Having said that, I personally am against GM stuff where foreign, non species specific genes have been spliced in.
Potato with the DNA of Arctic Cod? Salmon with a growth DNA from Gods know where?
We have created new types of Proteins, Proteins that our bodies do not know. We do not know the long term result. Independent European research has shown some frightening results of long term GM diet.
I'd be really interested in the Independent European research you mentioned, if you can remember anything about it.
In a previous life I was a geneticist for 10 years in the 2000s and never came across any convincing scientific evidence of long term GM diet having detrimental health effects.
There was a widely reported paper that showed rats ONLY fed GM soya had higher mortality/health problems but I seem to remember there was very little control (that is if the rats were fed ONLY on regular soya they would have faced the same nutritional deficit) and was subsequently widely discredited (however that wasn't so widely reported).
It has been a few years since I've actively looked at the research.
Selective breeding where beneficial traits are selected for by breeding with and between particular strains has been done for millennia and is the basis for all farming. However it is not without problems, unfortunately there have been strains produced in this way (in the last 50 years) that have had a detrimental impact on human health (I was taught a number of examples but can only remember a particular potato that was toxic even when cooked), however there are very few checks on breeds produced in the 'traditional' way.
Most GM crops are GM because they have had particular pesticide resistance genes inserted allowing farmers to use far more pesticide, far more indiscriminately for my liking. They also sometimes have their viability messed with forcing farmers to buy new seed every year (rather than being able to grow from the seed they produce). totally immoral in my eyes.
As with a lot of science GM was developed with the best of intentions to be able to improve drought resistance, yield and pest resistance. However when the multinationals came in all they saw was a way to make money by forcing farmers to buy the pesticide resistant strains and then the pesiticides themselves (farmers pay twice) and don't give a toss about the effects of the pesticides on the surrounding environment...
No scientist goes into science with the sole aim of making money, though every businessman does, sadly.