They are increasing because the pests are getting immune. Entomologists could show you that, but they are perhaps not scientific enough for you.
And of course you need more now, because the natural predators were killed with the pesticides used to kill the pests.
The GMO plants however lack the ability to call for help, Biologist could show you that, measuring the impulses the plants are sending.
So it is linked to GMO, but It is funny that a 2010 study is prove and a 2012 is just a variation. Let me guess, climate change is also a hoax.
Erm, did you actually read the articles you posted?
"Of that total,
herbicide use increased over the 16-year period by 527 million pounds while
insecticide use decreased by 123 million pounds."
Less insecticide is being used. Sure, the increase in herbicide use is not necessarily a good thing but it has nothing to do with insect pests.
As for your final point here no I did not say that, both studies are evidence in one direction, but given that both are correlational studies neither tells us much in the way of causality of GMOs. Essentially they cancel each other out. Therefore it is more likely that variations in pesticide use is influenced by other variables than GMOs.
You know that Glyphosate is Roundup. Which you not using for very obvious reason. You are not working for Monsanto by chance?
That didn't really occur to me and I had no idea it would be construed in that way.
Also that second comment seems rather random. Indeed it is the second time in your posts you threw in such an accusation. Are you familiar with ad hominem?
Nuclear energy used to be the savior of humanity, you know a personal nuclear reactor for every household. Anti Nuclear people were laughed at, that they were Anti Scientific or just stupid.
What evidence? Studies are not evidence, if studies would be evidence no product tested safe could ever become unsafe. Nuclear reactors were also safe, according to science only every 100'000 years there should be an accident. I am alive for 37 years and I already witnessed several.
You're still misunderstanding. The fact that some technologies have later emerged with unintended consequences does not act as evidence for GMOs being subject to the same problem.
When we consider the probability of something we first consult the base rates. The probability we are considering is that the scientific studies may be wrong. The base rate for such a probability is very heavily weighted towards the science being correct because the vast majority of products have not emerged as being unsafe.
So since something like 90% of products that have been proven safe remain so, the base rate is 90% for the science being correct. There is a 10% chance of it being incorrect (and again these numbers are assumptions) Thus it would be irrational to dismiss the science on the 10% probability without additional evidence to shift the probability.
Also you are kind of playing up to the anti-science stereotype by saying studies are not evidence. Yes, they are, they often form the basis of our knowledge about things. Since you have generally been arguing with reason I'm going to presume it was just a miswording on your part.