29. How Seed It Is Titelbild

29. How Seed It Is

29. How Seed It Is

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In this episode, Dr. Reade Hubert explores the uncomfortable but necessary distinction between hazard and risk in modern health, food, and agriculture debates, using L-aspartame, GMOs, and glyphosate as case studies. He traces the history of artificial sweeteners, explains how genetically modified seeds work and why they were developed, and unpacks the global scientific and political conflict surrounding herbicides like Roundup. Throughout the discussion, Dr. Hubert highlights how regulatory bodies such as the FDA, EPA, and WHO often reach different conclusions based on whether they assess theoretical hazard or real-world exposure risk, leaving the public "stuck in the middle." He concludes by grounding the conversation in his core framework: the four causes of sickness (thoughts, toxins, trauma, and traits) and challenges listeners to think more critically about what "natural" truly means in an increasingly complex world.

Key Points

  • Explains the history of L-aspartame (NutraSweet), why public hysteria faded, and how newer research reframes concerns around long-term exposure rather than immediate toxicity.

  • Clarifies the critical difference between hazard (can it ever cause harm?) and risk (does it cause harm at normal exposure levels?).

  • Breaks down how GMOs are created, why seed modification has improved crop yields, and how nature rapidly adapts through resistant weeds and pests.

  • Discusses glyphosate (Roundup), its classification differences between WHO and U.S. regulators, and why these disagreements have fueled massive litigation.

  • Outlines the ongoing political, legal, and regulatory battles involving Bayer, the EPA, the Supreme Court, and federal farm policy.

  • Emphasizes that science, economics, food security, and public health are deeply interconnected—and rarely simple.

  • Reaffirms the "Four T's" framework (thoughts, toxins, trauma, traits) as a practical lens for understanding both sickness and healing.

  • Leaves listeners with a final reframing: cancer is both a hazard to health and a risk to life, and clarity depends on how we choose to evaluate evidence.

To learn more about Dr. Reade Hubert, visit Tapping Into Uncomfortable

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