Under most circumstances, if Monsanto is for it…I’m agin’
it. That is certainly the case with the
initiative to require labeling of Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs) in California. The campaign in support of Prop 37 is called
“Californians Right to Know” and that pretty much sums it up. We have a right to know if food we buy is
Genetically Engineered (GE).
Who is spending $35 million to try to convince you that you
shouldn’t know if your food contains GMOs? Monsanto, DuPont, Dow Chemical, Conagra,
Bayer Crop Science, Coke, Pepsi,
Kellogs, Sara Lee, General Mills… You get the idea. Expect lots of slick mailers implying that
GE foods will be banned (false) it will cost taxpayers millions (Legislative
Analyst says $1 million AT MOST for regulatory costs) and it will increase food
prices by billions. This last claim is
based on an assumption that once GE food is labeled consumers won’t want
it. The argument is, “We don’t want to
tell you what’s in our products because then you won’t want to buy them.”
The health effects of GE food is unknown. My guess is that they are minor in a diet already
full of processed food. Let’s face it,
if you are drinking Coke and eating Frosted Flakes, the fact that they are made
with GE corn is probably the least of your health worries. And a GE apple may
well be a better individual health choice than a bag of organic potato
chips. Consumers of junk food, will
probably soon just stop noticing the “Genetically Engineered” on the
package. The consumer demand that may
change as a result of the labeling will be on foods that are marketed as
“natural” or “healthy choice.” Consumers
who are putting effort into trying to buy healthier food deserve accurate
information. And if the result is a
decrease in demand for GE food then that is the free market at work.
More than individual health, the real cost of GMO agriculture
is in the context of the environment and the food system as a whole. Despite claims of using GE to solve world
hunger with super nutritious, drought tolerant crops, the most widespread GE crops are Round-up ready corn and soybeans that will survive being doused with
herbicides and crops that have GE systemic pesticides. The widespread use of
these crops rapidly create super-weeds and super-bugs that demand ever stronger
and more thickly applied herbicides and pesticides. This arms race leaves
growers of non-GE crops struggling with out of control weeds and pests. For example, Bt, is a bacteria that can be
used as a pesticide in certified organic food but which was used rarely so
there was little pressure for bugs to develop resistance. In a few short years, Bt impregnated GE
crops have caused such widespread resistance that Bt is now largely ineffective for
organic growers.
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ReplyDeleteThat's right. Or follow "Uncle Steve's Voting Guide" which is: "Follow the money and then piss on what you find there".
ReplyDelete--Horemheb