Yes, but we understand modern science as it pertains to both... which is why lead is controlled for both organic and non-organic farming.
Honestly curious, which of these is more harmful than the non-organic alternatives?
https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title-7/subtitle-B/chapter-I/su...
I used lead as an example only because everyone actually understands why it's harmful. There are a number of chemicals that are more harmful, common vinegar for example in the concentrations that are useful, but nobody understands it because nobody has actually read the safety information on such chemicals.
I would imagine any agricultural use of vinegar as an organic chemical pales in comparison to it’s culinary use.
Agricultural use is a lot more concentrated though, which is important. In the case of vinegar this is about safety.
Though I don't know how much vinegar is used in ag - my facebook feed is full of people who don't need roundup because some concoction of vinegar, salt, and dish soap works - they never point out that you need PPE to work with this stuff that isn't required for roundup.
Agricultural use is not more concentrated than culinary use by the time it goes into my mouth. I've never tasted any vegetable off the shelf that was more sour than a pickle.
Occupational exposure is certainly a totally different story but the context of the story and root of this thread was about the consumer safety of the end product.