03-03-2015, 04:43 PM
kalakoa - Both testosterone and estrogen are on the list. Therefore, men and women are "known to the State to cause cancer or reproductive harm".
Testosterone and estrogen are well established carcinogens, which is why, for instance, hormone replacement therapy carries an increased risk of developing cancer. You're unlikely to be exposed to much of either from a person unless you kill them and eat their organs, which is looked down upon in a progressive state like California.
Obie - I didn't realize arsenic causes cancer.I wonder how you would ingest enough to get cancer and not kill yourself first.
Back to gmo labeling.Why not just hang a big banner at the entrance to every grocery store that states "Everything in this store contains gmos" maybe have flashing lights to draw attention to it.
Arsenic is also a well established carcinogen with cancer implications world wide.
http://www.cancer.org/cancer/cancercause...ce/arsenic
As for the GMO labeling by banner, not every food contains GMOs, which is the whole point now isn't it?
Prop 65 is an obvious example of how a state has 'actual authority to control things that qualify as "interstate commerce"'. There are many others which indicate that GMO labeling likely falls within the state's power to regulate.
Testosterone and estrogen are well established carcinogens, which is why, for instance, hormone replacement therapy carries an increased risk of developing cancer. You're unlikely to be exposed to much of either from a person unless you kill them and eat their organs, which is looked down upon in a progressive state like California.
Obie - I didn't realize arsenic causes cancer.I wonder how you would ingest enough to get cancer and not kill yourself first.
Back to gmo labeling.Why not just hang a big banner at the entrance to every grocery store that states "Everything in this store contains gmos" maybe have flashing lights to draw attention to it.
Arsenic is also a well established carcinogen with cancer implications world wide.
http://www.cancer.org/cancer/cancercause...ce/arsenic
As for the GMO labeling by banner, not every food contains GMOs, which is the whole point now isn't it?
Prop 65 is an obvious example of how a state has 'actual authority to control things that qualify as "interstate commerce"'. There are many others which indicate that GMO labeling likely falls within the state's power to regulate.