Farmers in Vietnam, who’ve only just started using herbicides in the past two years, are suffering from terrible symptoms, even dozens of deaths. On top of that, and seemingly in coincidence, wild mutant dogs have been terrorizing villages, attacking and killing domestic animals.
Local Vietnamese media reports are now blaming an herbicide that farmers were tricked, I mean convinced, into using. Most of the farmers had never used herbicides before.
In Vietnam the herbicide in question is called Kanup 480 SL. It’s made by a company called Thang Bac Giang (Vithaco). Turns out that Kanup 480 SL is the very same herbicide known as Roundup in the United States.
Roundup was patented in the 1970s by Monsanto. The patent expired in 2000.
Here’s the thing: In 1996 Monsanto was sued by the state of New York for lying about the safety of its products. In 2007 Monsanto was convicted by the European Union for lying about Roundup being safe and biodegradable. It turns out that Roundup is not safe or biodegradable (under European standards). The main ingredient, isopropylamine salt of glyphosate, is “dangerous for the environment” and “toxic for aquatic organisms”. Another ingredient of Roundup is polyethoxylated tallow amine, it is known to be highly toxic to animals (humans are animals too, you know).
Lab test showed animals that were contaminated with Roundup resulted in mutated offspring. Some media reports say Monsanto knew of this as early as 1980. It’s interesting that the wild mutant dogs in Vietnam showed up in the very same areas that Kanup 480 SL is being used.
There have been dozens of studies on Roundup, showing it causes mutations and death. How much Roundup does it take to kill a human? It depends, but studies have found as little as 85 ml could kill you, while some people have survived accidental doses of as much as 500 ml. The latest study was in 2009.
Another interesting point: Monsanto is also behind genetically modified plants (which involve using deadly bacteria to make the modifications stick). The modified food crops are meant to be resistant to Roundup. However, some of these crops (the first being Soy) cross pollinated with weeds and created super weeds. The super weeds can not be killed with Roundup, however many people don’t know that and will just spray more and more Roundup.
I still deal with weeds the old fashioned way; I pull them up with my hands, or run over them with my electric lawn mower, or chop them down with a weed whacker.
Why just yesterday, after writing my article on the Mystery disease, I saw employees of the city of Chubbuck, in Idaho, busy with their yearly spraying of Roundup in the park adjacent to my back yard. They like to run that crap along the fence lines of everyone’s property that butts up to the park. It’s so strong you can smell it.
I used to work for a retail property management company. The boss was obsessed with using Roundup, even on a single weed that was growing in the middle of a parking lot that could hold a hundred cars! In less time than it took to mix the Roundup, then prime the pump and go about spraying, I was able to simply pull the weeds out of the asphalt. But I actually got reprimanded for that!
People in the United States better wake up and stop smelling the Roundup before you can’t smell the Roses anymore!
Warning! Roundup’s warning label is misleading. It basically says Roundup is just an ‘irritant’. Yet, on some Roundup warning labels (on their larger containers) it tells you to immediately call your local poison control center for help!