A New Look at the Glyphosate Debate
United States, USAWed Mar 25 2026
For years, a prominent environmental activist has been in courtrooms arguing that the herbicide glyphosate causes cancer. He built a career and earned millions by pushing cases to trial, often citing this claim during his presidential run.
Recently he surprised his supporters by backing an executive order that would boost the domestic production of glyphosate. The move seems like a political flip‑flop, but it also highlights how fragile the anti‑glyphosate movement has been when faced with scientific evidence.
The activist once helped win a huge lawsuit against the company that sells glyphosate, but now he aligns with regulatory agencies that say the chemical is not likely to cause cancer when used properly. This shift has angered many of his followers, who feel betrayed.
What is more concerning is the fact that for decades he helped spread misinformation that made people fear glyphosate, while also making money and giving a narrow group of lawyers big profits.
Regulators, like the Environmental Protection Agency, agree that glyphosate is not a human carcinogen when used as directed. The real controversy comes from a 2015 study that labeled it “probably carcinogenic, ” a category also used for red meat and very hot drinks. Later investigations revealed that the study’s authors had financial ties to law firms that profit from lawsuits.
Because of this study, courts became a venue for an $11 billion settlement boom. The activist’s 2018 verdict opened the floodgates for thousands of lawsuits, large advertising campaigns to recruit plaintiffs, and a reliance on disputed science in courtrooms.
Fortunately, legal reforms in 2023 strengthened judges’ ability to scrutinize expert testimony. Courts can now demand scientific consensus rather than rely on litigation‑funded studies.
Those who feel let down by the activist’s new stance should also question those who helped create the panic in the first place. A serious movement against misinformation must look inward as well as outward.
https://localnews.ai/article/a-new-look-at-the-glyphosate-debate-3107cfcc
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