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Guess Who’s Controlling Our Food Supply
I have a difficult time accepting genetically modified (GM) foods at face value. My primary concerns have to do with what we know, and, more importantly don’t know about how this “promising” technology may or may not be impacting human health and our environment.
For those who prefer to avoid serving as human lab rats, myself included, our non-GM food options, according to advocates of GM food, boil down to eating USDA Certified Organic, which do not allow any genetically modified seed or crops to be used on such labeled food products. Their idea of severely limiting consumer choice, since they are adamantly opposed to “GMO Inside” labeling, goes against their own argument of freedom to choose, which also goes against the very fabric of what makes America’s version of capitalism work so well.
I couldn’t imagine the situation getting much worse, but it just did.
The latest issue of Scientific American Magazine includes the chilling article “Do Seed Companies Control GM Crop Research?” The magazine’s editors take readers beyond initial “government” approval of GM food, which reportedly utilized industry-sponsored research rather than independent government research, to the current state of independent research on genetically modified seeds and crops:
Unfortunately, it is impossible to verify that genetically modified crops perform as advertised. That is because agritech companies have given themselves veto power over the work of independent researchers.
It would be chilling enough if any other type of company were able to prevent independent researchers from testing its wares and reporting what they find—imagine car companies trying to quash head-to-head model comparisons done by Consumer Reports, for example. But when scientists are prevented from examining the raw ingredients in our nation’s food supply or from testing the plant material that covers a large portion of the country’s agricultural land, the restrictions on free inquiry become dangerous.
It is hard to understand how a handful of companies have amassed so much control over food ingredients found in an estimated 75 percenthierarchy of needs. of processed foods in America’s supermarkets. Making matters worse, and as the Scientific American editors point out, we are talking about a basic physiological need – food, which joins water, shelter and a handful of other needs defined by Abraham Maslow in his
Without extensive independent research on GM foods on how they impact human health and the environment, the distinct possibility exists that we’re setting ourselves up for significant and potentially irreversible problems down the line.
To keep the mainstream in check, we get slick multimillion dollar advertising campaigns from company’s like Monsanto claiming they have the solution to feed the estimated 9 billion people expected on the planet in the not to distant future, among other claims. Who cares if these claims have not been independently verified. Who cares if the Union of Concerned Scientists have released a report on GM crop yields debunking industry claims of significant yield improvements.
Despite 20 years of research and 13 years of commercialization, genetic engineering has failed to significantly increase U.S. crop yields.
The ongoing debate is not about stopping public relations (PR) efforts by these companies. Companies market products and there’s nothing inherently wrong with that. Nor is it about whether I or anyone else thinks GM foods are good or bad. Making such claims today are mostly opinion, since independent research is not available to properly inform discussions.
The debate needs to be about how our regulatory structure has sold out to industry, which is represented by a highly concentrated, centralized power structure that controls our conventional food system. It needs to be about holding the food system and our government accountable. Most important, it needs to demand companies and the government do what is right, just and fair.
We are a long way from that, it would seem, which is why initiatives like Pro Food and Slow Money are gaining steam. These efforts actively engage everyday citizens in developing and supporting transparent sustainable food systems, building on unique competitive advantages in comparison with today’s industrial food system players.
Let’s just hope that a sustainable food economy is not far behind.
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60 Comments so far
Show AllLet's hit 'em with our rubber duckies!
Rob.
Ned! Come back to us!
Been in this fight too long to leave except through my own death, Maliswan.
Just giving Robbie a little rub. ;)
And we'll go hunting deer.
Be careful what you rub him with; he's oily, this one.
Observed, Maliswan. Rob's okay, insofar as that goes. He just thinks a little higher of himself than he actually is. That is a danger for any of us. Self-deception. Which can also work the other way. You might think less of yourself, or what you are doing, than you are in actuality.
Many are the ways, but few are the Masters. :)
nedlud
Thanks for the constructive hip-check, Nedlud. :)
To measure one's standing via what they post online and/or how they comment on such posts, pales in comparison to his or her actions. Let's check back in 3-5 years and see whether I was all hat and no cattle.
I think well enough of myself that I expect the answer will be obvious.
Cheers,
Rob
"Being and non-being create each other.
Difficult and easy support each other.
Long and short define each other.
High and low depend on each other.
Before and after follow each other.
Therefore the Master acts without doing anything
and teaches without saying anything.
Things arise and she lets them come;
thing disappear and she lets them go.
She has but doesn't possess;
acts but doesn't expect.
When her work is done, she forgets it.
Practice not-doing, and
everything will fall into place"
(Tao Te Ching)
Lao Tzu
But don't forget either, Maliswan. That was a long time ago. Things are different today (and yet, not so different).
The Master changes and remains the same. :)
Yes and no; I understand.
Somedays it's: You can't be neutral on a moving train.
And others it's: The end of the world is only the end of an illusion.
A-yep.
We move from an ideological processing and being prcessed point of view to a kind of bewilderment, I guess.
'There is only the traveling on paths with heart, on any path with heart. Ask yourself, and yourself alone: Does this path have a heart? If it does, then the path is good; if it doesn't, then it is of no use.'
Don Juan Matus, from the writings of Carlos Castaneda
We need individual responsibility to take control of our own food supply. Consider that during WWII, 40% of all food being consumed in the US was grown in peoples front and back yards.
Today, roughly the same percentage comes from McDonalds, Burger King and Wendy's. And about 2% comes from backyard kitchen gardens (I can't verify these exact percentages).
We're letting this takeover happen to us because we are lazy and addicted to fast food.
Turn off the TV, sell your lawn mower at a garage sale and plant some heirloom tomatoes and carrots in your lawn. Don't buy into the empty promises of Frankenfoods.
The only thing GM food promises is to make a few people rich while destroying the biodiversity of our Mother Earth.
Hey, Moondoggy!
The author mentions Maslow's hierarchy, one of my faves...
The basest needs, on the bottom of the pyramid, are these:
Breathing
Homeostasis
Water
Sleep
Food
Sex
Clothing
Shelter
We, the 'premier intelligence' on the planet, have actually gone backwards as we've progressed through time...we are removing our ability to provide these, the basest of living requirements, for ourselves...we are creating a world where we are completely corporation-dependent for everything...I think Maslow's idea was we start at the bottom and work our way up, not start at the bottom and fall off...
Property ownership must go...as must chemical alteration of the planet...corporate personhood, electrical use, industrial destruction...
Global Start Date: September 22, 2012...we're gonna need locally-growing food, and lots of it...we've got lots of sharable shelter, we just have to get the landlords out of the picture...banks? money? cars? gas? gone...take a tip from the Moondoggy, and let's get those gardens growing! I still see SO many houses surrounded by worthless, frequently unkempt lawns...replant with food! Help those who can't, in return for shared bounty...grownups can do it, kids can do it...much of what we call education is just the opposite: disinformation and indoctrination...life is not so hard, we have made it that way...join the global team!
Why the specific date?
We have to change, globally, all of us around the world, together...I just picked a date not too far out, as we don't have much time, and at the near end of a growing season to enable and encourage us to grow and stockpile food in the meantime...
Then RUN WITH IT!. Get it out there! You're on to something...
Hey Dubet, How's it growin'?
Moondoggy,
Individual responsibility is critical, but in our media saturated, consumer driven culture it is very difficult to get this type of message in front of mainstream America.
At some point it will, but from my perspective I think we have to create new retail experiences around sustainable food that meets consumers where they shop - in stores. When I blur my eyes I see sustainable food "ingredient" stores right next to every McDonald's, given people accessible, convenient, everyday access to good food.
Getting there is what charges me up every day!
Cheers,
Rob Smart
Rob,
Thanks for your reply. I've read all your CD posts, and I appreciate what you are doing, envisioning and saying. Keep up the good work, brother!
Getting to a sustainable food economy is not only possible, it is a reality! For us, anyway. And it's not that hard. We grow a lot of the food we eat, plus sell the excess twice a week at farmers market, and to our local CSA customers (about 10 families). If we can do it here in northwest Montana, people can do it just about anywhere. People in warmer climates have it made!
We shop or trade for what we don't grow at the farmers market. And the rest we buy organically grown, local as possible, from our local food co-op. We make our own meals, and bake our own quick breads, pies, etc. We consume a tiny amount of processed food rarely, occasionally (my wife is a sucker for Soy Delicious and I for hemp rella), but mostly create our own meals.
To learn more about genetically modified organisms in our food I highly recommend a visit to the following website:
http://www.seedsofdeception.com/
Also see the documentary called The World According To Monsanto. You can see it in it's entirety on YouTube. Here's a link to part 1 of 10:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c_OJcPKEYDE
Cheers! ~Moondoggy (Brian Parks, Swan Lake, Montana)
birdfrog@wildmail.com
http://www.flyingpopcornranch.com
Fly in that ointment is that many Americans don't have lawns to dig up. They're tucked in apartments working two or three jobs to pay massive rip off rents or mortgages. At one time homes were too expensive to buy unless you wanted a subprime loan, and those who got subprime loans are now loosing the homes they obtained, turning those in for tent cities...
Landlords take a dim view on gardens, even the container variety in many drought stricken states as well. Grass lawns are being forced to go brown. Other areas mandate lawn care.
Crafty
I'm not "many Americans", and neither are you. I agree with you that rents and mortgages are a huge rip-off. They are usually an adult's primary monthly expense.
We all need food, clothing and shelter. Shelter gobbles up anywhere from one third to 60% (or more) of a person's income. It's robbery, and offers no possibility to get ahead, keeping us enslaved with no way out.
But a guy named Rob Roy offers us a way out in the form of a book. It's called:
"Mortgage Free! Radical Strategies for Home Ownership"
http://www.homestead.org/SheriDixon/MortgageFree.htm
Read it and set yourself free!
"Are you ready for the country, because it's time to go..."
-Neil Young
please see thom hartmann sociopath article explains all of
this very nicely.its time to modify some of their genes.
these things are monsters! humans don't do this to one another!
The corporate food industry IS the regulatory structure; no debate needed.
You say we need accountability, independant research, disscussions, the right the fair and the just - But based upon what criteria? Science stammers to "discover" what our ancestors knew intrinsically; this confusion is breed by a hodge-podge of "specialists" who refuse to acknowledge that life is a WHOLE system working together, and not just a series of random and independent events.
The criteria is the human being and his direct relationship to nature, which provides his means of survival. Decorate it anyway you like - With politics, chemicals, and the bottom-line - But, at its very essence, we are talking about WHAT WE ALL NEED TO LIVE. This is a criteria based on quality, not quantity.
We need, most importantly, for individuals to stop writing articles that simply say "We need to this...And we need to that...". Give us answers! Give us a WAY to make this actually work!
"We will find a way, or make one" - Hannibal (of Carthage)
Maliswan,
You know that answers to highly complex problems don't come easy, so the more people thinking about the things we face, the better.
Having said that, what I am working on personally is developing a framework and tools for foodpreneurs to launch, fund and grow sustainably-minded ventures that create more opportunities for more people to buy and eat sustainable food. You may have read one of my "Pro Food" posts on Common Dreams. Here is the current line up of those posts.
1. Closing the Farm to Table Knowledge Gap (http://everytable.wordpress.com/2009/06/19/closing-the-farm-to-plate-knowledge-gap/) - Set up Pro Food by describing the critical need to bring farmers and consumers together, thus pushing industrial food system to the side
2. Pro Food Is (http://everytable.wordpress.com/2009/06/30/pro-food-is-2/) - outlines overall all challenge and seven core principles
3. Slow Food with an Entrepreneurial Twist (http://everytable.wordpress.com/2009/07/08/pro-food-vs-slow-food/) - contrasts Pro Food with well established Slow Food movement
4. The Five Stones of Pro Food (http://everytable.wordpress.com/2009/07/23/five-stones-of-pro-food/) - Discusses competitive advantages
Together, the represent the foundational tools to help entrepreneurs, advocates and investors carve out a better way, grow market share and put real pressure on government and industry to change.
There is much work to be done, but my efforts go far beyond just "writing articles."
Cheers,
Rob Smart
Mr. Smart,
Thank you for the reply.
I have actually been very vigilant of your CommonDreams posts.
My "fundamentals" are these: You have to get the land back to the PEOPLE! And THEY must understand that we, as human beings, correspond directly to the natural world. Without this understanding, there is imbalance in our lives - As we are beginning to see in a myriad of modern forms, from the inconvenient to catastrophic. If you throw Mother Nature out the window, as Masanobu Fukuoka has said, She will return to your door with a pitchfork!
We don't need idolatry, we don't need "isms", we don't need every other thing on this planet to be branded, spruced-up, and made available for sale. We need to KNOW LIFE - With love and fear and awe!
This is an uphill battle and we will most likely lose - But we must fight - Because what would we be otherwise?
I wish you the best of luck, Mr. Smart.
In haste,
Phillip Serradell/Maliswan
No surprise here, and I'm certainly with the writer on condemning any and all GM foods.
But what do we make of this: "...freedom to choose, which ... makes America’s version of capitalism work so well"?
Is this some kind of joke?
Clovis,
Unchecked capitalism, the type we are seeing in America's industrialized food system is not what I was referring to, but I agree is a joke. That was one of the primary points of this post.
Having said that, properly regulated by a democratic government, capitalism has tremendous potential, even better when companies embrace triple bottom line corporate structures (see "Five Stones of Pro Food" at http://everytable.wordpress.com/2009/07/23/five-stones-of-pro-food/ for more on this).
What I find interesting is how often industrial food uses "choice" as justification of status quo, even when it doesn't make any sense. For example, they are against labeling of foods with GM ingredients because people should have freedom to choose what they eat without government getting involved. Then, when you ask them to explain how people can choose non-GMO foods, they say give them Certified Organic.
Its maddening in a way, but also identifies tremendous opportunity for sustainable food entrepreneurs to embrace better ways and start taking market share.
Hope that helps.
Cheers,
Rob Smart
a.k.a., Jambutter on Twitter
Blog: http://everytable.wordpress.com
Thanks for the clarification, Rob. I guess I was responding on a more general level--i.e., that the American version of capitalism doesn't seem to be working at all of late, and "freedom of choice," at least the way it is invoked to justify unchecked capitalism, has always seemed to me an illusion. When it comes to the food that we put in our bodies, on the other hand, I certainly do want the choice of eating non-GM foods, and this is precisely what the agribusiness giants seem bent on preventing. Authentic choice, I think we agree, should be good for the economy. The problem, however, is that with business and government incestuously intertwined the way they are in the present-day U.S., truly free choice is only allowed insofar as it benefits the major vested interests. Witness, for instance, Bush's interdiction of less expensive Canadian medicine from the American market. Strictly speaking, a truly free-market economy should allow anyone and everyone to try to undersell the competition. But with our current version of lobbying-as-government (and, by extension, lobbying-as-business), this is almost never the case.
Go see "Food, Inc." it is really an great movie, and it really shows us who is calling the food shots.
What I took away from this movie was this: if you eat three times a day you vote with every food purchase. Put your money where your mouth is. Buy organic, even though it is more expensive. Wal-Mart is now stocking milk without BST. Why? Because it's customers wanted it. We need to show our food producers what we want. Go to your local farmer's markets and vote with your dollar.
At least Europe will remain uncontaminated.
Europe remains uncontaminated but Monsanto, Syngenta and the rest are always, through the WTO, filing lawsuits against and putting pressure on European countries to reverse GMO bans, allow field trials, etc.
Unlike us, European citizens know how to stage a real damn protest. Hopefully they'll be able to prevent that from happening.
Part of it has to do with the way they prefer collective work and responsibility over excessive individualism compared to here where it's the opposite. Another part has to do with what they eat compared to here. It's virtually impossible to deny the truth about our electorate being corn-fed when a European comes up and tells us just that.
To continue our earlier conversation, I managed to get some meatless meatballs (as strange as that sounds) at Whole Foods today and just finished a nice dinner of organic whole wheat linguine with meatless meatballs. They taste a bit different, but still good :-)
I'm glad they weren't so bad. I'm much less of a meat eater but on my next occasional moment, I'll have to remind myself of that. Thanks.
P.S.: I have mixed feelings about Whole Foods Market. On the one hand, that giant organic store is looked at as the Organic Walmart due to its similar structure and probably because they crushed a lot of the smaller organic stores. However, plenty of great stuff there that is harder to find elsewhere and they do go local and regional from place to place which is why I cannot resist. :)
My state has 3 locations, one in each of the big two (Kansas City and St Louis) and one somewhere out there. I hear that the DC location has a lot of them in the surrounding suburbs outside DC.
There's 3 inside DC, and a few nearby outside it. Whole Foods is very useful for rarer and alternative brands of products, and their store brand is good quality and is usually cheaper than the regular crappy name brands at other stores. I just bought some WF brand tortilla chips, BBQ potato chips, and salsa there, mmm.
It also has some other stuff I can't find anywhere else, such as organic milk from grass-fed cows. Right now though I drink powdered milk, it's pretty cheap, and of course it doesn't go bad.
The chips are great though I don't think I can take the ones with a little too much sea salt lest my blood pressure go up. :(
About Whole Foods, the store is interestingly from Austin, TX. I always knew that TX could produce a few neat things aside from the dirty pols.
Yeah, I gotta be careful too, I ran out of blood pressure meds over a month ago and can't get more right now. But as long as I stay away from pizza or fast food, I should be fine. Plus, this site helps me relieve stress :-)
So does listening to the local classical music station, chatting with my friends from college, reading, drinking hot tea at work, etc. I may very well be ok without my medicine, but I wish I didn't have to risk it.
The UN is defending those MNCs and that's why it's very difficult to reign in Monsanto out here in St Louis. The UN could be better if they would stop protecting those agri-giants and let them fail on their own.
Zmann: Unlike the US, where so many citizens are disengaged, blissfully ignorant or otherwise, Europeans come out of the woodwork to fight any hint of GM foods infiltrating their markets, and never without proper labeling.
It reminds me of my former home town of Montpelier, the capital of Vermont. Thanks to a strong mobilization of its citizens some years ago, Montpelier remains the only state capital in the US without a McDonald's.
Anything's possible if enough people pull together.
Cheers,
Rob Smart
Awesome :-)
But does it have Burger King, Subway, Wendy's, Starbucks, Arby's, Wal-Mart...?
There is a Subway and Dunkin Donuts (on outskirts of town), but no other fast food or coffee chains. Keep in mind there are only 8,000 citizens in Montpelier, with daytime population of 20,000-25,000 due to legislative and executive government activities.
I'll bet that in Europe even where there is fast food stores, the food is not as overprocessed unlike the States. :(
Don't be fooled, zmann, by Europe's posture of benevolent concern. As we speak, the E.U.--the institutional body, that is--is trying its damnedest, with the Sarkozy government leading the charge, to circumvent the public's unambiguous rejection of GM foods. It is only the vigilance of groups like José Bové's in exposing any and all attempts to fly under the radar that has thus far prevented the eurocapitalists from trying to cash in on this opportunity. The situation bears watching, however, since big business--in Europe no less than anywhere else--is always waiting for the public to let down their guard. And Sarkozy's stranglehold on the French media doesn't help.
Why isn't the author discussing the fact that the UN is defending Big Agri against those of us that want to reign it in? Trying to reign in agri-giants such as Monsanto is like trying to lift a mountain. As long as Washington and the UN defend these corporate creeps, they win and we lose. The UN should not be defending bad MNCs but instead let them fail on their own.
Also, I mentioned the differences in our agriculture of 50 years ago vs today in yesterday's article by Jim Goodman on farmers and healthcare. This author should have discussed pasture raised meat and diary that used to be the norm until 50 years ago when that all changed and corporate factory farms took over and were allowed to smash small farmers to wipe out the competition and poison us slowly.
Ray Berthiaume
Jennifer, I appreciate your comments. May I make a correction, please. I believe you meant "rein" rather than "reign" Peace.
Ray Berthiaume
Jennifer, I appreciate your comments. May I make a correction, please. I believe you meant "rein" rather than "reign" Peace.
Thanks Ray. :)
Ray Berthiaume
Jennifer, I appreciate your comments. May I make a correction, please. I believe you meant "rein" rather than "reign" Peace.
OK i admit i am not a food scientist. but some thins there are that so violate Mother Nature they may be dismissed with no further discussion. "mountain top removal" for example is a phrase so abhorrent one would expect it to self destruct on arrival. i submit that "genetic modification" is also a concept sufficiently offensive to what's natural that it can be discarded without more "studies". in this case we may perceive possible gains, but upon more reflection we realize that unanticipated consequences could be disastrous. genetic changes do appear naturally, of course, but when this happens they blend seamlessly with the rest of nature, precisely because they are natural. this is not what happens when monsanto rears its ugly head over the horizon. any time Mother Nature sees monsanto coming she screams.
it's a scream that actually sounds a lot like what you hear when a mountain top is blown off.
Mr Rob Smart___ You may not be able to verify that GM plants will not produce more, but if you talk to any farmer that has been in the business for ten or more years you will get a different opinion on that. When you see healthy plants that are free of root insect damage, and in the case of corn, free of ear damage, all without using dangerous sprays and chemicals, it is pretty impressive. Farmers will not pay high prices to get GM seed if they do not increase yields and are safer to manage than regular varieties. However, most farmers plant as much GM as is allowed as a refuge has to be provided to keep insects from becoming immune.
It would be interesting to know what percent of the GM corn goes into human consumption as most of it is fed to animals or exported. It may be that the corn and other grains that go into the human food supply may not be mostly GM products. I have not seen any figures on that but I do know field corn is as the benefits are proven by now.
How do we know that plants that have been covered in sprays and grown in treated soil are any safer to eat that GM? It is impossible for commercial farmers to try to raise organic crops as the pests would drive them out of business. For someone growing food for a farmers market, organic is a great idea, and the extra price received will make up for less yield.