Farmers?...are you sick of accidental cross-pollination of your produce?

Farmers?...are you sick of accidental cross-pollination of your produce?
Here is a basic explanation of the mechanism per se:I have never once heard this suggested even by the craziest of anti-GMO activists. Do you have any citations at all for this happening in humans due to GMO crops?
Except that the GMO crops have a tendency to be planted close enough to non-gmo crops that cross fertilization happens. The companies then go after the non-gmo farmer for "stealing".
It would be sort of like a software company releasing a computer virus on the internet and then suing the owners of infected PC's for piracy.
That's been my understanding as well. I hear all the time about how awful Monsanto is and how they're suing farmers who have the misfortune of having their field next to a field of GMO crops. Yet whenever I hear about it from an unbiased source, it's pretty clear they're only suing farmers who have intentionally tried to steal the GMO seed for their own benefit. The Supreme Court recently refused to hear a case on this topic, partially because Monsanto had promised not to sue anyone who who unintentionally had traces of their technology on their farm.Except that the GMO crops have a tendency to be planted close enough to non-gmo crops that cross fertilization happens. The companies then go after the non-gmo farmer for "stealing".
It would be sort of like a software company releasing a computer virus on the internet and then suing the owners of infected PC's for piracy.
I don't know that that actually happens, though. One of the science podcasts I listen to reviewed all the court cases (there weren't actually that many) and they were all very straightforward and obvious cases of farmers stealing the seeds. The podcast even appealed to listeners to see if they missed something, but all the evidence seemed to point to that being just another made-up part of the Monsanto Bogeyman narrative. It's been awhile since I've listened, so maybe they've found something since.
I'll try to find the episode or episode notes or something when I have more time later.
I like the bite-sized ones that are so easy to eat. They make salads great! (I think they are called cherry tomatoes:I wonder if they can introduce this trait into the smaller tomato varieties, like the Campari.
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