GMOs & Pesticides:
What You Weren't Told

The food supply has been fundamentally altered over the past four decades. Here is what the science shows — and why it matters for your health, your children's development, and your fertility.

Genetically Modified Organisms: Not Tested for Human Safety

Genetically modified organisms (GMOs) were introduced into the food supply beginning in the 1990s with the central claim that they were "substantially equivalent" to their conventional counterparts. This designation — not a safety test, but a regulatory shortcut — exempted GMO crops from the rigorous long-term human safety testing applied to drugs and food additives.

Decades later, independent research from several countries has raised serious concerns about what was never properly evaluated. The findings cover fertility, fetal development, neurological function, and immune response — effects that would take years or decades to become visible in a population.

Reproductive & Developmental Concerns

Studies conducted by several independent research groups in Europe have found that GMO consumption in animal models is associated with:

Ermakova IV. "GMO soy leads to over 50% mortality in rat offspring." EOS: Ecology and Environment, 2006. | Malatesta M et al. "Ultrastructural morphometrical and immunocytochemical analyses of hepatocyte nuclei from mice fed on genetically modified soybean." Cell Structure and Function, 2002. | Austrian Federal Ministry of Health. "Biological effects of GM food: a study on reproductive and infant health." Austrian Health Report, 2008. | Séralini GE et al. "Long term toxicity of a Roundup herbicide and a Roundup-tolerant GM maize." Food and Chemical Toxicology, 2012. (Note: subsequently republished in Environmental Sciences Europe, 2014 after controversy over retraction.)

Note: Some of these studies have been contested on methodological grounds.

  • Decreased sperm count and reduced fertility in male offspring
  • Potential sterility effects compounding across generations
  • Spontaneous abortions and miscarriage in pregnant animals
  • DNA incompatibility issues between mates
  • Impaired DNA communication between mother and developing fetus

These findings document effects on reproductive hormones and fertility markers in multiple species — consequences attributed to novel proteins introduced into the food supply that the human body has no evolutionary history of encountering.

Whether or not you are currently trying to conceive, these findings are relevant to hormonal health, fertility across a lifetime, and the health of future generations.

The Biggest GMO Offenders to Avoid

Corn
Soy
Canola (rapeseed)
Wheat
Dairy (rBGH hormone)
Alfalfa (fed to animals)
Yellow squash
Zucchini
Sugar beets
Cotton (cottonseed oil)
Aspartame
Papaya (Hawaiian)

Note: If an animal is fed GMO grains — corn, soy, alfalfa — the meat from that animal carries residues. Choosing grass-fed, pasture-raised, and certified organic animal products is important for this reason.

Pesticides: What Can't Be Washed Off

The herbicides and pesticides sprayed on conventional and GMO crops are not surface contaminants. Many are systemic — meaning they are absorbed into the plant tissue itself and cannot be washed off at the kitchen sink. You eat them.

Pesticides — a category that includes insecticides, fungicides, herbicides, rodenticides, and others — have been linked in peer-reviewed research to:

  • Cancer
  • Alzheimer's disease
  • ADHD and attention difficulties
  • Birth defects and developmental abnormalities
  • Autism spectrum disorder (proximity to agricultural spraying)
  • Neurological damage — Parkinson's, seizure disorders
  • Endocrine disruption and hormonal imbalance
  • Reproductive harm — spontaneous abortion, reduced fertility

Glyphosate: The World's Most Widely Used Herbicide

Glyphosate — the active ingredient in Roundup — is now detectable in human urine, breast milk, amniotic fluid, and rain. It was designed to be sprayed on GMO crops engineered to resist it. It is also used as a desiccant (drying agent) on non-GMO wheat just before harvest, which is why glyphosate residues appear in many grain products.

Research by Dr. Stephanie Seneff (MIT) and others has linked glyphosate to disruption of the gut microbiome (it affects the shikimate pathway used by gut bacteria), interference with amino acid synthesis, and contributions to liver disease, gut permeability, and neurological conditions.

Samsel A, Seneff S. Glyphosate's Suppression of Cytochrome P450 Enzymes and Amino Acid Biosynthesis by the Gut Microbiome. Entropy. 2013.

Where Glyphosate Goes, Cancer Follows

In 2015, the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) classified glyphosate as a Group 2A probable human carcinogen — the same classification as red meat and anabolic steroids. The classification was based on sufficient evidence of carcinogenicity in animals and limited-but-positive evidence in humans, particularly for non-Hodgkin lymphoma.

The geographic data adds a layer the classification alone does not convey. When US county-level cancer rates (National Cancer Institute SEER data) are overlaid with glyphosate agricultural usage by county (USDA NASS data), the visual correlation is direct and consistent — the highest-cancer counties are concentrated in the same regions where glyphosate application rates are heaviest.

Two overlaid US county maps: all-cancer rates (NCI SEER) on top, glyphosate agricultural usage in lbs/sq mile (USDA NASS) on bottom — showing geographic correlation in the Corn Belt and Mississippi Delta

Top: US county-level all-cancer rates (NCI SEER). Bottom: Glyphosate agricultural usage, lbs/sq mile (USDA NASS). The Corn Belt and Mississippi Delta appear darkest on both maps.

The geographic overlap

  • Corn Belt — Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, and Nebraska cluster at the intersection of highest glyphosate usage and highest all-cancer rates in the overlay data
  • Mississippi Delta — a second dense cluster: cotton and soy agriculture, heavy herbicide application, and elevated cancer rates — particularly GI and liver cancers
  • Non-Hodgkin lymphoma specifically: a 2019 meta-analysis in Mutation Research Reviews found a 41% increased risk of NHL with glyphosate-based herbicide exposure (pooled RR 1.41; 95% CI 1.13–1.75)
  • → County-level correlation does not establish individual causation — these are ecological associations from aggregate data. They are also not random noise.

What the IARC classification means — and doesn't mean

Group 2A means the evidence is strong enough that the IARC found it probable, not merely possible. It does not mean "causes cancer in every exposed person" — it means the biological plausibility is established, the animal data is consistent, and the human epidemiology points in the same direction. The Bayer/Monsanto legal settlements — over $10 billion across tens of thousands of cancer cases as of 2023 — represent a separate legal record, not a scientific one. But it is the same herbicide.

IARC Monographs Volume 112. Glyphosate. International Agency for Research on Cancer, 2015.
Zhang L et al. Exposure to glyphosate-based herbicides and risk for non-Hodgkin lymphoma: A meta-analysis and supporting evidence. Mutation Research Reviews. 2019;781:186–206.
Siegel RL et al. Cancer statistics, 2023. CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians. NCI SEER data, county-level cancer incidence. 2023.

Copper Chelation & Mineral Dysregulation

Glyphosate was originally patented as a chelating agent — a descalant for industrial pipes — before it was ever registered as an herbicide. Chelation is its fundamental chemistry. When applied to crops, it does not stay on the plant. It persists in the food, and it chelates divalent minerals in the body: zinc, manganese, cobalt, copper, and iron are bound and made chemically unavailable even when they appear present in the food. A person eating a conventional diet may be consuming adequate minerals on paper while their cells are being starved of them at the biochemical level.

The copper-zinc imbalance

  • Glyphosate chelates zinc, copper, manganese, and iron — minerals are present in the food but chemically unavailable to cells
  • Copper simultaneously accumulates from copper pipes, copper cookware, and estrogen-dominant hormonal environments — birth control raises copper significantly
  • Result: copper overload relative to zinc — one of the most consistent biochemical findings in autism, ADHD, anxiety, and sensory processing disorders (Walsh Research Institute, Pfeiffer protocols)
  • → Elevated copper suppresses dopamine — copper oxidizes dopamine to norepinephrine via dopamine beta-hydroxylase — producing the hypervigilance, sensory sensitivity, and behavioral dysregulation pattern seen across the neurodevelopmental spectrum
  • Diagnosable with hair tissue mineral analysis. Not being screened for. Not discussed in standard care.

Why boys — and why now

  • → Glyphosate disproportionately impacts males — consistent with the 4:1 male-to-female autism diagnosis ratio and the rising rates of male infertility, testicular cancer, and undescended testicles since widespread glyphosate adoption
  • → Research documents that glyphosate preferentially affects individuals with melanin pigmentation in skin, due to its chelation of melanin-associated minerals and disruption of melanogenesis pathways
  • → The male birth ratio — naturally 105.3 boys per 100 girls through the mid-20th century — has declined: the US now sits at 104.9 (CDC/World Bank 2023); 38,000 male births "lost" in the US since 1970 (Davis DL et al., JAMA 1998); Japan lost 127,000; the Netherlands declined at 0.83 males per 1,000 births per decade
  • → At the extreme: the Aamjiwnaang First Nation community (Ontario, Canada), surrounded by petrochemical facilities, recorded a male birth proportion of 0.348 (1999–2003) — roughly one boy for every two girls; the lowest ever recorded in Canada (Mackenzie et al., EHP 2005)
  • → Male fetal deaths have risen disproportionately in both the US and Japan — the proportion of fetal deaths that are male has increased since 1970; a declining male birth ratio is a sentinel signal; it is not being investigated at the population level

Male births per 100 female births — United States

Y-axis zoomed to show the signal. At population scale, fractions of a point equal tens of thousands of children.

38,000

US male births lost since 1970
Davis et al., JAMA 1998

127,000

Japan male births lost since 1970
Davis et al., EHP 2007

34.8%

boys born in Aamjiwnaang, ON
1999–2003 · Mackenzie EHP 2005

Sources: CDC/World Bank 2023 · Davis DL et al. JAMA 279:1018, 1998 · Davis DL et al. EHP 115:941, 2007 · Grech V et al. BMJ 324:1010, 2002 · Mackenzie CA et al. EHP 113:1295, 2005

The copper-zinc dysregulation that glyphosate drives maps directly onto the autism and ADHD symptom profile: sensory hypersensitivity, speech delay, behavioral dysregulation, anxiety, immune dysregulation, and poor gut motility. These are not random. They are predictable downstream consequences of a specific mineral imbalance created by a specific chemical mechanism. It is diagnosable. It is addressable. It is not being screened for in any standard pediatric or prenatal protocol.

Glyphosate and Anesthesia: What No One Tells You Before Surgery

Cytochrome P450 enzymes are not just one system among many — they are the liver's primary pathway for metabolizing every drug given during surgery. Every anesthetic agent. Every pain medication. Every sedative used in the OR moves through CYP450. And glyphosate directly suppresses this system.

Anesthesiologists calibrate doses based on bodyweight and an assumed baseline of normal liver function. They do not test your CYP450 status before surgery. They do not ask about your glyphosate exposure, your pesticide body burden, or how long you have been eating a conventional food supply. The assumption is that every liver works the same.

When CYP450 is impaired — from chronic glyphosate exposure, from years of conventional food, from a liver already managing pesticide residues — anesthetic drugs clear more slowly than expected. The result: prolonged emergence from anesthesia, heightened drug sensitivity, extended cognitive fog, and an increased toxic load that the body must process after an already-stressful procedure.

Post-Operative Cognitive Decline (POCD) — temporary or lasting cognitive impairment following surgery — is increasingly common and poorly explained. It is studied primarily as a neurological phenomenon. The liver's ability to clear anesthetic agents quickly and completely — which depends heavily on CYP450 function — is not part of the standard pre-surgical conversation.

The standard pre-surgical checklist does not include toxin body burden. That does not mean body burden is irrelevant. It means nobody is asking.

The Dirty Dozen: Highest Pesticide Load

The Environmental Working Group (EWG) publishes annual testing of commercially grown produce. These twelve consistently carry the highest pesticide residues and are the most important to buy organic:

  • 🍓Strawberries#1
  • 🥬Spinach#2
  • 🥦Kale / Collard Greens#3
  • 🍑Nectarines#4
  • 🍎Apples#5
  • 🍇Grapes#6
  • 🍑Peaches#7
  • 🍒Cherries#8
  • 🍐Pears#9
  • 🍅Tomatoes#10
  • 🌿Celery#11
  • 🥔Potatoes#12

The Simplest Path Through: Eat Real Food

The most effective way to reduce your exposure to both GMOs and pesticide residues is straightforward:

  • Choose certified organic for the Dirty Dozen, animal products, and any corn, soy, or canola derivatives
  • Skip processed and packaged foods — the majority contain GMO corn syrup, soy lecithin, or canola oil
  • Source animal products wisely — grass-fed beef, pasture-raised poultry and eggs, wild-caught fish avoid the GMO grain chain
  • Grow what you can — even a small container garden of herbs, greens, and tomatoes removes you from the industrial food chain for those items
  • Shop local farmers markets — many small farms use organic practices without being certified; ask directly

One study followed families switching to an organic diet for just two weeks and found that detectable pesticide residues in their urine dropped by over 60%. The body responds quickly when the input changes.

Studies, Documentaries & Resources

Research

Tools

Additional Research

Documentaries & Films

Paul Chek — Food, Organics & Soil Health

Pesticide Reduction Experiments

Tools & Databases

Note: This page is for educational purposes. Information is drawn from peer-reviewed research and is offered to support informed food choices. It does not constitute medical or dietary advice.

Transcript

Transcript

What if I told you that the food supply was fundamentally altered in the 1990s — and that the safety testing that would normally be required for a new substance was bypassed using a regulatory technicality?

That's the story of GMOs. And once you understand it, you can't un-see it.

What Are GMOs & The Problem

Genetically modified organisms are crops where DNA from another species has been inserted to create traits that wouldn't exist naturally — typically resistance to herbicides or insects. When they were approved, they were classified as "substantially equivalent" to conventional crops. That phrase is a regulatory shortcut, not a safety clearance. Long-term human safety testing was never done.

Several independent research groups in Europe have since found effects on fertility, reproductive capacity, fetal development, and DNA function that never showed up in industry-funded studies, with documented effects on reproductive hormones and fertility markers in multiple species. Some of these studies have been contested on methodological grounds.

Pesticides & What Can't Be Washed Off

The other piece is pesticides. The herbicides and pesticides sprayed on conventional and GMO crops aren't sitting on the surface of your food — many are systemic, meaning they're absorbed into the plant. You can't wash them off.

Glyphosate — the most widely used herbicide in the world, in Roundup — is now detectable in human urine, breast milk, and rain. It's linked to gut microbiome disruption, liver stress, and a long list of neurological and hormonal issues.

Pesticide exposure has been linked in peer-reviewed research to ADHD, autism (living near agricultural spraying), Alzheimer's, cancer, birth defects, and impaired fertility.

The Dirty Dozen

The Environmental Working Group tests produce every year and publishes what they call the Dirty Dozen — the highest-pesticide crops: strawberries, spinach, kale, nectarines, apples, grapes, peaches, cherries, pears, tomatoes, celery, and potatoes. These are the ones to buy organic first.

Practical Guidance

Here's the good news — and there is real good news here. A study that followed families switching to organic eating for just two weeks found that pesticide residues in their urine dropped by over 60%. The body responds fast when you change the input.

The key moves: buy organic for the Dirty Dozen and any animal products. Avoid processed food — nearly all of it contains GMO corn, soy, or canola. Choose grass-fed meat and pasture-raised eggs, because if the animal ate GMO grain, so did you.

The most effective thing? Skip processed and packaged food entirely. Real whole food — organic animal proteins (meat, eggs, liver), vegetables, and seasonal produce — removes most of the risk. The problem is the additives, seed oils, and pesticide-soaked ingredients in processed products, not real food in its natural form. Carbohydrate tolerance varies by individual metabolism — work with your own response when choosing which whole foods to emphasize.

Close

You vote with every purchase. And the body you're feeding — and the bodies of your children — are worth the extra thought at the grocery store.

All studies and resources are in the Resources tab. This is The Undoctored.

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