Shontel Brown Criticizes RFK Jr.'s 'MAHA Report' for Flawed Data and Claims
Forbes Breaking NewsSeptember 7, 20254 min897 views
11 connections·19 entities in this video→Critique of the 'MAHA Report'
- 🎯 Shontel Brown criticizes the 'Make America Healthy Again' (MAHA) report, stating it was developed without input from farmers and key stakeholders.
- ⚠️ The report is accused of containing broken citations, misleading claims, and cherry-picked data, ignoring established science-based frameworks for crop protection.
- 🔍 The report's methodology is questioned for omitting crucial voices, including farmers, food producers, and scientists, and for making broad claims not grounded in current scientific understanding.
Importance of Science-Based Regulation
- 🔬 Farmers rely on pest control products as essential tools to protect crops, preserve yields, and ensure national food security.
- ⚖️ A strong, science-driven regulatory system built on rigorous standards, facts, and stakeholder input is crucial for effective governance.
- 🗣️ There is a need to ensure regulatory processes are founded in science and not influenced by political agendas or fear.
Funding for Agricultural Research
- 💰 The MAHA report calls for more research into the health impacts of pesticides, yet the administration's proposed budget includes significant cuts to agricultural and public health research programs.
- 📈 This creates a contradiction, questioning the seriousness of the report's call for science if the institutions needed to produce it are being defunded.
- 🧑🔬 Federal research dollars are vital for ensuring the regulatory process remains grounded in sound, up-to-date science, including the review of new technologies and their impacts.
- 🏫 Land-grant universities play a role in testing new properties, but this requires adequate funding to enable timely research and regulatory review.
Commitment to Innovation
- ✅ Sound policy must start with sound science and trust in facts.
- 🚀 Commitment is expressed to supporting the next generation of crop protection tools grounded in research and innovation to build a more resilient and secure food supply.
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Transcript17 segments
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What’s Discussed
MAHA ReportShontel BrownRobert F. Kennedy Jr.House Agriculture CommitteePest Control ProductsCrop ProtectionFood SecurityRegulatory SystemScience-Based RegulationAgricultural ResearchFederal FundingStakeholder Input
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