GMO’s and the silent killing of Nigerians without their knowledge

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In saner societies, when you walk into a grocery store, you have a fighting chance.

You’ll see:

– “Non-GMO”

– “USDA Organic”

– “Glyphosate-free”

– “No hormones. No antibiotics.”

– “Raised without chemicals.”

You may still be buying rubbish — but at least, you’re buying it knowingly.

In Nigeria? Forget it.

You’re buying maize that’s genetically modified to produce its own pesticide.

You’re feeding your baby beans that are resistant to every insect except the one eating her stomach lining.

You’re buying tomatoes that have never seen real soil.

But there is no label.

No warning.

No way to opt out.

Because your government does not care about your consent.

They approved GMO crops in 2019 — quietly.

No public campaign.

No mass education.

No labeling law.

No responsibility.

You eat blind.

You’re not choosing between real and fake.

You’re just buying what looks red and round.

And if you get cancer?

If your child starts having allergies?

If your sperm count drops?

If your hormones collapse?

If your gut becomes inflamed?

They’ll say it’s stress.

They’ll say you’re getting old.

But the truth is, you were poisoned — by “food.”

Food you never had a chance to reject.

Because no one gave you the information.

No one gave you the label.

No one gave you the right to say no.

It’s deeper than food.

It’s a war.

A war where:

– Your fatigue is not from hard work. It’s from inflammation.

– Your bloating is not because of age. It’s gut confusion.

– Your infertility is not spiritual. It’s biochemical sabotage.

You think you’re shopping.

You’re walking into a chemical experiment.

And you’re the lab rat.

Because you never asked.

Because they never told you.

Because in Nigeria, transparency is a threat.

They know if they put “Genetically Modified Organism” on that corn, sales will drop.

So they hide it.

They silence it.

They bury it under hunger and economic stress.

And you keep feeding yourself and your children food that would come with a warning label in Europe or the US.

That is not carelessness.

That is a crime.

So if you still think:

– Cheap rice is rice

– Imported apples are a gift

– Bread is innocent

– And maize is just maize

You’re already lost.

Wake up.

Start asking:

– Where was this grown?

– What seed was used?

– Is this sprayed?

– Is this ripened with gas?

– Why does this fruit never rot?

And if they can’t answer, walk away.

Because you may not know what you’re eating.

But your body does.

Share to your friends and family.

Let them know what they’re really eating.

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