DarkHorse Podcast

Round ‘Em Up! The 308th Evolutionary Lens with Bret Weinstein and Heather Heying

103 min
Jan 7, 20263 months ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

Bret Weinstein and Heather Heying discuss the retraction of a foundational 2000 toxicology paper on glyphosate safety, revealing ghost authorship by Monsanto, failure to review published literature, and undisclosed financial conflicts. They examine how this fraud influenced regulatory decisions for 25 years and connect it to broader failures in academic integrity, peer review, and the legal system's handling of corporate liability.

Insights
  • A landmark 'review' paper on glyphosate safety was retracted after 25 years because it never actually reviewed the full literature—it only cited unpublished Monsanto studies while ignoring published carcinogenicity research, demonstrating how review papers can masquerade as comprehensive while serving corporate interests.
  • Ghost authorship and undisclosed conflicts of interest in toxicology papers are systemic problems enabled by weak journal oversight, anonymous peer review incentives, and the game-theoretic nature of academic careers where authorship is currency regardless of actual contribution.
  • Punitive damages against corporations are being systematically reduced by appellate courts using the 14th Amendment's equal protection clause, effectively converting legal penalties into a cost of doing business and removing the deterrent effect needed to stop harmful corporate behavior.
  • The textbook explanation of how glyphosate works (disrupts plant-specific pathways) ignores the reality that humans are not isolated organisms but ecosystems containing trillions of bacteria whose amino acid synthesis pathways may be disrupted, creating indirect harm not captured in reductionist safety assessments.
  • Regulatory capture and corporate influence in toxicology extends beyond pharma to agricultural chemicals, with journals explicitly banning tobacco company funding while accepting contributions from pesticide manufacturers, revealing inconsistent standards based on public perception rather than actual harm.
Trends
Retraction of foundational papers decades after publication due to discovered fraud, indicating systemic failures in initial peer review and journal oversight that persist for years before correction.Growing use of litigation discovery to reveal ghost authorship and undisclosed conflicts in published research, suggesting courts may become primary accountability mechanism when journals fail.Systematic reduction of jury punitive damages through appellate review, creating a legal arbitrage where corporate defendants can absorb penalties as business costs rather than existential threats.Expansion of glyphosate use through new agricultural practices (desiccation before harvest, herbicide-resistant crops) despite mounting health litigation, indicating regulatory approval persists despite legal challenges.Disconnect between public perception of corporate harm (tobacco banned from funding) and actual regulatory treatment of demonstrably harmful products (glyphosate still approved), revealing inconsistent risk assessment frameworks.Proliferation of multi-authored papers with unclear contribution attribution, enabling ghost authorship and reducing individual accountability while inflating publication metrics.Inadequate countermeasures against evolving academic fraud schemes, with disclosure requirements and conflict-of-interest statements failing to prevent Monsanto-authored content from being published under other names.EPA regulatory review cycles (glyphosate re-certification in 2026) becoming focal points for legal and scientific challenges to previously approved chemicals, suggesting regulatory windows are key leverage points.
Topics
Glyphosate Safety and Toxicology RetractionGhost Authorship in Scientific PublishingUndisclosed Conflicts of Interest in Toxicology ResearchPeer Review System FailuresPunitive Damages and Corporate Liability14th Amendment Equal Protection Clause MisapplicationRegulatory Capture in Agricultural ChemicalsJournal Editorial AccountabilityMonsanto Litigation and DiscoveryMicrobiome Disruption by HerbicidesEPA Chemical Re-certification ProcessAcademic Authorship StandardsTextbook vs. Complex System BiologyDesiccation Use of GlyphosateHerbicide-Resistant Crop Development
Companies
Monsanto
Agricultural chemical company that ghost-authored a foundational glyphosate safety paper, failed to disclose authorsh...
Bayer
Current owner of Monsanto, inherited litigation liabilities from glyphosate lawsuits and faces EPA re-certification r...
Elsevier
Academic publisher of Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology journal that published and later retracted the fraudulen...
People
Dwayne Johnson
Plaintiff in landmark 2018 Monsanto glyphosate lawsuit, awarded $280M for non-Hodgkin lymphoma, later reduced to $20....
Martin Vanderberg
Handling co-editor and chief of Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology who initiated retraction of the 2000 glyphosat...
Gary Williams
Sole surviving author of the 2000 glyphosate safety paper who did not respond to journal requests for explanation of ...
Bobby Kennedy
Lawyer involved in initial Monsanto litigation regarding glyphosate safety and health impacts.
John Vandermeer
Ecology professor who mentored Bret and Heather in Costa Rica field research, used to illustrate learning about tropi...
Quotes
"The textbook explanation is dead on arrival but the point is you can see how this paper is structured to lead you to a comforting assessment if it were isolated from all of the things that aren't being said here."
Bret WeinsteinMid-episode discussion of glyphosate mechanism
"We always have to assume that there are ways that things can act in complex systems that we have not yet considered. Therefore claims that are meant to modify to calm to sedate to make you feel like this is just fine don't worry about it are very often covers for a hubris that is utterly unborn."
Heather HeyingDiscussion of knowledge limitations in toxicology
"You don't want that liability stop creating new victims it's obvious and what do we know about the judgments that were ultimately handed down they weren't big enough you're still selling the stuff."
Bret WeinsteinDiscussion of punitive damages inadequacy
"It's not obvious that the best way to punish it is to transfer that wealth to the individual who was egregiously harmed."
Bret WeinsteinDiscussion of punitive damages allocation
"This is a failure of the journal this is not something that came to light later this was a failure of the journal to recognize that this review article failed to review the literature in question."
Heather HeyingAnalysis of journal accountability
Full Transcript
Hey folks, welcome to the dark horse podcast live stream. It's the 300 and a th. I am Dr. Wienstein. You were Dr. Heather Hying. I'm going to say with a certain degree of assuredness 308 is not prime. But it is the first of the new year. So happy new year. That's everyone who's watching. Yes, happy new year. Indeed, I hope it is an excellent one. I have concerns. You know, that's sort of my nature, I guess. Yes, it is. Yes, yes, it is. All right. So we're going to talk about animal communication. We're going to talk about the safety of the public relative to things like pesticides and things that have emerged on this front. And we'll see where it goes from there. And maybe some other things as well. So yeah, welcome everyone. Here we are on the new year. We will we will actually not be back next Wednesday. We'll be back a short time after that. That's a strange January for us. Hopefully not too strange for everyone else, but hopefully it's good strange. Yeah, indeed. So we've got to watch party going on locals as always. Please consider joining us there. And we have the rent to pay right at the top of the hour with three carefully chosen sponsors that if you hear us reading ads, you know that we have clear carefully vetted the products or the services being offered. In this case, it's three sets of products, all of which are awesome. So without further ado, let us go go forth and pay our rent. We will Sally forth whatever that means. Yeah, our first sponsor this week is we know it's Sally for it. I don't know why Sally has been you do it. Okay, our first sponsor a foraging Sally in for instance, a tropical bird. Oh, I think it's the same it's the same word. So a foraging Sally. Okay, let's let's just back up. Yeah, we're not we're not doing ads at the moment. This is not paid this is not paid content. That's the fly catchers are not paid. I'm going to tell a story on myself to allow you to I don't know say a face or something. Okay. But I think it was our first field season as biologists. We had already spent some time in the Neatropics traveling together and explore and actually doing some and a Metagascar. Ending up like helping on research projects, but our first summer after our first year of grad school, we were in Costa Rica with a few other grad students and our professor John Vandermeer, who had created a field course for us in the style of the organization for tropical studies, which simply wasn't offering one that year. And and although we had both spent some time in tropical forest before we didn't there are literally tens of thousands of names to learn in any given forest and no one knows all of them. And we specifically didn't know the birds particularly well. And so I was standing with Dr. Vandermeer at some point and we were watching a bird who had gone forth from a branch and appeared to have been a hucking insect war had caught something in the air and insect in the air and then gone back and he said that is a foraging Sally. I sort of doot dootfully run down to my right in the rain notebook and said okay that type of bird is called a foraging Sally. And I don't know if I vocalized what I was doing but he looked at me like I was just an idiot. He said no not the bird that behavior the behavior is a foraging Sally in which you st the bird Sally's forth forages and goes back. Therefore when we Sally forth is it not the very same Sally? I believe it is and it's not done so much anymore but back in the day if you were to do it on a horse it would be a Mustang Sally. I was trying to help you save face. I think you I think we're back. Okay. Back to the ads. Yes. Which we have not yet. Nope. We are going to Sally forth for the ads. Our first sponsor this week is brand new to us as a sponsor. It's clear that's X L E A R but pronounced clear. Clear is a nasal spray that supports respiratory health and it's a product that we've been using for a while now made by a company with which we are well familiar. That's again clear X L E A R throughout history improvements in sanitation and hygiene have had huge impacts on human longevity and quality of life more so often than traditional medical advances have. For instance when doctors started to wash their hands between handling the diaries and helping women give birth seems obvious to us now but it wasn't then the rate of maternal deaths went way down. Breathing polluted air and drinking tainted water have hugely negative effects on human health clean up the air and water and people get healthier. Nasal hygiene often gets overlooked but consider that the majority of bacteria and viruses that make us sick enter through a mouth and nose. It has become a cultural norm to wash our hands in order to help stop the spread of disease from person to person but it's rare that we get sick through our hands. Rather we get sick through our mouth and nose. Thus it makes sense that we should be using something that we know blocks bacterial and viral adhesion in the nose enter clear. Clear is a nasal spray that contains xylitol that's xylitol with an X hence clear with an X. Xylitol is a five carbon sugar alcohol. Our bodies naturally contain five carbon sugars mostly in the form of ribose and deoxyribose. That's the R and the D in RNA and DNA. Respectively those are the backbone sugars of those informational molecules that make up all life that we know it on earth. While most of our dietary sugars have six carbons, sugars like glucose and fructose. Xylitol is known as xylitol again a five carbon sugar alcohol. Xylitol is known to reduce how sticky bacteria and viruses are to our tissues. In the presence of xylitol bacteria and viruses including for instance strep SARS-CoV-2 and RSV don't adhere to our airways as well which helps our bodies natural defense mechanisms easily flush them away. So again xylitol in our airways reduces the adhesion of many bacteria and viruses. Perhaps all of them we of course don't know that but many including strep SARS-CoV-2 RSV and makes it more difficult for them to adhere and make us sick. Clear is a simple nasal spray that you use morning and evening. It takes just three seconds it's fast and easy and decidedly healthy. If any of this sounds familiar perhaps you listen to Brett's conversation with Nathan Jones, founder of Clear in the inside rail in November of 2024 or Brett's conversation with Nate's father, Lon Jones, an osteopath and the inventor of Clear on how xylitol interacts with respiratory viruses last May, May of 2025. We recommend those conversations and we highly recommend Clear as a daily habit and prophylactic against respiratory illnesses. That's clear once again xyl-e-a-r get clear online or at your pharmacy, grocery store or natural products retailer it's really widely available at this point you should be able to find it just about anywhere. And start taking six seconds each day to improve your nasal hygiene and support your respiratory health. Yes and I will just say that the folks at Clear have been extremely supportive of the medical freedom movement that could people in addition to making an excellent product and they have faced the most ridiculous opposition in including in the middle of the panic over SARS-CoV-2 though they demonstrated that it prevented adhesion and therefore caused you to be much less likely to come down with SARS-CoV-2. We're forbidden from saying that publicly by the federal government. They have now won their legal challenge and of course you just heard Heather say this which they are now allowed to say but the evidence was there. So even at a time when we were turning civilization upside down to prevent the spread of this disease here you had a product that did prevent the spread of the disease and they were forbidden from saying it an amazing story. It really is. So again clear nasal spray with xylitol it's a nasal spray just like if any of you have had scissor inhalers that's not how inhalers work is it. It's a nasal spray just you know twice a day morning and night super simple super fast and it seriously reduces the likelihood of when you're exposed you're going to have those viruses or bacteria actually make you sick. Yes and they have a version for preventing you from getting sick in a version. If you find yourself becoming sick a rescue version I hope they will at some point come out with a version for dyslexics who do not properly understand how you spell this term if they just spelled it with a sea I'd know where to look for it you know. Yeah. No I agree. Yeah. Okay our second sponsor this week is Armura colostrum an ancient bioactive whole food. Here at Dark Horse we talk frequently about the fact that we live in an age of hyper novelty. Humans are the most adaptable species in the planet and even we can't keep up with the rate of change that we are enacting on ourselves. We are bathed in electromagnetic fields artificial light sea oils microplastics enterch and disruptors in our air water food and textiles and there are myriad other modern stressors like overcrowding and having too little control over our choices in life. Here's something you can control. Strengthen your immune health with a bioactive whole food that is Armura colostrum. All of this hyper novelty can disrupt the signals that your body relies on negatively impact and gut immune and overall health. Armura colostrum works at the cellular level to bolster your health from within. Colostrum is nature's first whole food helping to strengthen gut and immune health and fuel performance. Armura colostrum is great added to smoothies I love it with banana and mint and cacao and raw milk. I was going to say but I don't eat raw wilks. Oh that does not sound good. No definitely not put them in smoothies. No. Yep not going to show up on one of these. Armura is a great alternative to raw welk. Yes, smoothie. But so is just about anything. Yes true. So that's a low bar. Armura colostrum ever meets a much higher bar. Bovine colostrum can support a healthy metabolism and strengthen gut integrity and Armura colostrum is a bioactive whole food with over 400 functional nutrients including but not limited to immunoglobulins, antioxidants, minerals and prebiotics. Armura colostrum starts with sustainably sourced colostrum for grass-fed cows from their co-op of dairy farms in the United States and they source only the surplus colostrum after calves are fully fed. Unlike most colostrums on the market which use heat pasteurization that depletes nutrient potency, Armura colostrum uses an innovative process that purifies and preserves integrity of hundreds of bio-active nutrients, all removing cast-scene and fat to guarantee the highest potency and bioavailability. The quality control is far above it and she standards including being certified to be, wait for it, glyphosate free. And why should that matter? Hang in there and we'll get to that point once we're done with the ads. People who have used Armura colostrum have reported clearer skin, faster and thicker hair growth and better mental concentration. In addition, people using Armura colostrum have noticed a decrease in muscle soreness after exercise, better sleep and fewer sugar cravings. Armura colostrum is the real deal. We've got a special offer for the Dark Horse audience, receive 30% off your first subscription order. Go to armura.com slash dark horse or enter dark horse to get 30% off your first subscription order. That's armra.com slash dark horse. Our final sponsor this week is Caraway. They make high quality non-toxic cookware and bakeware. That is excellent for but not limited to making wonderful two egg omelets. Maybe you may be the only person the world to mix two eggs. I know that's why I think of it as a major innovation. Maybe you've made a New Year's resolution to eat better or cook more or decrease your exposure to toxins. You can do all three at once by cooking with Caraway. We're in the cold season now at time. Wow. This is showing our northern hemisphere bias. We are on the cold. So is the population distribution of the planet? Excellent point. All right. If you're not in the cold season now, that's kind of on you. It is a time for warming soups and stews, braised and slow cooked cuts of meat and roasted root vegetables. Maybe you're full up on cookies after the holidays, but a nice piece of cake generally hits the spot too. With Caraway, all of this deliciousness from roasting to baking, from a quick omelet, two eggs or otherwise, cooked on the stove top, to a long simmered soup is easy to accomplish. Caraway's cookware and bakeware is functional, beautiful and non-toxic. It is also easy to clean. What more could you want? Modern life is full of hazards, not least, the non-stick coatings on cookware and bakeware. We threw out all of our Teflon cookware decades ago because Teflon is toxic. Yet over 70% of cookware in the United States is made with Teflon and 97% of Americans have toxic chemicals from non-stick cookware in their blood. When you cook with Teflon, it only takes two and a half minutes for a pan to get hot enough to start releasing toxins. Enter Caraway. Caraway kitchenware is crafted with sustainable non-toxic materials like PSC certified birchwood premium stainless steel and amilled cast iron and naturally slick ceramic to help you create safer healthier home. Create a safer healthier home. That's what you should do. Caraway makes several lines of non-toxic cookware and bakeware. Our favorites are their stainless steel line and they're enameled cast iron. All of Caraway's products are free from forever chemicals and their enameled cast iron is offered in six stylish and beautiful colors including forest blue. Actually, forest blue does not exist. I checked. These pop. What call forest blue looks to the rest of us like Carher orange? Yeah, it looks nice though. We'll agree to that much. It's beautiful. Yeah, these pots are strong and highly scratch resistant. The last generations and Caraway also offers butcher blocks to cut on glass lids for non-toxic cooking with a view and a bar set which is crafted from rust resistant 304 stainless steel. We're cooking with Caraway and now Zach our elder son is two in his first college apartment. He says it's amazing which we know to be true and we know that he will be cooking with it for years to come. Caraway's cookware set. English again. Gotta remember to stick with English. Caraway's cookware set is a favorite for a reason. It can save you up to $190 versus buying the items individually. Plus if you visit CarawayHome.com slash DH10 you can take an additional 10% off your next purchase. This steel is exclusive for our listeners so visit CarawayHome.com slash DH10 or use the code DH10 at checkout. Caraway non-toxic kitchenware made modern. And in case anyone was concerned that you are limited to two egg omelets with Caraway cookware because there is one skillet we have that is Brett has discovered perfect for two egg omelets. Our younger son Toby whom we sent back to yesterday. Yeah. Was regularly making 10 egg scrambles. I don't know, I don't know people make 10 egg omelets but he was making 10 egg scrambles because apparently we are told it is bulking season. When he comes home I'm going to teach him we're going to tell him you know for like three weeks. I know but given some time to reflect you know hours I think when he comes home I should try to a figure out whether a 10 egg omelet is possible and be I think he actually prefers this cramble. What does that matter if it's possible it seems like it is a it is a bar worth setting. Not if it's not preferred. I don't see what preferred has to do with it. Right. Anyway, use Caraway to make two egg omelets or 10 egg scrambles and anything in between. There you go. Yeah. There you go. Shall we start with the glyphosate news? Yeah, let's do that. Let's do that. Okay, so actually I did not have queued up here but the New York Times we're going to show the papers but of all places the New York Times is covering and published. Let's see when is this. This is January 2nd of this year. A study is retracted renewing concerns about the weed killer roundup. Problems with a 25 year old landmark paper on the safety of roundups active ingredient glyphosate have led to calls for the EPA to reassess the widely used chemical. So as it turns out there the main paper that has been used to point out and you know direct all naysayers and skeptics to the obvious safety of glyphosate is this one from 2020 and if I can have my screen back for a moment so I can show the hold on. The obvious safety concerns or lack of safety of glyphosate. Anyway, just skip to word. Okay, so here is the paper in question published in 2000 in regulatory toxicology and pharmacology. At this point I did not have it before. I kind of thought I had but I didn't so you can't get it. I'm sure you can if you work hard and use way back my sheet or something but at this point all standardly available copies of the paper have retracted across every single page which is kind of remarkable that you know these people are serious. The paper was called was titled from 2020 up from 2000. Safety evaluation and risk assessment the herbicide roundup and its active ingredient glyphosate for humans. Let's just share the abstract with the understanding again that this work is no longer being vouched for by the journal that's published in nor has any other professional society or journal stepped in and said well actually we're going to go ahead and you unretried that paper now that that's exactly how it works but I would just say retraction is a pretty extreme step. Lots of papers that don't stand up to scrutiny never get retracted exactly just the literature builds on it and that's a natural process. Retracted is pretty serious. It's very serious and so we're just going to share this the abstract from this paper from 25 years ago and then then share the retraction notice itself because there are several reasons for the retraction in this case all of which are interesting and none of which strike me as that they should be particularly new or surprising at least to the dark horse audience because this this story sort of has something for everyone with regard to what is wrong with science today. Yes in fact the pesticide story is like right next door to the pharma story they are connected through Bobby Kennedy. Right. So again abstract of this now retracted paper from 26 years ago on that purported to conclude that glyphosate was safe. Effective? I don't know safe for human health reviews on the safety of glyphosate and roundup herbicide that have been conducted by several regulatory agencies and scientific institutions worldwide have concluded that there is no indication of any human health concern nevertheless. Questions regarding their safety are periodically raised. This review was undertaken to produce a current and comprehensive safety evaluation and risk assessment for humans. It includes assessments of glyphosate. It's a major breakdown product, AMPA. It's roundup formulations and the I just want to even know and the somethings are fact and used in roundup formulations worldwide. The studies evaluated in this review included the performed this is going to be tough to read. Included those performed for regulatory purposes, something something something I'm going to just skip a bunch of this because it's actually very hard to read with attraction listed written through it. Multiple lifetime feeding studies have failed to demonstrate any tumorogenic potential for glyphosate. Accordingly it was concluded that glyphosate is non-carcinogenic. Glyphosate, AMPA and POEA were not terenogenic or developmentally toxic. There were no effects on fertility or reproductive parameters in something generation reproduction studies. On and on and on again really hard to read exactly what is being said here. Skipping to the end of the abstract acute risks were assessed by comparison of oral LD50 values to estimated maximum acute human exposure. It was concluded that under present and expected conditions of use, roundup herbicide does not pose a health risk to humans. I will the only thing else I'm going to share from the paper itself again retracted, published in 2000, along the sort of the gold standard for what people point to and they want to assure you that glyphosate is safe. The herbicide properties of glyphosate were discovered by Monsanto company scientists in 1970. It is a non selective herbicide that inhibits plant growth through interference with the production of essential aromatic amino acids by inhibition of the enzyme, anal pyruvolshicamate, phosphate synthase, which is responsible for the biosynthesis of corasmate, an intermediate and phenylalanine, tyrosine, and triptophane biosynthesis. This pathway for biosynthesis of aromatic amino acids is not shared by members of the animal kingdom, making blockage of this pathway an effective inhibitor of amino acid biosynthesis exclusive to plants. So right there at the very beginning of the introduction we have one of the primary claims that is made often about glyphosate and about other herbicides. Said this only works on plants we assure you or in some cases with some herbicides it's only works on monocots, right? This only going to work on grasses or the opposite on die cuts and not monocots. So there's often these claims, I've given the particular way that the molecular mechanism action is and given that we know we're very very sure that this doesn't exist in pick your clay in this case animals. Therefore, it's totally safe in animals and it's true that we believe that it is true that this pathway for biosynthesis of aromatic amino acids is not shared by us. For one thing we know for instance that triptophane is and sent what we call an essential amino acid, essential amino acid being a list of amino acids that we cannot synthesize ourselves and therefore they are essential in our diet. So that much is true but the most obvious problem that pops out to me from this and I haven't spent a lot of time thinking about this paper having just been made aware of it a couple days ago is that we're not just made of us. We contain multitudes. We have many many in fact, we have so many species of and abundance of individuals of bacteria, mostly the good bacteria that you will always hear about in our guts and throughout our bodies and I have not found any evidence that we are confident that those bacteria don't have their pathways impaired by glyphosate and in fact I find some evidence that in fact they do. So the human body itself may actually be able to do what it needs to do even in the presence of this ridiculous herbicide but given that we aren't alone like none of us is simply an individual that is only made up of mammal. We're also made up of all these bacteria and if it's impairing the ability of our good bacteria to do what they do then it's impairing our ability to do what we do. So we sometimes talk about the textbook version of something. The textbook, a literal textbook generally presents a simplified version of biological function and the problem is often that the thing that you need to be concerned about isn't described in the textbook. If you look at what the textbook says about the way vaccines work it seems extremely elegant. If you understand that there's a manufacturing process that vaccines don't work the way the gender vaccine did and that therefore other things have been introduced to compensate for the defects of modern vaccines you understand that the story that the textbook tells isn't right and this strikes me as exactly like this. I can imagine as if I was a bit more naive than I am and I imagine I'm probably naive about a bunch still but there was a bit more naive than I am. I can imagine myself confidently saying well this is an elegant pesticide because what it does is it disrupts a pathway that's unique to plants we aren't plants and therefore you should expect this pesticide to be effective when trying to control things in one kingdom without disrupting things in another. Now the track record of glyphosate is so appalling with respect to disrupting animals and environments that I know the textbook explanation is dead on arrival but the point is you can see how this paper is structured to lead you to a what would be a comforting assessment if it were isolated from all of the things that aren't being said here. Yes and in 1970 when glyphosate was discovered invented or when its herbicidal qualities were discovered I think it had already been invented before then we did not have the kind of knowledge that we have now about the you know the fact that all mammals contain multitudes that we in fact are conglomerations of individuals that are that include many many species of an abundance of individuals of bacteria but that doesn't make those people back then any less culpable because the idea that at any moment we know everything we know everything we need to know we know everything that there is to know can never be true so we always we always have to assume that there are ways that things can act in complex systems that we have not yet considered. Therefore claims that are meant to modify to calm to sedate to to make you feel like this is just fine don't worry about it are very often covers for a hubris that is utterly unborn. Yes and we've discussed many times the distinction between highly complicated systems and complex systems and so the overarching problem here is that anytime you're taking let's say a pesticide introducing it to a food crop you are assuming that you understand all of the things that might be disrupted when the chances that you do are effectively sorry effectively zero so you know the what one would need to do is if you're going to introduce such a thing you would need massive work on the tail and tracking the harms and most important of all that work has to be done by people who don't have a conflict of interest so they can compare the well-being of populations that are exposed to this to populations that aren't and say well what's their health effect rather than you know corporate goons who are going to arrive at a pre-ordained conclusion because it's how they pay their mortgage. Yes so speaking of conflict of interest let's get to why this paper was attracted. First off let's just take a look at authorship published in 2000 with three authors which is a relatively small list of authors for a unlike other paper although it's a review paper so such papers often have fewer authors listed at New York Medical College University of I don't know if that's going to be Utrecht maybe because it's retracted yeah Utrecht and then Cantux Health Sciences International in Canada so we've got representatives three three scientists out of the United States out of the Netherlands and Canada authoring this paper and back in 2000 and then we have fast-forward to the retraction notice published just now in again regulatory toxicology and pharmacology for for the paper that I was just showing you with that same authorship so why let's just read some of their reasons for why this article has been retracted at the request of handling co-editor and chief professor Martin Vanderberg thenberg excuse me concerns were raised regarding the authorship of this paper the liturgy of the research findings in the context of misrepresentation of the contributions by the authors and the study sponsor and potential conflicts of interest of the authors I the handling co-editor and chief of regulatory toxicology and pharmacology reached out to the soul surviving author Gary and Williams and sought explanation of the various concerns which have been listed in detail below we did not receive any response from professor Williams so two of the three authors are dead and one of them is not responding to requests for explanation of a paper which presumably helped make his reputation because it is the paper that for 25 years has been pointed to as evidence that glyphosate is safe hence this article is formally retracted from the journal this decision has been made after careful consideration etc etc the subtraction is based on several critical issues that are considered to undermine the academic integrity of this article and its conclusions one carcinogenicity and genotoxicity assessments the articles conclusions regarding the carcinogenic anesthetic glyphosate are solely based on unpublished studies from monsanto which have failed to demonstrate tumorogenic potential the handling co-editor and chief also became aware that by the time of writing of this article in the journal the authors did not include multiple other long-term chronic toxicity and carcinogenicity studies that were already done at the time of writing their review in 1999 pause for a second that 2000 paper that is now been retracted was explicitly a review article it did not seek it did not undertake any new experiments it did not seek therefore to generate any new data it was explicitly a review of existing data so that the public could the public and the scientific community could know what it was was actually known when taken in a collective form a review paper thus has as perhaps its primary necessary goal that it actually successfully completely reviews all of the existing literature very first reason for the retraction here is that what they reviewed was unpublished monsanto which is the maker of glyphosate studies and none of the actually published reviews that had already been published at the time of submission to the journal which right there is means that this was not a review paper at all yeah it was an anti-review I will say good on the handling editor for retracting it but this is a failure of the journal this is not something that came to light later this was a failure of the journal to recognize that this review article failed to review the literature in question well I mean in this yeah this gets back to one of the problems of peer review of course um that back when you know back when we were professors I was um you know somewhat often asked to peer review articles and I did so I took it as a as part of my responsibility to sort of the academy even though it is explicitly unremunerated and it takes a lot of work and and there the other there's sort of two approaches that editors can take when sending papers out for peer review they can send papers out to people who are doing work exactly in the domain where the research is being done and thus they are very likely to know if anything has been missed for instance oh there are review papers out that you haven't reviewed here however you end up with this circle jerk of of scientist potentially who okay there's a community of call it 4 40 maybe even 400 scientists depending on what the field is who are all working in the same in the same area and if it becomes clear that one of them yes peer review is supposed to be anonymous but almost always people can tell if it becomes clear that one or a handful of scientists are actually being rigorous in their peer review and pointing out flaws and causing people's papers not to be accepted by the journals then there is going to be retribution and so the the problem with sending peer review with sending papers out to peers within the same sub discipline is that you have a game theoretic problem in which unless you can be assured that you are actually completely anonymous and if the community is very small how could you possibly be honest review is taken as basically actionable for retribution or you can send papers out to people sort of more broadly in the field and then they're less likely to know that oh actually there are reviews out there so again it's unremunerated work there's a problem if you send it to people who are most likely to know if the if the review has been done well and then there are problems if you send it out to people who are less likely to feel beholden to the authors of the paper but less likely you know what those people are likely to be able to do is assess the actual rigor of the work in a review paper that's going to be you know less interesting it's not going to be about experimental design and hypothesis generation and all of this it's going to be just about like are the statistics correctly which is an important part of peer review but it it minimizes the role of the peer reviewers but even so we're talking about a paper they've had a quarter century of feedback on this paper and to the extent an editor should have known that this was missing important literature shouldn't have taken much to figure that out if they had made the mistake of publishing it and then discovered that because angry letters arriving at the journal they should have quickly retracted it and so I again would point out something's wrong it should be no surprise something is wrong in the state of toxicology and it's going to involve economic feedback loops almost certainly I would also point out one of the things that is inadvertently demonstrated here if Monsanto running studies couldn't find car snitchingicity and all sorts of people who were not at Monsanto found car snitchingicity what does that tell you about Monsanto studies right they're not science that's what it tells you right that's right okay so you know there's a few more details about that first reason for retraction but but that's a big one right okay they just they don't appear to have actually reviewed the literature in in a paper whose sole job was to review the literature should have been dead on arrival over that yeah exactly two second reason for retraction of this 25-year-old paper lack of authorial independence litigation the United States revealed correspondence from Monsanto suggesting that the authors of the article were not solely responsible for writing its content it appears from that correspondence that employees of Monsanto may have contributed to the writing of the article without proper acknowledgement as co-authors this lack of transparency raises serious ethical concerns regarding the independence and accountability of the office of this article and the academic integrity of the car snitchingicity studies presented now i did not go and try to figure out when the litigation in the us that revealed this was presumably wasn't right then it might be quite recently i don't know but this points to direct conflict of infant direct conflict of interest with regard to what in every single scientific paper out there is explicitly expected to be stated that you you have to you have to state any conflicts with regard to finances or other work that you are doing or have done and if there are other people who have contributed to the work they need to be explicitly either you know made authors or acknowledged and there is if i remember correctly at some point when i'm not on my screen here i will look i think of the indulgements of the original paper there's a vague unspecified unnamed mention of help from Monsanto employees you know by help they mean they went ahead and gave us our conclusions and wrote most of it for us well i guess so okay uh third um reason for the retraction of this 25 year old paper misrepresentation of contributions this is very similar to the last one the apparent contributions of Monsanto employees as co-writers to this article were not explicitly mentioned as such in the acknowledgment section this omission suggests that the authors may have misrepresented their unique roles and the collaborative nature of the work presented the failure to disclose the involvement of Monsanto personnel on the writing process compromises the academic independence of the presented findings and conclusions drawn in the article regarding carcinogenicity bore questions of financial compensation further correspondence with Monsanto disclosed during litigation indicates that the authors may have received financial compensation from Monsanto for their work on this article which was not disclosed as such in this publication this raises significant ethical concerns and calls into question the apparent academic objectivity of the authors in this publication which concerns and questions have not been answered so hold on i just want to find out there's a whole there's a whole range of games that can be played and there are a whole range of countermeasures that have been deployed to try to prevent them yes right yes so you have a conflict of interest you have to declare it what did all of the authors do on this paper you have to say the how was the work funded how how was the work funded imagine all of the games you can play if you can have an author of the paper who is not named somebody can write the paper other people can claim they wrote the paper so let's say i have a product and i want a paper that says the product has awesome impacts on my health right well i can write this fraudulent paper and then i can have other people i can say i don't even want to be an author you be an author it goes on your CV you get the credit they published the thing yeah then i say wow my product look there's even scientific work that says it has awesome effects on your health but of course yeah it wasn't that so and and given the penny any economy of academia where low authored papers add to your CV and add to your credibility as a scientist even if they're crap papers and even if you didn't write them at all people people who are ethically compromised which is to say most people are likely to take someone up on that offer hey i've got this paper it's already written already like already vetted by well me you want to slap your name on it and see if you can get it published sure that's a deal that a lot of people accept and you know there's a whole range of ways that you can contribute to a paper that wouldn't seem to an outsider like they were real contributions but are so you we have seen this proliferation because work has become more complicated we've seen the number of authors on technical papers go way up but that's not entirely about the complexity it's also about it costs me if i've got a paper with ten authors it cost me very little to give you the gift of being an author on this paper for a contribution that doesn't really warrant it and what will i get from you maybe you'll smile on my paper my next paper and review so anyway the net even sesquic networks develop and the countermeasures are manifestly inadequate they're inadequate they're too slow they're trying to keep up with a game that's evolving much more rapidly than the countermeasures are i have begun to see not on these you know molecular biology papers that are authored by like many dozens of people but on papers that have many authors something between let me say just like five and twelve or something increasingly now i will see a description of what each author's contribution what's you know historically the last author on a multi-authored paper was basically the PI that principal investigator of the lab he was one he usually was the one interested in the work in the first place drove the experimental design at a broad level you know wrote and received the the federal grants but often unfortunately modern science modern scientists even the most honest and remarkable of them get trapped into more and more bureaucratic roles the more advanced they get like field scientists don't get go out in the field anymore lab scientists don't get to spend time with the bench anymore what they've become is people seeking money from the federal government and so it's their postdocs and their graduate students who are doing the work and so you'll see you know on say a six-authored paper you know the first two authors maybe you know the ran the first part of the experiment and and did most of the writing and the third author did the stats and the fourth author you know did a bunch of the grant work because it was the undergraduate in the lab and then like the final author was the actual PI you know who without who none of it would have happened but didn't actually do any of the work involved yeah it's actually so may not be able to actually vouch for it it's a genuinely difficult question somebody who may have done foundational work they provide the environment in which the work gets done they didn't contribute to the experiment is that a contribution or isn't right um you know yeah this is not an easy problem it's not an easy problem to solve you you could also you know let's say you have a case where you wanted to measure the length of microsatellites and you needed a primer uh to uh to get the sequence measured somebody may supply the primer who had nothing to do with your research question but they made the primer yeah without which the research couldn't be done it wouldn't be done right so is that is that worthy of an of a line in the acknowledgments or is that worthy of authorship well if you've got a four person authored paper it's probably not worthy of authorship if it's if you've already got 20 authors on the things slap it in there and like let them add that line to their CV and this is why you have people you know early and mid-careers with you know hundreds of papers um you know I I once asked a colleague uh about some some work in a paper that they were an author on and learn and I reported the story before but this is a particular story but I have many others like it and I know it's not unique this person said to me I don't know what that means I said what do you mean you don't know what that means you're an author on the papers and well I didn't write that part so I don't I don't care you're an author on the papers and well it's not the part I was responsible for it you know he he felt no no shame no embarrassment at all about actually saying not only in my like dude did I not write that I don't know what it means maybe I don't even agree with it sure it's in a paper that my name is on but I wrote this little piece over here which was also crap by the way but you know like there's just no culpability so what is a paper you know we're we're we're at a level where it raises questions about what is a scientific paper and if it doesn't hold together as a coherent mass we're at the very least every single author can tell you what the hypothesis was and what work was done and how it was analyzed and what the results were and what that means in the context of what else is known in science then I'm sorry it shouldn't qualify yes it actually reminds me of the thing you sometimes say that nobody at the cocktail party would be proud of being illiterate but people frequently proclaim pride over being enumerate in this case you get this weird kind of pride inside of research science where people are basically evidencing that yeah I know how the game runs and I'm good at it and you know yeah I didn't write that part of the paper yeah and they don't realize that they're telling on themselves right you're actually saying that you gave up on science a long time ago and you're just playing some stupid game well that's exactly it hey look at me I'm so good at the game of science like and clearly you don't care about actual science yeah like that you know you you can get one congratulations you're good at the game but you're not good at the actual thing yeah and the game actually destroys the actual thing that's that's what gets people like you and me upset by the sort of behavior is it's not like that game continues and it's some separate thing it's it you know grrenches the literature in things that masquerade as if they're informative when in fact actually you in fact you don't even know what they are right right okay so um let's keep going through there's eight points of the reason that the co whatever founding I don't remember the editor handler handling editor um of currently of regulatory toxicology of pharmacology is retracting has retracted the foundational 2000 paper which supposedly established the safety of glyphosite in in humans number five ambiguity and research findings this article has been widely regarded as a hallmarked paper in the discourse surrounding the carcinogenicity of glyphosate and roundup however the lack of clarity regarding which parts of the article were authored by monsanto employees creates uncertainty about the integrity of the conclusions drawn specifically the article asserts the absence of carcinogenicity associated with glyphosate or its technical formulation roundup it is unclear how much of the conclusions of the authors were influenced by external contributions of monsanto without proper acknowledgments again related to the previous several but a distinct point it also strikes me though as very weak tea at the point you know that monsanto has written part of this paper and it's not acknowledged as having authorship the papers are fraud well but that's what he's that's what they've done here right but he's saying one of eight points right but this is five I know but he's he's saying we don't know which parts monsanto wrote the real answer is monsanto wrote parts of this paper period the end it's a fraud um and so I I disagree I think I think being careful being as accurate and less important but as precise as possible when you can be especially when you're retracting you know that there's going to be major pushback to this attraction I'm sure there's going to be explanations for why okay fine you were attracted that paper but it was a good paper after all right and so being very very careful about what isn't is not known is is valued well I don't want us to get lost in the weeds here but what part of the paper would be acceptable for monsanto to have written that's not that he's not saying that some part of it is he's well he's saying it's not clear which parts and I'm just saying this editor I think I think your misunderstanding did not spot that this uh review failed to review the literature and now this is 26 years later this is not the editor who was involved in accepting this paper in 2000 this is not I took handling editor to be the person responsible for this paper maybe if that's not the case I doubt it I really don't think so then then I take back my I didn't look into that I I would be shocked if there was still the same handling editor well I agree it's impressive if I don't think so yeah but that's it hadn't even occurred to me that it could be so I didn't look it up six uh six point in the reason for retraction of this paper from 2020 wait a evidence approach the authors employed a wait a evidence approach in their assessment of glyphosate's carcinogenicity and genotoxicity while this methodology is sound in principle the potential biases introduced by endosclerose contributions from monsanto employees in the exclusion of other existing long-term carcinogenicities studies may have skewed the interpretation of the data the authors critical analysis of both unpublished and published studies must therefore be viewed with caution here to object again to the the cautious language may have skewed viewed with caution this is you know this this is how scientific papers are written yeah but this is the problem no no no that is not the problem no writing with with clarity and conservatism and caution is not the problem the problem is fraud no no exactly the problem is fraud and the point is that the caution belonged in the other direction the caution should have been no the caution to belong to in 2000 exactly and having failed to exercise you're holding the current retraction accountable for yes and yes because for the same reason that a grudging acknowledgement this this I think this journal fell down on its obligation to the to the public and people died because of it so my feeling is this needs to be accurate and the way it needs to be accurate is to say monsanto authored parts of this paper the authors failed to acknowledge literature that was relevant that monsanto didn't author this paper was a fraud and and that's how it should be stated and the problem is so you think that having more words makes this week you think no but you want the three sentence retraction no well first of all I would accept a three sentence retraction but then there's no detail that's fine then you can you can list all of these things but I don't like hedging in there and the question is what else is it is not hedging it's it's it's saying we don't know which parts of this paper monsanto authored if monsanto was not an author on the paper the fact that it authored any part of it is in and of itself yes invalidating of the entire thing he doesn't say that that's not true he's just saying it's possible that the authors on the paper did write some of it we don't know but clearly monsanto was involved in writing some of it and that's unacceptable well look we have a completely broken academic environment in my opinion part of it has to do with the places that things hide whether it's long authorship lists or caution that has been reversed and the fact is the public is entitled to understand how bad a failure this was and this was a catastrophic failure mind you a catastrophic failure like this can happen when human life and limb is not at stake but in this particular case yes human life and limb people die from this pesticide and this journal has responsibility because it completely failed to do the job a journal is supposed to do making sure that the papers it publishes are accurate and if they're not retracting them quickly so the fact that this took a quarter of a century is I think we're learning why it took a quarter of a century in the cautious language of the retraction I don't think that's that's fair at all however the only the only way that I think that that is a fair critique here is if this editor Martin Vanderberg was the handling editor back then and has been sort of sitting on growing evidence all along and a very quick AI look says nope he he was not so I would be surprised at that duration at the same journal yeah but I don't know what the word handling is doing there if he wasn't the one who handled this thing he's handling it now that's I mean that's that's a term that shows up in in journal editors I mean that's that's not that's not new to me you know it can mean different things in different contexts but I'm not I'm not that that does not inherently come with a timestamp from before no but I mean look again we're in the weeds but if you think about the reason that I took handling to be important is that the handling editor suggests one interpretation of it is that it was the editor who handled this paper why is this editor in charge of this retraction rather than the editorial board because he was the handling editor maybe that's not maybe it's not true but it isn't it well it is an interpretation to that word the word is ambitious okay but so I just allowed that there was one condition by which I would allow for what I think is a is a very ungenerous and frankly not helpful reaction that you're having and on you know my first look suggests very strongly that that condition does not hold that this editor was not the editor who accepted and shepherd newspaper back in 2000 and your your position hasn't moved no my I I allowed that there was one condition that would move my my position and it it's it's not true and I just think I think this is this is massively important this is going to get major pushback all bet that we do not see so so one thing that is also true that is related in the New York Times article is that in 2026 the EPA is I don't know if it's certification or whatever of glyphosate as safe for use on food crops for humans is coming up for review yeah so this comes at a critical moment yeah like the EPA needs to take this not just a consideration I just be like oh actually we know nothing that says that this garbage is safe for humans and we need to you need we need to radically change our recommendations for its use I would say get it off the market entirely but you know the timing is important it's powerful it is a full retraction you can see I can't even read the paper you know I couldn't even read all of the abstract because they've stamped retracted across the front of it you know I don't I think asking for more asking for it to have happened earlier you know this is like you are like why now like well no no this is not this is not look I have one interest and one interest only in this which is what happens now should be designed to make sure this kind of failure never happens again yes and to the extent that the journal minimizes its responsibility that is a problem what needs to happen is this needs to be so embarrassing to the journal the level of egregiousness of the failure here is so large this needs to be so embarrassing to the journal that no other journal would contemplate making an error like this that other journals will think oh crap you know what we need to do again I think I think you're misunderstanding what it looks like on the inside of peer review that uh you know the best journals the ones that are actually trying to publish good science to to other scientists are overworked overburdened they're asking unpaid academics to do a bunch of the work and you know most of the time they don't get responses at all and then they get and so you know don't do this again don't do don't do what again like how like apparently a bunch of what has been revealed that is the basis for this attraction came out through litigation that that happened well after this was published right now the you know the one thing that I have read in this retraction that could have been known at the time was presumably known by some people and was not caught by the editors and the peer reviewers of the journal in 2000 is that there were published studies that showed carcinogenicity and toxicity of glyphosate that were not included in the review that seems you know that it seems obvious that that needed to be in a review uh but how do you guarantee that that is like without redoing the work without every time a paper is going to be published someone at the journal itself read us the work to make sure that everything is as it is claimed like it's it is it is a maybe intractable problem to guarantee that all the work is going to be excellent okay but let's take that okay the work would have to be much greater than the available labor in order to get a proper study that would say this thing is safe enough to put it on food crops and my point is fine if you can't do the work or if you can't review the work to make sure that this product is safe to be on food products it shouldn't be and the fact that you journal isn't about safe on food products like this this is a this is a basic yes it is it is playing a role in the process that arguably makes us safe and because it is not doing that role well we are not safe so my point is whatever the problems are in the academy whatever the level of overworkedness of the people involved they don't have a right to do shoddy work when life and limb is on the on the line frankly they don't have a right to do shoddy work when only the future of sciences on the line even if we were talking about cosmology you do if you don't have the labor to make sure the thing is done right most of the time then you shouldn't have a journal and so I am in sense what so you know the problem then becomes worse there are already you know by by many measures too many people with appropriate degrees trying to publish too many papers because the one metric because the thing that's easy to count is how many papers do yeah and there aren't enough journals even now to to to publish all the papers that people want to publish the fat I mean we've talked about you know more chronic issues with regard to paper mills and you know fake people being put on papers and being and you know I know it's problems about to get way worse right the papers are going to be generated entirely not by humans and you know the work itself may be fabricated right but I think your question go first of all I have said in many different places I don't think you disagree with me that the system is so broken it can't be fixed here we're getting to peer into a place where that brokenness resulted in humans getting cancers that they were assured would not be downstream of this product and do I think that you know the population of the academy can be saved by by reforming the system I don't I'm not particularly concerned about them because they haven't stood up against this fraud on mass as they should have so no I don't I don't think you can rescue these journals I don't think you can rescue the faculty I don't think you can rescue this process every time we peer into it we see that this is its product a bunch of people solving their own little game theoretic problems about how they're going to get through their career results in other people dying of cancer who were told of the product that they were using was safe and it's not acceptable so well you're really going to like point seven okay yeah so seven of eight of the of the reasons that the paper from 2020 has been retracted is historical context and influence the paper had a significant impact on regulatory decision making regarding glyphosate in roundup for decades given its status as a cornerstone the assessment of glyphosate safety it is imperative that the integrity of this review article and its conclusions are not compromised the concern specified here necessitate this attraction to preserve this scientific integrity of the journal go off no I mean I think we've said it all yes I don't like this hedging voice and whoever you are who wrote this you owed the public better you should have just said it straight we screwed up we published a paper you shouldn't have published we didn't retract it in a timely fashion and even if that timely fashion was as soon as discovery in court revealed that the paper wasn't what it pretended to be it should have been retracted then and the fact that you're hedging and at this point you know you want a pat on the back for retracting it no this should the people died I'm sorry they died and that's on you okay so I don't see hedging this attraction I disagree with you about that but let's just read the the final point eight conclusion in light of the aforementioned issues the handling co-editor and chief lost confidence in the results and conclusions of this article and believes that the retraction of this article is necessary to maintain the integrity of the journal the scientific concerns regarding the lack of carcinogenicity only derived from unsanitary studies concerns regarding ghost authorship some potential conflicts of interest none of which have been responded to are sufficient to warrant this action any of those points would have been sufficient to to more of this action lack of lack of using non-monstantidata or ghost authorship like either of those yes certainly reason not to publish in the first place of the ghost authorship had they had no way to know that at the time but any of these points would have been sufficient to retract we appreciate the understanding of the scientific community regarding this matter and remain committed to upholding the highest standards of integrity in published research in regulatory toxicology and pharmacology yep i'm glad he appreciates my understanding i'm part of the scientific community oh wait oh you're gonna you're gonna like the disclaimer oh no yeah it goes with the disclaimer as handling co-editor and chief i emphasize that this attraction does not imply a stance on the ongoing debate regarding the carcinogenicity of glyphosate around up but originates from directly following the cope guidelines which uh he has to say that that has to be his position that has to be the journal's position because they haven't published counter evidence it certainly doesn't need to be stated um it's obvious this paper should never have existed okay we all can figure out what that means right most of us count those of us who need to figure out what that means can figure out what that means it the added hedge is uh is preposterous but anyway i'm sure it was written from under his desk i that's not fair no it's fair that's totally not fair people the hide here is a it wasn't him no but he is so you you've got you've got a paper co-authored by three people co-authored by co- publicly co-authored by three people apparently ghost authored by like the entire staff in one santo yep okay only one of those dudes is still living only one of the publicly authored dudes is still living he's not responding to requests for like what the hell did you do obviously the ghost authors are invisible to us there's no tracking them down although maybe in litigation maybe you know maybe those court documents reveal some stuff those are the people who oh i agree at whom you should be directing your ira right no no it's there's plenty to go around the fact is you had people submit a fraudulent paper and those people have done something utterly unforgivable in light of what the topic is right these people have blood on their hands the journal failed to do the job of the journal i don't want the journal hedging about the failure to do the job of the journal it's all too common and it has had a horrifying impact on the way civilization functions on the health of the public i just want people to take responsibility for their part entirely i have some sympathy for an editor who wasn't there at the point that this paper was published who now has to clean up the mess but what i want them to do is say here's where we screwed up i want them to do it without hedging and i think that that's a reasonable thing to do it's it's what it's what you would do interpersonally if you had screwed up in some way and you were explaining to somebody else i made an error you wouldn't hedge and the hedging doesn't belong here anymore but interpersonally like i i'm not responsible for the sins of my ancestors okay so if i am now the editor at a journal a job that i took i don't know when right but let's say 12 and a half years ago okay half again 50 percent of the time since the paper was published it is my job to oversee the journal and when i find evidence that there has been fraud in the journal from well before my time to work hard to get that fixed but it is not my personal responsibility to apologize for actions that were not mine i didn't i did not i was not involved in accepting and accepting the paper sending out for peer review that turned out to be wildly insufficient um for knowing things that no one knew at the time except outside of monsanto which turned out to be released in court records years later so i don't know why this is signed by an individual editor if the journal made an error the people who are running it aren't the people who were there it could have been done as the editorial staff i mean he's he's written it in which like he's saying that he's now seeing these things right so i i get the form but the question is if this is you know a quarter century in the past mistakes were made by a different staff they are now trying to correct it resurrect the the status of the journal in the public's mind that's all well and good i would do that by not hedging i don't you know either fact that he's not responsible for those errors is a little consequence it's you know yeah if you had not hedge then i would i guess i would let i mean i don't think i think we're going to drive off the rest of our audience but i i want to know where you saw the hedge well let's take the one sentence i remember at this moment okay the idea that we don't know which parts of the paper monsanto wrote the fact that monsanto wrote parts of the paper and was not acknowledged as an author makes this fraudulent in light of the consequences of being wrong about toxicology it makes it dangerous the lack of clarity regarding which parts of the article were authored by monsanto employees creates uncertainty about the integrity of the conclusions drawn right uncertainty about yeah uncertainty about the integrity no they can they they conducted a fraud and it's one thing to be defrauded it's another thing to hedge in the aftermath of it this should just simply have been retracted there there's obviously ample reason i disagree okay i simply retracted without any of this without our ability to see no they don't want into it they would be ridiculous they can enumerate each of those things without the hedging there's not this isn't hedging creates uncertainty about the integrity of the conclusions drawn creates uncertainty the conclusions drawn were fraudulent they're it's not creates uncertainty this was a fraudulent paper can we at the next part assuming you don't have further you want to go here i think well but you i think the the whole thing connects let us talk about what has happened in these trials in a general sense what trials the trials where monsanto has been sued court trials court trials the same ones that reveal i thought you're talking about randomize no no no no court trials okay so numerous people have sued monsanto which has now been purchased by bear bear in this case actually is a bit in the position of your editor who apparently was not at the journal at the time this fraud was perpetrated on sea but has inherited responsibility yes legal responsibility although they have they have plenty of sins in their past wow do they wow do they but nonetheless bear made a mistake it purchased monsanto including all of their liabilities and the way also he's not my editor all right sorry start start the court trials okay what happens is and the first one of the trials that was one was actually one he was not the only lawyer but bobby kennedy was one of the lawyers on the initial trial in which a verdict against monsanto for cancer caused by glyphosate was one by a guy named dwayne johnson i do we know do we know one i do but i've forgotten uh it was um ballpark like first decade of this like right after this got published or uh yeah could you look it up um what do i look up though i don't know dwayne johnson verdict against monsanto um but i want to make a point to you about what's going on here so the general pattern is this individuals sue monsanto for injury done by glyphosate oftentimes these are people who work with a lot of it in an agricultural context or their landscapers this is 2018 2018 so they sue oh wait so dwayne johnson isn't the lawyer he was he was the plaintiff yes the plaintiff yeah oh wait i remember this yes non-hodgekin lymphoma he got a ton of money from them well that's what i want to get okay he got a ton of money i think something like two hundred and eighty million dollars thirty nine point two mill this is again just first past chatchipity thirty nine point two million in compensatory damages and two hundred and fifty million in punitive day except guess what the punitive portion was later reduced by the trial judge on appeal the final award was significantly lowered twenty million to lay no new reductions to around seventy eight point five and later to about twenty point five after a palli decision okay so the jury looked at this guy's yeah terminal cancer and awarded him two hundred and eighty million dollars it was reduced later by two successive judgments twenty million dollars he is still alive and he was given two years to live when he was first diagnosed he was significantly outlasted his prognosis but nonetheless this pattern where a huge award is given by the jury in the aftermath of one of these cases and then it is later reduced has been the consistent pattern with judgments against monsanto now i want to talk a little bit about why that is is so i want to hear that but what do we know about whether or not that tends to be a pattern with very large punitive damage awards by trials trial by jury trials that are later reassessed in a pellet court that is exactly the pattern for all across all yeah not just monsanto right so a jury of your peers hears about what some awful corporation did to you awards you a huge amount of money because you're in a state that has punitive damages not all of them do as you will remember we were limited in our ability to sue the state when the evergreen meltdown happened and happened to us because Washington does not have punitive damages punitive damages are designed to punish the offending entity so that it will stop with the egregious behavior now i'm going to argue that we do them incorrectly and that there's a fix that needs to happen in order for the system to work but i'll get to that in a minute the reason that these judgments get reduced is because of the equal protection clause of the 14th amendment i didn't see that coming yep you want to put the uh 14th amendment up so the 14th amendment for those who have uh forgotten which was part of reconstruction and it was designed to protect slaves former slaves all persons born or naturalized in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof are citizens of the United States and of the state they reside no state shall make or enforce any law such uh any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States nor shall any state deprive any person of life liberty or property without due process of law or deny any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws so what don't really see Monsanto in there do you know i don't remember what you said about what part of the 14th amendment is being used to justify the minimization of jury judgments it's the equal protection clause at the end okay now the reason that this yeah because it's preposterous okay what's going on here is that corporations you'll remember are um persons corporate person a widely misunderstood property the reason that corporations are persons and they do need to be persons is to bind them you need to have the ability of a corporation to sign a contract and then to be able to enforce that contract against them so that personhood was designed to make them persons for purposes such as contracting and suing it was not designed to give them the protection that is granted to all citizens yeah so what's going on here is that the courts have a kind of pseudo sophistication in which they look at the ratio between compensatory damages and punitive damages and they consider things above nine to one to be excessive now this is insane that still doesn't get you to a reduction of more than an order of magnitude of total damage is awarded um i can't get you there myself the ratio the a ratio problem doesn't get you anywhere close to that reduction well the general property is reduction based on a skewed ratio of compensatory damages which are scaled to the harm that was done to you um and the punitive damages now let's talk about why so uh hold on there are three things that are taken to be uh reasons to reduce these verdicts one is the degree of reprehensibility of the defendant's contact to his compensation uh uh to civil criminal penalties for similar misconduct so they compare to other penalties and the ratio between punitive and compensatory compensatory damages here's the problem there is a general flaw in our legal structure which is that penalties are scaled to the offense not to the capacity of the individual or the corporation to endure the penalty so bill gates does not suffer the same fear of getting a speeding ticket that i do because there's no speeding ticket you could give him that would make you know the amount of time that he has to sit there with his window rolled down is way more expensive to him than any ticket he could be given so there are no effective speeding tickets for bill gates right in fact the best thing you can do is uh draw out the process while you've got his window down um that'll hurt him um right uh so a he doesn't drive the juries are responding to the evil done to these people dwayne johnson got non-hodgekinslam phoma from uh glyphosate having not been told that that was a possibility and in fact being assured that it wasn't right the jury was incensed by this and gave him a big punitive award and then the court said well that big punitive award is out of scale the problem is what you want punitive damages to do is to alter the future behavior of the offending entity yeah you want monsanto to not just simply budget for lawsuits you want them to stop selling glyphosate because they know it gives people cancer right the award has to be large enough to do that so the jury's iron is actually right and the courts are wrong to be reducing these things because what they do is they turn it into a cost of doing business but uh i'm curious about the larger trend that you say is true which is that across the board uh you have large jury judgments being reduced in the appellate courts yeah that is uh the big guys on the system and my claim is that we need a wholesale rethink of this process punitive damages are vitally important to the system doing what it's supposed to do when you it should not be a cost of doing business when you cause somebody cancer it should cause you to rethink whether or not you can afford to have your product on the market at all in order for that to be true these things need to be scaled to the degree of evil and the size of the entity being punished right and what i mean i remember us discovering uh after our lives had blown up on us and ever going to turn uh that Washington didn't have punitive damages perhaps being told by our lawyers who were you know very good at what they did but they're like there's just not much we can do yeah um i don't think that either of us looked into at the time and maybe you know like why do the states vary so much in with regard to um the ability to enact punitive damages and i it i would have guessed uh that historically states that were tending to vote blue would be more like the deputive damages and so was surprised to find that Washington state had none yeah i don't know what the history is it's bound bound to be interesting but when its corporations were dealing with the 14th amendment should not apply this is not the founders gave corporations personhood to bind them not to enable them with the rights of a citizen did the founders do that yeah they did because there was some because they had there was some interpretation more recently that got a lot of attention oh it was the citizens united in the 90s or something corporations right to free speeches is like equivalent to that of an individual so it's preposterous in order to make the system work a you need to have punitive damages b they need not to be scaled to the amount of harm i mean you know the harm to monsanto needs to be large enough that they don't do harm to dwein johnson in the way that they did um so you need massive punitive damages now it may be that some of those punitive damages should not go to the person who was harmed right to the extent of the court awards i think part of what the reason that we um hiccup on this is that it's not obvious if you punish monsanto at a level that makes it think twice about what it's doing it's not obvious that that's relevant to what the person who was injured the person who was injured deserves some of those damages but in order you know if you're it's possible that those funds should go elsewhere in other words the general harm that was done to the public maybe it should go into a fund for other people who've been harmed something like that i'm not arguing all of it some of the punitive damages i don't i think that's i think you're asking for trouble really i mean you're effectively talking about socialize the the damages no what i'm talking about is the purpose of punitive damage is is to punish and and it's punitive versus what would you compensatory um compensated for harm yeah but yeah i just that the uh the strong allergic reaction to uh socializing of um of funds that have been earned through trial um in this case an actual trial um i i i i don't i don't think any good will come of it well that's possible but my feeling is um if the court's purpose is to punish it is not obvious that the best way to punish it is to transfer that wealth to the individual who was egregiously harmed in other words if you've got if dwayne johnson is representative of a thousand people who never sued because they couldn't or uh because the their case was less clear or whatever it was then it's not obvious that the huge windfall and mind you he didn't get a huge windfall you got 20 million for his life being radically shortened um but the huge windfall that has been scaled to the size of the thing that you need to punish it's not obvious that that is relevant to the individual who's been harmed to a certain extent he uh he deserves to be more than made well i believe but the purpose to punish has to be maintained and it may be that the public is actually less enthusiastic about punitive damages because they see it as a windfall but i don't i don't see any evidence the public is not enthusiastic about punitive damages because you you you you you you report that jury trials keep on producing these big judgments well and then it's the appellate courts that reduce them right you know i do wonder how it is the state like washington has no punitive damages at all um but i don't i don't see any evidence that what you're saying is true and i think the idea um yeah we're gonna let the guy who's obviously harmed go to court and take all of the risk and then we're gonna claw back some of that for you know unspecified others like that just sounds like socialism and it's stupidest um no i think actually the pattern is the one i'm describing and it makes sense because if you're in the jury box and the uh prosecuting attorneys are presenting you with the evidence that not only did mon mon santo distributed dangerous product that it knew it was dangerous that there was a discussion about whether or not the public needed a better warning and they decided against it you know if you have that evidence in front of you it incenses you that's very different than the public at home reading whatever they're reading that hears that somebody you know got a i forget what the judgment was for the hot coffee that got spilled in the drive-through window which is like hey wait a minute but then you look at the case and you're like oh actually you know once you see the discussion where somebody knew that somebody was gonna get scalded and decided that's fine you know how bad could it possibly be um you understand why these why these punitive damages are there in the first place but the public in general doesn't they hear these giant numbers and uh there's well i mean so i don't i don't know the legal system at all it's an entirely social construct and entirely human construct and so not being able to drive anything from first principles i only i only know what i know and it's not much and you are proposing you are you are noting a problem uh which you say is widespread not limited to things like unsanto judgments in which uh juries of one's peers come down with large amounts punitive damages and later on those get reduced substantially by a pellet quartz that is a problem that you know probably also the media follow up on the reductions is much less than the than the original yep and than the original and so people don't even recognize that actually monsanto wasn't really slapped um you know hardly it was like a mosquito at at their at their foreheads as opposed to a major problem um so something i have no idea what um is you know something is a mis there and how might you solve it i don't know i think you are proposing that there is another problem i don't yet see that there is that problem maybe there is that the public gets a little squirrelly about the idea of large punitive damages delivered to individuals there's a problem that you see i don't know that there's a problem and you propose something of a solution that is kind of vague and i feel very concerned about the solution being proposed okay i have proposed a solution it's not vague your concern what's the one new answer the solution the solution is we have to fix the belief that the 14th amendment protects corporations from egregious no but the hold on um so we need to have punitive damages scaled to the size of the entity that has engaged in this bad behavior and they have to not be protected by the 14th amendment in this way that's illogical right it was not designed to protect corporations in this way so we need large punitive damages uh and we need corporations not to be immunized by the 14th amendment because it's illogical and the justification by the appellate courts comes back to the 14th amendment yeah to these times yeah the equal protection clause so that's just uh well i think the answer is it's obvious what this does when you have these massive judgments reduced uh on uh appeal what it does is it has bear the owner of monsanto uh which has suffered substantial loss in its valuation uh after buying monsanto because these judgments are mounting and it's looking for relief from the federal government wants to be freed from responsibility it's still selling the stuff right so here's my point you don't want that liability stop creating new victims it's obvious and what do we know about the judgments that were ultimately handed down they weren't big enough you're still selling the stuff yeah right so and they're probably still developing i don't know but my guess is that they're also still developing the random ready crops which are you know the crops that are particularly resistant um which then use tons of the stuff which puts the very people the idea of brand up ready means bring it on yeah it means that you can afford to drench the crop in the stuff they're also developing this insane use where they use it to desiccate crops um right before harvest which means that people ingest a lot more of it so the point is the bad behavior continues onabade it these judgments need to be bigger not smaller right reducing them has left this behavior in place and so this does for me connect back to you know the journal in my opinion i know it's not yours but in my opinion covering it's asked here my feeling is this stuff's got to hurt way more if it's going to stop that's my point it's got to hurt way more the natural level at which it needs to hurt has to be more if we're going to get people to stand up and block bad papers or retract them quickly once they find out that they've been had which is what we need in the public that's what that's what we're owed well given that this this this particular bonsanto lawsuit that you've been talking about was from 2018 yes that's some years ago but it's not it's it's a small fraction of the time that has passed since this paper was published and you know i don't i don't i don't know when the rest of the reasons that the papers being retracted were came to be understood my guess is and this is not how journals should work but that it was you know no one's job once it had been accepted and published to go back and continue to you know relitigate as it were um the paper and so only at the point that these big lawsuits started happening did uh anyone at the journal start to think now wait a minute i don't think that's true for the following reason do we agree that i don't remember was it eight enumerated reasons yeah well one of them was concluding so okay um i think each of them was sufficient on its own that seem right to you yeah although honestly only one of them i i think i can go back but um only one of them was about the the one that seems the most substantive and obvious to explain to anyone who whether or not they have any background academia is this is a review paper review papers review what's known bingo dude well how how is this helpful this is what i'm saying is that if they never went back to it so let me just finish the thought yeah go ahead if if the i think that the only one of the eight points um that is likely to have been no a bull outside of the context of the court cases is that a review paper is expected is required to review all that is known and in fact it did not review all that was known and in fact only reviewed that which was uh cryptically or not so cryptically out of monsantium in the first place it was never a review paper in the first place that should have been caught in peer review that should have been caught by the editors in the first place etc etc but journals are not in the business of once they've decided to accept and publish a paper continuing to go back and be like now did we make the right decision like that's not what that's not what journals do well so i don't i just i don't look i am not pleased that this paper has sat for 25 years um allowing allowing actual grifters and fraudsters to poison an entire planet with this garbage yeah but i don't think that you can hold a journal to a standard of constantly reassessing everything that it is already published no that is an unreasonable standard no this this was exactly my point i'm sorry i said bingo but this is why i said it they will have known almost immediately that they screwed up and that this review paper was no such thing no they will not have you don't think they got a slew of correspondence people saying hey wait a minute you missed these 16 papers this is a review article and it doesn't cover these 16 paper hey i don't think there were 16 i think there were a couple okay and no i don't actually and you know if they did then that's a different situation and we will never know well i so i we don't know we don't know but i would say the contentiousness of the safety of glyphosate has been such as they in fact mention in their concerns continue to have been raised i would would bet that that was immediately called to their attention and that that is their responsibility as a journal the journal screwed up in this case we published a review that wasn't one that missed important evidence that everybody knew was in the literature so even though 2018 is the first judgment successful against monsanto it's not obvious that that's where the discovery would have happened because it wasn't the first trial against monsanto but even if that were the case we only find out but is discovery inherently a matter of public record i don't think so and then you have to and you have to know to make a FOIA request or whatever the appropriate request isn't the first place like there's just a lot of there's a lot of contingencies well i agree and i and we don't know that history you and i don't know what presumably somebody does yeah but the journal published a paper about toxicology of a product that was being used widely yeah in the world that review article was not a review article yeah i think they will have known that quickly um but that's but that's your pay we don't that's my guess fine but you can't like that's that that's not a basis on which to to formulate the argument that they were being irresponsible it's contingent if i am right that they will have known quickly that they published a review that was not a review they should have retracted it earlier yes i agree there's lots of stuff published that they can't go back and reinvestigate and the place to discover that is in future articles that say you know this experiment was done poorly here's what it missed but a review article is different a review article that doesn't review uh and you know becomes the cited article is a hazard in its own right yeah and you know among other things i did not look at uh so it's an Elsevier journal which is the you know major academic publisher but i did not look into anything about their history you know who who has been known to support them uh Elsevier is is giant and predatory in its own its own different way um but regular Torrid toxicology and pharmacology already sounds like it's you know it's not a basic science journal it's an applied science journal um and and we don't know like we can we can guess but i'm not prepared to claim that the journal has been uh grossly uh uh in gross negligence of what it should have been doing based on some um some positions about what they knew when fair enough um i would say that what we have learned about medical journals and the degree to which what is in them is thoroughly compromised by pharma um it's hard to see why this would be any different you know there's tremendous amount of money to be made in uh toxicology for obvious reasons people are putting stuff into the world and um you know there's lots of reasons to want your competitors product to look more dangerous than it is to make your product look safer so i wouldn't expect it's any purer than that on their site um and you can show my screen here um one interesting thing I find and you know we've begun to talk about this a little bit privately i don't think we've said anything publicly but it's it's amazing what becomes known and becomes a focus of human concern and so you know aims and scope is is the page i'm at for the you know the Elsevier journal regular her toxicology and pharmacology which published this article establishing the safety of glyphosate in 2000 is now attracted at this year um they describe what they are and it's sort of you know as you would expect you know it's it's it's an applied journal science here's the types of peer reviewed articles published original research articles also news regulatory toxicology and pharmacology the last thing on the aims and scope page is RTP tobacco policy regulatory toxicology and pharmacology as the journal serving developments for improvement of human health and environment will not consider manuscripts that have been supported by tobacco companies now cool i guess but you know nicotine is the enemy like i don't know that it's good for you i don't know that it's helping people you know it might it but there's a lot that's where they're going to draw the line that's where they're drawing the line because somehow we all accepted i think after you know court cases really before you and i were conscious um or you know maybe you were conscious of them but you know everyone it came to accept that smoking is bad for you yeah smoking cigarettes is bad for you um i don't even know to what degree that research is absolutely well-vetted uh at this point but the idea that tobacco is the one tobacco companies the one named type of company that cannot be involved uh in any way in papers that are submitted here like if you if you say that you received funding from NIH and the DOD and you know the Bill Monogate's foundation whatever it's called now and um you know Philip Morris then you're out but if it was Merck and Monsanto and you know well then well then it's okay it's actually fun and the Bill Melonogate's foundation and you know the welcome fund or the welcome trust whatever it's called i have now forgotten uh you remember the film uh thank you for smoking um in which that was the film in which i at least became aware that there was a bobby kennedy tuner i did not know that beforehand that he is uh the he's portrayed in the film as the sort of protagonist um because of his work in this uh in this area tobacco is the one corporate entity that just lost this battle yeah right and it's like okay fine yeah these things suck they're bad for you we all we had met it um but uh your hood right but the point is that's the one that they're gonna forbid is bizarre given the number of things that are actually harmful and the and me you know that's the one where it doesn't really matter because as you point out we all accept it right it doesn't matter what the toxicology says we all write or wrong accept the harms of this of this one particular product it's the harms that we don't yet accept which are the ones that it's really important that this journal get right and uh they're uh mom about it yeah and you know and they and part of what they say here is that this is the journal serving developments for improvement of human health and environment which you know means this attraction never should have been necessary yeah right because the paper uh never should have been published in the first place because it was neither review paper nor written by the people um that were claimed as authors uh and it had um direct and intensive contributions from the very company that makes the product that was supposedly being assessed totally yeah now we could stop there or we could uh we had a couple of things that we were thinking about doing we could save them both um actually maybe maybe we we uh save them um yeah yeah the the other one we had planned for today will keep just as well and uh I'd be up to explore it next time all right I think that's all right the fiery episode of the Dark Horse podcast yeah um let's see let's see if I can find out what what else uh we're gonna oh so just a teaser for next time uh one of the next the stories we're gonna be talking about uh involves leopards martial eagles and pythons that's it that's all you get you now you have to guess you don't have to guess you already know no I already know yeah it would be easy for me to guess it's by putting it on the chair yeah and you're not a cheater no no not never have been not interested okay um I don't even know what I'm supposed to do now because we sort of stopped all of a sudden okay um we'll be back uh not next Wednesday but uh week from Saturday uh and then the following Wednesday with uh with a couple more episodes of Dark Horse um but there will be an inside rail episode publishing on the eleventh I believe and another one this month as well and um gosh I just feel like I'm forgetting to say all the things but uh you know I happy new year to everyone um I hope you know we're already a week in we're at one fifty second to the way through twenty twenty say wow already already um I'm still writing twenty thirteen on my kicks okay let me ask you a question yeah no actually I was gonna when was the last time you were to check I think you actually have written yeah I've written a check you know I read it was allegedly but probably four year at this point yeah now the island that we live on actually requires checks more often of of us uh because for better and for worse we are still living fifty years behind technologically for better and worse for better and for worse yes uh mostly for better yeah yeah yeah um although there's clipusate on the islands it's actually it's forbidden on the island yes still is some but yeah so this is not this is not the time but I think we've mentioned before it is apparently forbidden in the San Juan Islands clipusate and there are state agencies encouraging and in fact uh employing it in order to kill some plants and encourage other plants so that an endangered lepidopteran can thrive and it's just so shortsighted and arguments with such people get snowware maybe now it'll get somewhere maybe now we can stop the application of glyphosate within a African national historical park my god oh yeah yeah this is this has been a long time coming and so as much as you and I disagree about the particularly aware to focus our our dismay and anger we are in absolute agreement that the retraction was necessary and we hope that the EPA pays close heed and changes its directives when it has to do so this year good yeah so you have something else nope all right until you see us next time be good to the ones you love eat good food and get outside be well everyone if