A common weed killer left an epigenetic footprint in early-onset colon cancer

38 points
1/21/1970
a day ago
by SilverElfin

Comments


keane

a day ago

CommenterPerson

Scary stuff .. I have seen up close family members undergoing treatment for a different cancer. Believe me, it is harsh, changes the rest of your life for the worse. .. Consider living in a townhouse and never having to handle these toxic chemicals ever. And saving oodles of your time for more fun stuff.

a day ago

DerArzt

Or just don't use pesticides for your residential property.

a day ago

QuantumNoodle

Right? Grow some wild flowers instead of grass and plant some f*ckin trees. Americans love their yards but dont plant any trees. You know what creates shade?

I realized my rant is charged and unhinged. But idc. I hope at least 1 person sees this and pays the $200 to hire someone to plant a young tree in their yard.

14 hours ago

balderdash

Maybe I’m unique but growing up part of my chores (or punishment) as a kid was weeding - weeding the vegetable garden, weeding flower beds, weeding the stone driveway etc. - we would have never used chemicals around the house or on things you’re going to eat - we were definitely not a super “environmentally conscious” household but that just seemed like common sense…

a day ago

rythmshifter

Why a townhouse?

a day ago

SilverElfin

Dow Chemicals created a pesticide called Picloram, that apparently is behind the rise of colorectal cancer in young adults. And it hasn’t been reviewed by the EPA since the 90s but now a new study establishes the link between the pesticide - which is still legal to use - and this cancer epidemic.

a day ago

yareally

13 hours ago

ChrisArchitect

Maybe not exactly the same thing but related:

Supreme Court to hear arguments in landmark Roundup weedkiller case

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47923121

a day ago

tempera

[dead]

a day ago