Scientifically Absurd Proposed FDA Regulations on Genetically Improved Livestock Should Be Withdrawn Immediately
"If DNA is a drug, then all life on Earth is high."

The Food and Drug Administration issued, just two days before the end of the Obama administration, draft guidance on how the agency proposes to regulate genomically altered food animals. The FDA claims authority to regulate livestock and their products developed using the fantastically precise and versatile new genome editing techniques like CRISPR. Ultimately, the FDA's guidance document is rife with scientific nonsense.
First, the overreaching agency claims it has the authority to regulate genetically improved livestock as a "new animal drug." As the agency points out all new animal drugs are "deemed unsafe" unless it has approved a new animal drug application. Treating each version of new improved livestock as a drug is really bad news for developers and consumers, since it takes years for a new drug to get through the FDA process at an average cost of more than $1 billion. Consider that it took the agency 20 years to approve the Aquabounty salmon that was genetically engineered simply to grow faster.
The new FDA proposal is also ridiculously bad science. In fact, the regulation of modern biotech crops has been based on bad science for nearly three decades. Researchers have pleaded for years that regulation, if needed, be based on whether the end product poses novel risks, not on the method by which it is created. Under the new idiotic FDA guidance, any intentional change to a single-nucleotide base pair would make the entire animal a regulated drug. Let's put this into perspective. DNA, the chemicals that make up genes, are safe to eat. Unless you are eating only things like processed pure sugars and some minerals (in which case you'd be dead by now), nearly everything you eat contains DNA. In fact, by one estimate you eat more than 100 trillion genes that are in your food every day. Eating the DNA that specifies the production of snake venom is no more dangerous than eating any other DNA (even eating snake venom isn't necessarily dangerous, but I personally wouldn't advise it).
Genetically improved livestock like hornless Holstein dairy cows are now in the FDA regulators' crosshairs. Researchers at the University of California, Davis used precise genomic editing to change the horn gene in Holstein dairy cattle to match the hornless gene found in Angus beef cattle. Most dairy cattle are dehorned as a way to keep them from harming farmers. As someone who has dehorned both calves and cattle, I can tell you that the animals don't enjoy the experience. This gene editing actually advances animal welfare. Since it is safe to eat hornless Angus cows, it is also safe to eat and consume dairy products from now hornless Holstein cows. Yet, the proposed FDA guidance wants the developers to go through its whole new drug regulatory rigamarole before products from these genetically improved animals can be offered to the public. This is on top the the FDA regulations that have stymied biotech advances in crop agriculture for decades.
As Alison van Eenennaam, one of the researchers who developed the hornless Holsteins tells Gizmodo: "If DNA is a drug, then all life on Earth is high." She adds, "We have equivalent products with the same risks. Human intention isn't where risk lies. Who would say a Holstein is a drug? It's a bull without horns. There's no normal person that would think that's a drug."
The FDA guidance blandly observes:
In general, FDA's guidance documents do not establish legally enforceable responsibilities. Instead, guidances describe the Agency's current thinking on a topic and should be viewed only as recommendations, unless specific regulatory or statutory requirements are cited. The use of the word "should" in Agency guidances means that something is suggested or recommended, but not required.
As the former head of the Obama administration's White House Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs Cass Sunstein notes today over at Bloomberg News: "In theory, people are free to ignore guidance documents. If a company violates mere guidance, it cannot be punished. But in practice, any such violation is risky, because it will trigger the agency's attention, and officials might decide to take action. It's usually prudent just to comply." Sunstein continues: "These pleas should be heeded. Guidance documents are sometimes ill-considered—and they can wreak havoc." This guidance is particulary ill-considered.
The Trump administration has floated lots of different potential nominees to head up the FDA. There are plenty of useless regulatory blockages to progress that need to be swept away at the agency, but whoever eventually gets the nod should order this scientifically illiterate bit of guidance to be withdrawn immediately.
For more background, see my column, "CRISPR Critters: Regulators and the New Gene Revolution in Agriculture."
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"Absurb"
Spellcheck.
I see the title changed, but the slug is still misspelled.
Z: Thanks for the spell check. Changing slug complicates matters.
No problem Ron, I figured republishing might be a bridge too far, but thought I would mention it in case.
Dahnald! Save us!
Fuck the FDA!!!!!!!!
Fuck Donald Again? -- Prog wish
"Ultimately, the FDA's guidance document is rife with scientific nonsense."
I think that's in their charter.
they were chartered to try to ensure food and drugs that cross state boundaries are safe, then it got enlarged to efficacious too . Now they are just utterly power mad and seek to regulate everything and rip off everyone to benefit the industries that captured them long ago . If they were truly experts then their advice alone would be enough , they would not need enforcement powers.
This cow looks like a drug to the FDA
The steaks have never been higher.
This is why the terrorists hate us.
You got some kind of beef with GMSM?
If my choices were to be beheaded by ISIS or read more of these puns, I am not sure what my decision would be.
I don't see what their beef is here....
These puns are a little tough to swallow.
Herd that!
Another vindictive jab at Obama's noble legacy.
First, the overreaching agency claims it has the authority to regulate genetically improved livestock as a "new animal drug."
It doesn't. Period. See you in court.
Doesn't the FDA already have authority over food animals? Or have I been mistaken all along about what the F stands for?
That's actually an interesting question. Since many animals can be "eaten", can the regulate the animal itself? What's the FDA's position on Elk running around in the woods?
Thou shalt not trespass against the venison, lest ye be brought before the Court of Attachment.
IANA FDA L, but as I understand it, the FDA regulates food mostly from the fair-representation angle.
They control whether a company can call something "mayo" when it is made without eggs, and they can inspect the cornmeal factory to make sure they're not mixing the product with sawdust to increase profits. But when a hornless Holstein cow really is a hornless Holstein cow, they must find another spike on which to hang their hat.
Fortunately, they also get to regulate drugs. Therefore animals are now drugs.
See how easy rationalizing is?
But wouldn't the FDA only be able to regulate the steak, not the cow itself? I mean, all this if we're allowed to get ahead of ourselves and declare 'kosher' a regulatory agency that operates outside the representative legislature duly elected by the people.
I smoked Holstein back in college, but it's so much more powerful now.
I snorted a cube of grass-fed Japanese Kobe once. They found me three days later cowering behind a dumpster in Santa Monica completely naked and covered in Worcestershire.
Pictured.
This is exactly like post-modern philosophy.
The cows need their horns in case they get lost and have to defend themselves against other cows in the wild.
Cattle don't use their horns as weapons, they just use their horns to warn other cows they're mooving too close.
This is mostly true. I remember getting a few jabs as a kid, but the hooves are their weapon of choice.
Honk! Honk!
The horns on the cow go beep beep beep
I think in that case, the cow police hunt down that cows mother and arrests her. See? Horns not needed.
Nicely done sir. A tip of the hat!
"Enviropig" is an example... A Canadian university re-engineered pigs slightly, to protect the environment from phosphorus in pig shit (help pigs digest it better, so it doesn't go into the pig shit).
Regulators were already SOOO utterly full of pig shit, that they don't want ANY more pig shit, whether enviro-safe or not! Canadians could find NO financial backers, to get through the $1 billion and 30-40 years needed for anti-tech freaks to bless it anywhere... So the pigs were killed... See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enviropig ...
As Alison van Eenennaam
Is this an anagram of Allan Vanneman?
No, she's demonstrably authentic, factory original female. The radiologist who read Vanneman's anagram wrote, "inconclusive."
Alan transitioned. Alison is finally free to be herself. She is looking forward to getting her first period any day now.
She bought a bag of party balloons and a gallon of pigs blood from the butcher so she could just do it herself.
No one told Alison that Carrie was just a movie.
S/he's been practicing on Hit'n'Run for years.
Impossible. Animals flee at the scent of Vanneman. Even a full fecal transplant and total gut flora reconstitution wouldn't change his scent.
You assume the dog is a dog. Perhaps it is a transdog.
It still has to stay in the cat section at the kennel. A lawsuit is pending.
Yes, of course. That cute little collie clearly was a head of romaine lettuce not more than a week ago. CRISPR indeed. How silly of me.
MeThinks ye haz had a "full fecal transplant "...
Meaning, ye are FULL OF SHIT!!!!
Do you give "fecal facials"?
(Sternly!)
"Now look, Groovus, I'm sick and tired of yer shit!!!"
(Slyly)
"?Now can I have some of yer piss?"
Read 'em and weep.
The Brits finally have a reason for their scat play.
from http://www.sciencedaily.com
Autism symptoms improve after fecal transplant, small study finds: Parents report fewer behavioral and gastrointestinal problems; gut microbiome changes
Autism symptoms improve after fecal transplant, small study finds
RePOOPulation is a thang.
Cue FDA addictio warning on bacon packages, and extension of Big Apple transfat ban to pork at Trump Tower restaurants, lest uptowners get too high on the hog.
Remember, Democrats are all about "science." So stop harshing on them.
"Ultimately, the FDA's guidance document is rife with scientific nonsense."
All politicized science is rife with nonsense. It isnt about science, it's about the money. Data is either invented or tortured until it confesses.
Tell me again how the FDA saves lives?
This is something else I find odd. Whenever the question is raised about the value of the FDA, someone will point to the most recent outbreak of food poisoning as something that would take place without the FDA. But, since it's happening when we have an FDA, how does that make sense?
It would happen x1000 without them because killing your customers is profit.
"Genetically Improved Livestock"
Journalists usually exercise a little skepticism when it comes to reading and regurgitating press releases.
m: Yes, I find that to be all too true.
Step one to making health care affordable is to open a parallel drug and medical device certification path to market that is wholly in the private sector and open to competition.
Indemnification of online review and commenting sites for the certification agencies and the products they certify would keep the whole thing at least as honest as the FDA, which is as low a bar as one can ask for.
step one is lettibng the FDA advise on anything it wants to but letting patients and their doctors choose to use any procedure, drug or device they want to .
Of course the FDA should not exist period but since it does the rule should be any intraspecies transfer of genes does not require a new certification of safety. The hornless gene being a perfect example.