact that MSG causes adverse reactions.
However, when Andersen used the term
"MSG" she was referring to the one food
ingredient called "monosodium
glutamate," and not to the free glutamic
acid in "monosodium glutamate" that
causes adverse reactions. Failure to
define terms, asAnderson did (and does)
so handily, is both deceptive and
misleading.
-
- What Andersen did is
very clever. What she said makes no
sense at all. No one has ever claimed
that the processed free glutamic acid in
AuxiGro comes out of a box labeled
"monosodium glutamate." So for her to
say it doesn't, is meaningless. On the
other hand, the claim has been made that
the free glutamic acid in AuxiGro will
cause the same brain lesions,
neuroendocrine disorders, adverse
reactions and other diverse disease
conditions that are caused by the free
glutamic acid in "monosodium glutamate"
and the other food additives that
contain processed free glutamic acid.
That claim is true, but Andersen does
not address it. How do you refute
someone who ignores legitimate questions
and spews out irrelevant statements as
though they pertained to your legitimate
questions? You don't. The EPA defense of
its approval of use of processed free
glutamic acid in plant "growth
enhancers" and its registration of
AuxiGro has two parts to it: 1) ignoring
those who question EPA actions, and 2)
making the irrelevant statement that
AuxiGro does not contain MSG (monosodium
glutamate).
-
- Neither Andersen nor
anyone else at the EPA ever addressed
the criticism that approvals given by
the EPA to allow the use of free
glutamic acid and the product AuxiGro
were inappropriate.
- The EPA, which
approved the used of processed free
glutamic acid in plant "growth
enhancers," made a grievous error. But
instead of recognizing and remedying
that error once it was pointed out to
them, the EPA began a cover-up. That
cover-up included use of ambiguous words
and phrases, half-truths, and downright
lies told to consumers. The cover-up
continued (and continues still) with a
variation of those ambiguous words and
phrases, half-truths, and downright lies
told to legislators who inquire about
spraying MSG into the environment.
-
- You might find the
Emerald BioAgriculture sales literature
interesting
-
- Sales literature
promoting AuxiGro was once found on
their Web site, but is now long gone.
While Federal Register notices included
the fact that there is processed free
glutamic acid (MSG) in AuxiGro, the
sales literature from Auxein Corporation
did not mention the fact that their
product contains free glutamic acid
until the Truth in Labeling Campaign
began to broadcast that information. In
November, 1999, Auxein added deceptive,
misleading, and untrue statements in an
elaboration of its Product Page, wherein
they essentially make the untrue
assertion that the glutamic acid used in
AuxiGro is chemically and biologically
identical to that found in plants and
animals.
-
- Sales literature did
(on September 12, 2000), however,
contain the following:
-
- "PRECAUTIONARY
STATEMENTS
-
- HAZARDS TO HUMAN AND
DOMESTIC ANIMALS CAUTION"
-
- If you think you
might be reacting to AuxiGro sprayed on
crops, you might want to try to (contact
Emerald BioAgriculture (formerly Auxein
Corporation) at the addresses that
follow. (A friend recently told us that
he tried to contact them by e-mail, but
his e-mail was returned unopened.) By
law, the company is required to forward
reports of adverse reactions to the EPA.
You might want to ask the EPA if Emerald
BioAgriculture did so.
- John L. Mclntyre,
Ph.D.
- President & CEO
- Emerald
BioAgriculture (formerly Auxein
Corporation)
- 3125 Sovereign Drive,
Ste. B
- Lansing, MI
48911-4240
- Phone (888) 828-9346
- Fax (517) 882-7521
- mailto:%20sales@auxein.com
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