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wstat a T uut Laity v atuc vi UlyPltuz!.atc: 1 v 01 13 <br /> feed, some of which ends up in you. Readers may want to check <br /> out organic animal feeds here. <br /> The World's Biggest GMO Lovers <br /> Top WO(rol growrnF countries in millw,,hrn res tto+:) <br /> IV <br /> K - <br /> r - <br /> 40 <br /> K <br /> c r <br /> i <br /> LISA Fra7e Arr"t— canad) Irsd,a CMn) Paraguay South PaiKtan Uru[Puay <br /> Alma <br /> © gmoinside.org <br /> Worldwide, 8 GMO crops have been approved for commercial <br /> production; soy, cotton, corn, canola, sugarbeet, papaya, squash <br /> or yellow zucchini, and alfalfa, and the biotech industry is in the <br /> process of pushing forward additionally modified foods such as <br /> rice, apples, and salmon. The four major crops that account for <br /> virtually all of the biotech output are soy, cotton, corn, and <br /> canola. The remaining GMO crops are exclusively grown in the <br /> United States with the exception being papaya which is grown in <br /> China in addition to US cultivation. <br /> According to Grace Communications Foundation, <br /> The use of low doses of antibiotics by the modern <br /> food animal industry is responsible for drug- <br /> resistant bacteria emerging on farms which <br /> reach the general population through human or <br /> animal carriers, and through the food consumers <br /> eat. 131 <br /> However, in India, GMO crops have become an enormous <br /> agricultural problem, since "Indian Farmers are Committing <br /> Suicide because of Monsanto's costly GMO crops." <br /> The London Daily Mail reported, <br /> http://www.the-open-mind.com/whats-your-daily-v-sie-of-glyphosate/ 3/31/2015 <br />