Yeah, I generally support GM crops. Everything is already GM anyway. But done at random or they used to irradiate the seeds to increase the mutation rates. It's just now with current science we know a little about what's going on inside the cells. We've been GMing for thousands of years by trial and error so far. So I'd expect the issues with GM crops are not going to be massively outside our own experiences so far.
The golden rice criticisms seem a bit unfounded. Especially since it's a non-profit program, that makes the one reasonable one actually unreasonable.
Critics of genetically engineered crops have raised various concerns. An early issue was that golden rice originally did not have sufficient vitamin A.
So, it's worse than having none at all?
Greenpeace opposes the use of any patented genetically modified organisms in agriculture and opposes the cultivation of golden rice, claiming it will open the door to more widespread use of GMOs.
Well it would do that if the program is proven to help people...
Vandana Shiva, an Indian anti-GMO activist, argued the problem was not the plant per se, but potential problems with poverty and loss of biodiversity
Growing a different type of rice isn't going to imporverish people or reduce biodiversity any more than intensive rice agriculture is already...
Other groups argued that a varied diet containing foods rich in beta carotene such as sweet potato, leaf vegetables and fruit would provide children with sufficient vitamin A.
That sounds really expensive to pull off in poor communities where they may not have electricity for refrigeration. It sounds a little like a "let them eat cake" solution from a middle-class person who doesn't understand how hard it is to pull all that together. Maybe we can put the third-world on the paleo diet instead