Social media has fundamentally changed how we communicate with each other.
GMO
Attacking pesticides is sexy. Many activists, lawyers and journalists have made careers out of propagating a simple, compelling narrative about the chemicals farmers use to produce our food.
Laboratory grown muscle cells from various animals are quickly becoming a commercial reality; they are already real food, at least in Singapore, the only country that has approved their use as a human food.
California-based law firm Baum Hedlund was founded by Church of Scientology lawyers and has had close ties to the cult for decades.
Social media platforms shouldn't be trusted to censor scientific “misinformation.” As we've reported in recent months, such efforts by tech companies like Facebook are crippled by partisanship and double standards.
If you remember your high-school US history class, you know that prohibition was an abject failure.
“Florigen-regulating genes have been repeatedly modified by breeders in crops as diverse as tomatoes, soybeans, potatoes, beans, strawberries, barley, sugar beet, rice, and wheat.
Last month, comedian Russell Brand gave his YouTube followers a 17-minute lecture about Bill Gat
“Are GMOs making you sick?” That's the question posed by the Institute for Responsible Technology (IRT) in an alarming April 2
Just six years ago, America was engaged in a ferocious debate over GMO food labels; March Against Monsanto could