I'm not impugning Wikipedia.
I was indeed pointing out that uspirg.org is a website with a strong editorial bias, and I automatically suspect such outlets of bending the rules of good reporting to favor their agenda. I don't trust the article.
At this point I would and do use glyphosate preparations in my yard. (So some is ending up ingested/inhaled by me.) I need there to be a solidly-done and peer-reviewed study whose entirety is available for public view, and showing a definite hazard from glyphosate - before I change my mind on that. I am already fairly convinced that the Roundup adjuvant (polyethoxylated tallow amine) has been shown to be injurious to wetland fauna. So I'm not wedded to the idea of glyphosate or Roundup being safe.
The context here is that I see Roundup being backhandedly discredited, sort of like the way our media has turned every privately-owned gun in America into a dangerous and anachronistic Assault Weapon. They do it with a whisper campaign remarkably unimpeded by fact or the lack of it. I don't much like the propagation and proliferation of an (in my opinion unfounded) campaign to demonize this stuff. The jury is still out, I say. I reacted to the insinuation in the opening post that glyphosate's toxicity has been established. I am cautioning against propagating this sort of emotion-driven and probably unfair characterization of the substance.
Some info on how toxic we currently think it is, or isn't.
https://www.the-scientist.com/news-opinion/how-toxic-is-the-worlds-most-popular-herbicide-roundup-30308
This sort of epidemiology is extremely hard to do. Isolating long-term effects of one substance among people living in the real world is so hard that it sounds like a statistician's idea of the Problem from Hell. The hope is that closer-coupled
in vitro (not using lab animals and plants) and
in vivo (using them) tests can have predictive value going forward. We're systematically taking living systems apart and learning how the pieces fit together. One day we'll have the answers without having to run impossible long-term risk studies. Until then, I won't place glyphosate in the same mental category as tobacco and asbestos - things that we now know to be uncontroversially bad for us.
As for the kids, I do wonder what big health crisis is going on right now but hasn't yet been identified. I sort of suspect the bugbears we see (or think we see) now won't even be on the radar. But I do not know.
Good morning btw