You can read about the reason I’m asking this in the spoiler. TLDR I’m just wondering if there’s some debunking I can do since western media is oh-so-not-trustworthy

spoiler

I’m in some IRL debate (Well, online but in a closed chat) with some libs. They are talking about the right-wingers saying Taylor swift is being paid off to spread democratic votes, whatever, hollyweird are all dems, no conspiracy needed.

I mentioned that we need to actually, you know, actively keep conspiracy theories from spreading, and my liberal friend is gishgaloping a bit, but I’ll bite since they are sincere, even if wrong.

They came back with “Well china has conspiracy theories”, which I didn’t mention china, I didn’t mention anything about censorship, it’s just gishgalloping like I said, but anyway…


Any truth to this one? I mean being anti-gmo is not rare, so I’m not surprised if it was true. I don’t have a good handle on high quality china news (And cannot read their sites myself, even with translators it’s a slow experience).

Edit: Oops, I had to go AFK after posting this and didn’t get to clarify as the comments were all being. I meant do Chinese people broadly believe in the conspiracy theories around GMOs such as causing cancer or making your DNA change or something like that. Of course GMOs are complicated science and are a tool used by capitalists to patentize (did I make up that word? Lol) the food industry, which is a natural science and typically difficult to patent.

  • Vampire [any]@hexbear.net
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    10 months ago

    the part of GMO being used as a way to control people is silly, but the idea of a GMO being potentially dangerous is a completely reasonable statement to make

    I’d almost flip that: GMOs are no more dangerous than naturally edited genes (by cross-breeding) but it’s definitely being used as a means of controlling people, societies, and food-systems by selling what should be a non-commodity (heirloom seeds) creating demand for patented and proprietary goods, and making us dependent on their product.

    • Dudewitbow@lemmy.zip
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      10 months ago

      definitely be wary of economic dependancies, but that’s mostly not impossible given that agriculture export is a fairly competitive field, and Brazil has really stepped up in the past few years, In particular to China, even though they are a major producer, they still import a lot, and that’s a china specific problem they have to hurdle. but to find different sources for produce is (mostly) competitive in the current global market.

      It’s only when you have a certain crop thats hyper regionalistic and high in demand where it actually becomes a problem for dependencies sake. e.g Alfalfa (typically used as food for cattle) tends to only grow in regions near deserts.