America First Report
SUBSCRIBE
  • Home
  • Type
    • Original
    • Curated
    • Aggregated
  • Style
    • News
    • Opinions
    • Videos
    • Podcasts
  • About Us
    • Contact
  • America First Newsletter
No Result
View All Result
America First Report
  • Home
  • Type
    • Original
    • Curated
    • Aggregated
  • Style
    • News
    • Opinions
    • Videos
    • Podcasts
  • About Us
    • Contact
  • America First Newsletter
No Result
View All Result
America First Report
No Result
View All Result
Home Type Curated

‘Bringing Home the Bacon’: FDA Approves U.K. Biotech Company Plan to Produce Gene-Edited Pigs for U.S. Consumers

by Brenda Baletti, The Defender
May 10, 2025
in Curated, Opinions
Pork

  • Not All “Survival Food” Supplies Are Created Equal


The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) last week gave a U.K.-based biotech company the green light to produce gene-edited pigs for human consumption in the U.S.

PIC, formerly the Pig Improvement Company, uses CRISPR gene-editing technology to genetically engineer pigs to be resistant to porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome (PRRS), a viral infection that affects pigs produced in industrial factory farms, according to Technology Review.

 

 

PRRS, which first emerged in the 1980s, is a contagious respiratory virus that causes fever, respiratory issues and reproductive failure in pigs. It can also suppress the immune system, making pigs more vulnerable to other infections.

A recent analysis showed the virus cost the industrial pork industry about $1.2 billion in lost production between 2016 and 2020. Producers have had difficulty controlling the virus because it mutates quickly, rendering vaccines ineffective.

CRISPR gene editing makes it possible for scientists to manipulate an animal’s own DNA, rather than adding DNA from other species to it, as has been done with previous genetically modified organisms (GMOs).

The FDA’s approval allows the company to produce the pigs commercially, which includes allowing the pigs to reproduce and pass on their genetic modification.

Dagger

The designers of the pig used the CRISPR gene-editing “scissors” to edit pig embryos, cutting out the molecular receptor the PRRS virus uses to enter the cells. They then implanted the embryos into young female pigs.

“This approval is a milestone in biotechnology, with gene-edited animals potentially offering a more sustainable and disease-resistant source of protein,” wrote Food & Drink International.

Supporters also tout the idea that gene-edited pigs will need fewer antibiotics, because they won’t get sick.

However, critics doubt the editing will work for long. They also raised concerns about the technology’s unintended effects.


  • The Potential of Ivermectin and Mebendazole in Treating Parasites and Beyond


GMWatch, a GMO watchdog group that reported the FDA approval in its newsletter, wrote:

“We don’t expect the genetically engineered virus resistance — which even now is leaky — to last long in the gene-edited pigs. We saw in the COVID pandemic just how quickly viruses mutate to evade any barrier placed in their path.

“The genetically altered pigs will drive the evolution of mutations in the virus that enable it to break through the engineered virus resistance — potentially leading to the emergence of even more virulent strains of the virus.”

Swine disease researchers have also raised doubts about whether the gene editing will even work. A retired University of Minnesota professor and veterinarian told AVMA News, “There is no silver bullet when it comes to PRRS.”

“It will hopefully improve the control of PRRS,” he said. “But as it has not been tested under conditions representative of large-scale pork production, producers and veterinarians will still need to apply all the control measures that have been proven to be effective against this virus.”

In response to the news, the Center for Food Safety (CFS) is calling on the FDA to implement stricter regulations on genetically engineered animals. The organization said the current regulatory structure “lacks the necessary rigor and public transparency.”

CFS also said that gene-editing animals can lead to unanticipated animal health issues, environmental disruption, and that without labeling laws, it can take away consumers’ rights to make informed decisions about what they eat.

Other attempts at gene-editing animals … and people

The FDA decision on PIC’s pigs is among the first for gene-edited livestock in the U.S. The process has long raised concerns, because in animals, gene editing has led to unexpected side effects, including enlarged tongues and extra vertebrae.

Often, researchers don’t know the extent of a gene’s functions until they attempt to make changes to it, Dr. Joseph Mercola reported.

Technology Review said the pig-editing project is “scientifically similar” to an attempt in China in 2018 to genetically engineer humans. Scientist He Jiankui edited the embryos of what would become twin girls to make them resistant to HIV by removing a receptor gene.

 


  • Former White House Advisor: “Trump to Release $150 Trillion Endowment”


When the news broke about the twins, there was international outcry. Jankui was sentenced to three years in prison and a hefty financial penalty. It is unclear what happened to the girls. Jiankui told NPR they are “living a normal, peaceful, nondisturbed life,” but declined to comment on whether there had been any negative effects.

An international panel decided no one should modify babies again “until it has been clearly established that it is possible to efficiently and reliably make precise genomic changes without undesired changes in human embryos.”

However, those restrictions don’t apply to pigs.

Raymond Rowland, a University of Illinois researcher involved in creating the first PRRS-proof animals, told Technology Review that gene editing is “in its largest sense, a way to create more perfect life.”

Parasites Ivermectin Mebendazole

So far, only a few gene-edited animals have been allowed in the U.S. In 2015, the FDA approved AquaBounty Technologies’ application to create and farm its genetically engineered salmon, designed to grow twice as fast as normal salmon.

However, after approval, the company faced opposition from environmental activists and low demand for its product. Last December, it closed its fish factory and culled the remaining stock.

In 2022, the FDA gave gene-edited cattle, developed by bioengineering company Recombinetics, a low-risk determination for marketing products, including meat. The animals have their genes modified to make their coats shorter and slicker, which is intended to help them better withstand heat stress, allowing them to gain more weight and increase the efficiency of meat production.

The FDA said there were no safety concerns and allowed the development to move forward. The low-risk determination means that when the company is ready to market the gene-edited cattle, it will face lower hurdles in the regulatory process.


  • The Potential of Ivermectin and Mebendazole in Treating Parasites and Beyond


The same company was attempting to gene-edit cattle in Brazil to be hornless, but found unexpected genomic alterations during the process, which Brazil subsequently halted.

Not the first gene-edited pigs in U.S.

PIC’s pigs are the second genetically modified pigs approved as food in the U.S. In 2020, Revivicor won FDA approval for its GalSafe pigs, edited to be safe for people with the alpha-gal syndrome to eat.

Alpha-gal syndrome sensitizes people to allergic reactions to beef, pork and lamb, usually after a tick bite. The GMO animal was created by removing the gene for alpha-1, 3-galactosyltransferase, which “attaches alpha-galactose sugars to cell surfaces,” Medpage Today reported.

While the GalSafe pigs were for a specialty market, PIC hopes its pigs will be widely adopted across the livestock industry. The company is seeking approval in Canada, Mexico and China and plans to launch sales in the U.S. next year, Food & Drink International reported.

More gene-edited animals are also in the works. Last year, the FDA announced the establishment of two Animal and Veterinary Innovation Centers focused on making genetic alterations to animals that “support agricultural resilience, food security, animal health, or public health.”

The agency provided funding to the University of Wisconsin-Madison to develop gene-edited chickens to resist highly pathogenic avian influenza, also known as bird flu. It also funded the University of California, Davis, to work on various major livestock species for food and to share their data to help ease the regulation process.


The JD Rucker Show — Rumble — X (Twitter) — YouTube


Tags: Children's Health DefenseFDAFoodGMOLedePorkTop Story
Next Post
Ancient Dye

Ancient "Factory" for Purple Dye Mentioned in Bible Discovered South of Haifa

Comments 15

  1. letmepicyou says:
    2 days ago

    Since the “government” won’t get the FDA under control, isn’t it about time a lawful militia goes in and takes the place over? It sure would seem like the good and proper thing to do under the law, since the existing entity is CLEARLY doing more to harm us than to protect us. I’m pretty sure that literally defines them as an “enemy combatant” under both international as well as constitutional law.

    Reply
    • 8675310 says:
      2 days ago

      This is RFK’s wheelhouse. The FDA is in his department. Promises made. Promises broken. It lends credence to Shanahan’s claims.

      Reply
    • Nunyo says:
      2 days ago

      You’re glowing.

      Reply
  2. 8675310 says:
    2 days ago

    PRRS sounds like covid. Was it engineered like covid, as well?
    Aren’t we lucky to have these scientists who know better than God?

    Reply
    • letmepicyou says:
      2 days ago

      There’s actually no such thing as “COVID”.
      I’m pretty sure everyone knows this by now…
      There is also no “PRRS”, it doesn’t exist.
      Any “condition” the pigs may have, would be directly caused by previous “vaccines”. I guarantee you every single animal diagnosed with this “virus” that DOES NOT EXIST (because NO viruses exist) was previously treated with some other “medication”.
      This is the game they play. The require you to shoot up your animals with some bs, then a year or 2 later the previous bs they injected your animals with will start to make them sick, so POW here comes a new “virus”, even worse than the last! And of course, now you have to shoot them up with the new crap.

      It’s all a game. The majority of the shysters behind it all just HAPPEN to be Jewish, but I’m sure that’s just a big coincidence. The goal is to make the animals sick which increases scarcity lowers production and drives costs up, making them more money, and making us have less.

      Nothing else.

      Seriously, pay attention. This is grade school s*** by now, didn’t “CONVID” teach you anything?

      Reply
      • Mike says:
        2 days ago

        This is a wildly inaccurate take on this whole thing. Let’s say you’re right, that virus doesn’t exist… It’s whatever from vaccines. Wouldn’t then the VAST majority of all pigs be no good? Very sick? Unable to sell? As for someone else saying “we know better than God”… Give me a break .. human beings used to live to 16-19 years old. It’s thanks to medicines, sanitization, many vaccines as to why we do live much longer.

        Reply
  3. Leroy C Dunning says:
    2 days ago

    I will never by pork in any form ever again if this corruption of our food supply is allowed to take place.
    UK? what the hell is the UK doing to our food supply. I thought we threw these clowns out a couple of centuries ago.

    Reply
  4. SilenceDoGood says:
    2 days ago

    Jesus didn’t eat pork. He followed all kosher laws.

    Reply
  5. James Hascomb says:
    2 days ago

    A nice tangentially-related, standalone statement is in Rev. 11:18 is “The time has come for judging the dead” NIV.

    It’s okay if you don’t get how the passage can relate to this article.

    Speaking of not getting it, here is a biblical riddle for you to consider. In the book of Daniel there is a huge mountain mentioned in Dan. 2. There is also a tree in Dan. 4 that is mentioned. This huge mountain and this tree, they both represent the very same thing. So the question becomes, “when is a huge mountain a tree?”

    Well, riddle on that. If you can answer it, look for the holyhelper substack and leave a comment explaining your answer. Great things await those that can solve the riddle.

    Reply
  6. Rumpledstiltskin says:
    2 days ago

    Genetically altered corn is one thing, but genetically altering chickens and pigs has got to be about the stupidest thing these scientist could cook up. We no longer trust the FDA, Big Pharma, or most the supposed experts. We’ve finally woke up and have realized that human criminality against other humans is at a zenith and nothing is going to change unless me make it change.

    Now you know why Louigi took out that insurance CEO. At some point they are going to have to pay the price for fuquing us over for at least a Century. Using you lack of profits during this inflationary period is no excuse to try and screw over our populace with more fake vaccines to try and kill a fake manufactured virus. Apparently now profits are considered the “Holy Grail” that comes at consumers expense.

    Reply
  7. KlownWatch says:
    2 days ago

    Where tf is RFK?
    C’mon man!

    Reply
  8. Vera says:
    2 days ago

    If they do that, I guess I’ll have to become a vegetarian. I’m not eating frankenfish, Frankenstein pigs, or insects for my protein.

    Reply
  9. Farmer Jones says:
    2 days ago

    Like all good Demoncrats, RFK is proving contrary to his own MAHA movement. I assume FDA is under HHS. If the pigs have respiratory issues due to large scale confinement operations, then change the operations not the genetics of the pig. Small diversified food and energy sources are good for National security. Large cities are analogous to large livestock confinement facilities. At least spread things out. At. Least if large confinement centers are necessary then design them and automate and minimize unhealthy conditions that cause the problems. China has designed a pig highrise that is supposed to be fully automated and focused on healthy practices to keep the pigs healthy while they gain slaughter weight.

    Reply
  10. Deborah says:
    2 days ago

    I trust no one who plays god and thinks they can do it better, safer.

    I am choosing to opt out of this mad science world they are creating.

    Reply
  11. mac says:
    2 days ago

    Simple solution is forcing creators of modified DNA, RNA edibles, injectables, aerosols etc., to consume/absorb/breathe their own inventions FIRST (and repeatedly) …..
    Thus modifying themselves into oblivion before the general public can be affected.

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

America First Newsletter


MyPatriotSupply Generator




  • About Us
  • America First Newsletter
  • Contact
  • Home
  • Newsletter
  • Privacy Policy
Site Operated By JD Rucker.

© 2023 America First Report.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Original
  • Curated
  • Aggregated
  • News
  • Opinions
  • Videos
  • Podcasts
  • About Us
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy

© 2023 America First Report.

Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?