Mother Jones, effectively dismantling everything you thought about food nutrient by nutrient, had an actual geneticist weigh in on the topic of California’s Proposition 37, which reads the following:
- Requires labeling on raw or processed food offered for sale to consumers if made from plants or animals with genetic material changed in specified ways.
- Prohibits labeling or advertising such food, or other processed food, as “natural.”
- Exempts foods that are: certified organic; unintentionally produced with genetically engineered material; made from animals fed or injected with genetically engineered material but not genetically engineered themselves; processed with or containing only small amounts of genetically engineered ingredients; administered for treatment of medical conditions; sold for immediate consumption such as in a restaurant; or alcoholic beverages.
And, also:
- Proposition 37—Say “Yes” to know what’s in your food.
- Proposition 37 simply means you’ve the right to know what’s in your food. The way to do that is to make sure food labels are accurate.
- Proposition 37 puts you in charge. No government bureaucracy, politician or agrichemical company will be able to hide whether your food is genetically engineered. Enforcement is only an issue if companies disobey the law! All they must do is tell you what’s in your food, as they already do in over 40 other nations throughout Europe, Australia, Japan and even China and Russia.
- Proposition 37 doesn’t ban genetically engineered food. Big agribusiness and agrichemical companies and their lobbyists want to scare you. Under Proposition 37, you can keep buying your current foods, or you can select foods that aren’t genetically engineered. It’s your choice.
- Proposition 37 doesn’t raise food costs or taxes. Because food companies regularly re-print labels and there’s a reasonable phase in period, Proposition 37 won’t raise prices.
- Proposition 37 will help protect your family’s health. The FDA says “providing more information to consumers about bioengineered foods would be useful.” Without accurate food labeling, you risk eating foods you are allergic to. Why don’t the big food companies want you to know what’s in your food? With conflicting, uncertain science about the health effects of genetically engineered foods, labeling is an important tool to protect your family’s health.
- WE HAVE THE RIGHT TO KNOW WHAT’S IN OUR FOOD. Yes on 37.
Before I quote her article, I want to be fair and quote some of the arguments against Proposition 37… just for… fun:
Actually, scratch that. I sincerely read the argument against Proposition 37, and was thoroughly disgusted. The counterarguments are rooted in the same bulljive these companies have been misrepresenting for years, now, and I’m not giving it a place in this post or even on this blog until I can thoroughly go through it, line by line, and debunk it myself. I only wish I would’ve done it sooner.
There is absolutely no reason to not invest in educating the public. It isn’t costly to anyone but the companies, and that’s only because it’d require them to do what they can to avoid having to label their foods… which would mean having the genetically engineered material removed from their products.
Countless countries already have this law in place. The only reason we don’t is because our USDA and FDA – as well as our Supreme Court… I see you, Clarence Thomas, Monsanto alumnus – are overrun by ConAgra and Monsanto former (and future, don’t sleep) employees. Period. Any attempt to obfuscate the truth about a product that a consumer has to purchase is an attempt to undermine the integrity of capitalism, and any government that allows it to go on is only showing us the extent to which its been bought and paid for.
There’s a documentary out there titled Killer At Large, and there’s a great clip in there in a California court room where a representative of the food industry basically implies, “We believe that the public won’t buy our stuff if we tell them what’s in it.”
Oh.
On to the MoJo essay, though:
Genetically engineered (GE) sweet corn is being sold at a Walmart near you. And because that company has said it sees “no scientifically validated safety reasons to implement restrictions on this product,” and because US regulations don’t require it, it isn’t labeled “GE.” Developed by Monsanto, this GE sweet corn is beautiful by fresh corn standards—not a worm hole in sight—since it contains not one, not two, but three insecticides engineered into each cell of every kernel. Having the corn make its own insecticides means that farmers don’t have to spray those chemicals out in the environment. The end result is that no earworms or European corn borers will have anything to do with this good-looking GE sweet corn. But, you may be wondering: should I?
So here’s the 411 on GE sweet corn at Walmart, based in large part on information available on Monsanto’s website.
First, although Monsanto provides links to “Peer Reviewed Safety Publications” for many of its other GE crop products, it does not do so for its “Seminis Performance Series Sweet Corn.” The peer-review process is a hallmark of scientific validation.
As it turns out, scientists have found reason for concern about the sweet corn. There’s this peer-reviewed report documenting the development of resistance among western corn rootworms to one of the bacterial insecticides present in Monsanto’s GE sweet corn. Another peer-reviewed study finds that weeds such as Palmer amaranth are now resistant to glyphosate, the active ingredient in products like Monsanto’s Roundup herbicide. Since a fourth foreign gene in Monsanto’s GE sweet corn confers glyphosate-resistance to it, I expect we’ll see even more of these “superbugs” and “superweeds” showing up in US farmlands soon, unless this new GE sweet corn is agriculturally managed a lot more carefully than previous GE crops have been.
[…]
But that’s not what California’s Proposition 37 is about. Instead, it asks: Do you deserve some indication that pesticides are intentionally present in the fresh corn you contemplate purchasing and eating? And should you have the right to support, or not support, agricultural methods used to produce food crops that could also be producing new plant pests at the same time? My answer: Yes, definitely.
So… what do you think about this? Californians, what’s going on?
For more information on California’s Proposition 37, visit Ballotpedia’s lengthy and balanced wiki page on it… and pay close attention to how voting goes on it… after you’ve voted, of course.