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You're postulating that all "food" is the same. GMO foods have some additional things present and other things missing. If a crop is modified to excrete it's own kind of pesticide, guess what - you're now consuming that pesticide as well.
ya, pretty sure that's why coffee beans came to contain caffeine. the point im failing to make is rather simple. the first law of thermodynamics(conservation of information?).
1 g of angus beef will be just as energy dense as 1 g of GMO angus beef.
GMO is a retarded term anyways. Think about it, English Bulldogs are "Genetically Modified Organisms", I somehow doubt that the chemical energy stored in a english bull dog is any different than another canine of same size.
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[–] Hey_Sunshine 1 point 1 point 2 points (+2|-1) ago
How does my body, which uses food for fuel, break down the energy of GMO'd food differently than non GMO food?
Since when did Cavendish bananas become bad for you?
[–] badruns 1 point 2 points 3 points (+3|-1) ago
You're postulating that all "food" is the same. GMO foods have some additional things present and other things missing. If a crop is modified to excrete it's own kind of pesticide, guess what - you're now consuming that pesticide as well.
[–] Hey_Sunshine 1 point 0 points 1 point (+1|-1) ago
ya, pretty sure that's why coffee beans came to contain caffeine. the point im failing to make is rather simple. the first law of thermodynamics(conservation of information?).
1 g of angus beef will be just as energy dense as 1 g of GMO angus beef.
GMO is a retarded term anyways. Think about it, English Bulldogs are "Genetically Modified Organisms", I somehow doubt that the chemical energy stored in a english bull dog is any different than another canine of same size.
although I would love to be proven wrong