Not true, but there are carcinogens in nature that they list, because they look at all sources of cancer. For example, UV exposure causes skin cancer, so they list it. A company like Monsanto will spin this to "poison the well" on their manmade product getting listed as a potential carcinogen. Nobody can stop people from getting skin cancer from too much exposure to the sun, but that is not the same as being exposed to risk from a manmade product.
You are ignoring the fact that they did nothing of the sort. They did not contradict studies that looked at dietary intake, but this was not a case of dietary exposure to Roundup.
It remains certain that no cancer has ever been linked to glyphosate by any serious study.
This is just plain false. There are studies that have yielded conflicting results, according to the article that I posted. You are ignoring the fact that not all studies are equal in terms of what factors they take into account, levels of exposure, and conditions under which the exposure occurs. There are a lot of different studies, and the results and conclusions are mixed.
Regardless of which, a jury is completely unqualified to make any assessment of matters of science.
Who is "qualified"? The scientists who concluded that glyphosate was not a carcinogen or those that concluded it was? Juries are only required to arrive at a conclusion based on what a "reasonable person" would infer from the evidence presented in court. If you can think of a superior way to resolve legal questions regarding liability in such cases, then please inform us. The jury system is obviously not perfect, but what would be a better system for resolving these disputes?
Facts exist. Glyphosate is not a carcinogen. If it was, the evidence would be overwhelming - it's been very widely used for a very long time. Where are all the corpses?
Well now, there are quite a few human corpses out there that have died from cancer. The question is how many of them would have become corpses if the living bodies had never been exposed to glyphosate. Your bald assertion that glyphosate was not a carcinogen is hardly more convincing than the jury's conclusion that it was. Why should your opinion be taken over the opinions of jurors that had been exposed to Monsanto's defense lawyers? You never even heard the arguments or saw the evidence.
I recommend that those who imagine that there's a 'controversy' about this well established science read a whole bunch of sources, rather than cherry-picking.
I suppose that your advice would also apply to you. I don't get the impression here that you are some kind of expert on this subject. I could be wrong, but it strikes me that you are just another person here with an opinion. Those are not in short supply here, and we welcome your company.