Market

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Tuesday, November 8, 2016

The GMO food producing industry's latest gimmick-Wants US Government to give them grants to "brainwash" the consumers!

Does not your blood boil hearing the latest gimmick in the US by the so called "biotech" industry in trying to siphon of public funds for its selfish interest of promoting GMO foods in that country? It is an outright criminal thing to ask government to fund an "education" program to be run by it to "educate" the food consuming public how much benefits are awaiting them if they buy the genetically modified food products churned out year after year without the consumer ever knowing about it! Already more than 85% of processed foods marketed in the US are either wholly based on GMO raw materials or contain one or more of GMO components and what is there to educate the consumer is beyond any body's guess. It is well known how this industry has been stonewalling the demand by the consumers to declare on the label presence GMO ingredients in the products and after years of struggle the law makers considered a bill on GMO foods which is an apology for transparency! To add insult to injury now comes the new strategy to make government fork out huge amounts to help the industry sell to the consumer their version about the safety of GMO foods. Here is a take on this important issue which captured the attention of all those campaigning against the unsubstantiated claims about GMO foods.

"Last weekend (Oct. 29), the New York Times ran a piece on how the biotech industry has failed to deliver on its promises for GMO crops. The article followed less than a month after the biotech industry asked congressional leaders for $3 million in taxpayer-provided funding to "educate" the public about biotechnology and agricultural production. Congress should turn down this request for two reasons. First, the biotech and food industries should spend their own money to market their products. And second, Congress shouldn't use taxpayer money to promote what scientists and international organizations have said for years, and the latest investigation by the Times reveals, is a technology that not only doesn't live up it its hype, but is counterproductive to resolving the critical issues of global food sovereignty and global warming.
As reported by Farm Futures, 56 groups, including biotech and food industry lobbying organizations, wrote a letter asking four members of the Ag Appropriations Committee to include $3 million in the  2017 Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act in order to "ensure key federal agencies responsible for the safety of our nation's food supply – the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) – are able to more easily convey to the public science- and fact-based information about food." The groups justify their request for consumers to foot the bill for industry's marketing campaign by stating that: "These benefits are passed on to consumers who reap the advantage of affordable food prices, greater access to nutritious food, an improved environment, a strengthened rural economy, and enhanced domestic and international food security." In their letter, the groups claim "there is a tremendous amount of misinformation about agricultural biotechnology in the public domain." We would argue, and the Times investigation confirms, that much of that "misinformation" comes from industry itself, in the form of false promises. Specifically, as the Times reports, GMO crops have not led to higher yields, while they have led to greater, not reduced, use of pesticides. That's not news to those who track issues of world hunger and the harm, to the environment and to human health, of higher and higher volumes of increasingly toxic pesticides. The United Nations Human Rights Council is just one international organization that has reported on the failure of GMO crops to feed the world, and the fact that the only path toward global food security is agroecology, or regenerative agriculture. In its "Agriculture at the Crossroads" report, the International Assessment of Agricultural Knowledge, Science and Technology for Development (IAASTD) drew the same conclusions. Next week, governments, scientists and activists will gather in Marrakech for the COP22 Climate Summit. Thanks to French agriculture officials, who launched the 4 per 1000 Soils for Food Security and Climate Initiative last year at the Paris Climate Summit, the COP22 agenda will include discussions about the potential for regenerative agriculture to draw down and re-sequester carbon in the soil. This soil carbon sequestration strategy, recently hailed by climate scientist James Hansen, requires healthy soils in order to work, the kind of soils that can only be generated by regenerative agriculture practices—not GMO monocultures. The  United Nations Conference on Trade and Development's 2013 Trade and Environment Review estimates that the industrial food system generates 43-57 percent of anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions.
We must reduce fossil fuel emissions. But we also must draw down the legacy carbon already in the atmosphere. Regenerative agriculture practices provide our best hope for achieving that, while at the same time providing food and economic security to populations at risk.
Admittedly, $3 million is peanuts in the overall scheme of congressional spending bills—especially for an industry that, according to 2015 report,  "has spent hundreds of millions of dollars over the past few years on stealth PR tactics and deployed over a dozen front groups to push coordinated messages to attack organic food, defend pesticides and the routine use of antibiotics, and promote GMOs — messages that are making their way, day after day, to the pages of the largest media outlets." GMOs have been on the market for more than 20 years. Yet the number of hungry people in the U.S. is on the rise. Congress should allocate money to support the type of agriculture we know will lead to food security, at home and abroad, not to what has already proven a failure."

Will there be a day when the peddlers of GMO foods are taken to task for misleading with tall and unproven claims about these bio engineered foods, none of them proved beyond a shadow of doubt? Probably we may be day-dreaming because most governments, even the democratic ones, are in the vice-like grip of the GMO industry which has bankrolled the election of most of the lawmakers making the latter beholden to them. Naturally money can do strange things including making the law makers sing the tunes set by the industry. It is unbelievable that a reputed organization like USFDA can twist the facts and come out with guidelines that favor the industry in stead of protecting the health of the citizens. 
Surprisingly both the presidential aspirants in the November 8 election are avoiding saying anything about food safety, lest they burn their bridges with their financiers. One can only gasp in disbelief that world is moving slowly towards a catastrophe because of short sighted visions of the governments, supposed to be the guardians of the subjects they rule! 

V.H.POTTY
http://vhpotty.blogspot.com
http://foodtechupdates.blogspot.com