GM crops ‘work’ – rogue scientist

A renegade biotechnologist claims that some genetically modified plants “may infest more fertility throughput than traditional methods of caring for soil.”

If corroborated, the research by Vilsak San Monto could herald the end of modern agribusiness, which depends on organic factory farming and an ancient land management rite known as “biochar” burial.

The tested strains not only proved resilient, but made land more productive, his study found, and even “trapped more carbon than growing hemp.”

Opponents of genetic engineering cast doubt on Mr San Monto’s findings, and said his seeds couldn’t possibly make money.