WDNG News Talk 14.50
NOW PLAYING
Clyde Lewis
9P - 12P
buyersUSA Consulting
Local Interest:      Anniston Hotels      Anniston Restaurants      Anniston Real Estate      Anniston Florists      Anniston Schools      Trending Search:      Blake Shelton      Cher      Tim Duncan      Hunter Hayes      NHL      Michael Hastings      Aaron Hernandez      Mac Miller      Lil Wayne      Lolo Jones      Steve Gleason      MAC Cosmetics      LIRR      Sofia Vergara      Born Sinner      Paul McCartney      Bruins      Jimmy Hoffa      Rick Rubin      The Wolf of Wall Street      Smoking No More!      Local Interest:      Oxford Hotels      Oxford Restaurants      Oxford Real Estate      Oxford Florists      Oxford Schools     

From Heavy Industry - Agriculture / Aquaculture

Brought to you by Mexico Lindo

You're invited to Mexico Lindo, where your dining experience is like a fantasy under the stars! 550 Oxford Exchange Blvd Oxford, AL 36203? (256) 831-9407

Monsanto Throws GMO Victory Party in California

Wed, 7 Nov 2012 10:37:34 EST

$46 Million Advertising Blitz Convinces Citizens to Vote "Against Own Interests"
 
http://www.cornucopia.org/2012/11/monsanto-throws-gmo-victory-party-in-california/
Sacramento, CA -- After a deluge of allegedly misleading advertisements paid for in large part by pesticide and biotechnology corporations, California voters defeated Proposition 37, which would have given them the right–to-know whether the foods they buy at the grocery store contain genetically engineered ingredients (GMOs). 
 
With 95% of the vote counted, according to the California Secretary of State's office, the proposal was defeated 53-47%.
 
"Genetically engineered foods found on market shelves have most commonly been altered in a lab to either be resistant to being sprayed by large amounts of toxic herbicides, or to produce, internally, their own insecticide," explains Mark A. Kastel, Codirector of The Cornucopia Institute.  
 
"Corporations that produce both the genetically engineered crops and their designer pesticides, in concert with the multi-billion-dollar food manufacturers that use these ingredients, fought this measure tooth and nail, throwing $46 million at the effort that would have required food manufacturers to include informational labeling on GMO content on their packaging," Kastel added.
 
Many food activists nationwide looked to the California initiative as "the last best hope" for GMO labeling in this country.  Such labeling is required throughout Europe, and by scores other countries worldwide.  In the US, polls indicate that over 90% of citizens support labeling and the right to choose if they have not been deluged by misleading advertisements paid for by biotechnology corporations.  But both Republicans and Democrats in Washington have been unwilling to address the issue, likely due to massive campaign contributions from the biotechnology and agribusiness lobbies.  
 
The failure of Proposition 37 does not leave consumers completely in the dark about genetically engineered (GE) foods, since foods without GE ingredients are already widely available and clearly carry the USDA "organic" seal.  Federal law prohibits the use of GE seed or ingredients in any product labeled "organic."
 
In some ways, the "organic" label goes much further than what Proposition 37 would have required, since organic meat, milk and eggs must come from animals that were not treated with GE hormones and fed a diet that is free of GE ingredients.  Proposition 37 would not have required labels on meat, milk and eggs from animals given GMO feed.  Alcoholic beverages were also not covered under proposition 37.  Organically labeled beer, wine and spirits are increasingly available in the marketplace.
 
"Organic foods are already required by federal law to be free from genetic engineering," says Steven Sprinkel, an organic farmer in Ojai, California who fought for prop 37 passage.  "And the icing on the organic cake is that certified organic foods are also grown without a long list of dangerous and toxic chemicals and pesticides, hormones, antibiotics and other drugs that are routinely used in conventional agriculture."
 
Despite its defeat, Proposition 37 achieved at least one of its goals.  The question on the ballot, which forced biotechnology corporations and food manufacturers to defend their experimentation with our food supply and with public health, has likely increased awareness about GE foods among California consumers.
 
The biotechnology and food manufacturing industry's efforts to defeat Proposition 37 revealed just how terrified these corporations were of consumers knowing what they are eating.     
 
"If corporations truly believed that genetically engineering our food supply is in society's best interest, they should be happy for consumers to know which foods contain their genetically engineered materials," says Cornucopia's Kastel.  "Their obvious fear of people knowing what they're eating raises serious questions about their products' safety, and more and more consumers are making that connection."   
 
The campaign to label genetically engineered foods also shed light on the dedication to organic principles, or lack thereof, by the corporate ownership of many iconic organic brands.  For weeks, organic consumers have flooded consumer relations phone lines and Facebook pages of organic and "natural" brands such as Horizon Organic (Dean Foods), Silk (Dean Foods), Kashi (Kellogg) and Cascadian Farm (General Mills) when they learned that the corporate owners of these brands were spending hundreds of thousands of dollars to defeat Proposition 37. 
 
In what turned out to be a David and Goliath campaign fight, a diversified group of independent food manufacturers, retailers and activists that espouse their commitment to the principles of sustainable agriculture and to producing healthy, wholesome and pure food, stepped up to the plate by making contributions to the 'Yes on 37' campaign. 
 
Consumers can view a scorecard illustrating the financial contributions of various organic brands by viewing Cornucopia's infographic at www.cornucopia.org/2012/08/prop37.  "We hope this information will empower consumers to vote in the marketplace and support the true heroes in this industry," Kastel added.
 
Meanwhile, some corporations that should have stepped up to the plate gave token contributions at the eleventh hour.  Whole Foods, a corporation with net sales as high as Monsanto's—both have approximately $11 billion in annual sales—contributed a mere $25,000, just two business days before the election, Cornucopia noted in its research.  On the other hand, Monsanto contributed $8,113,000 to the "No on 37" campaign effort.
 
'Had we seen the same level of enthusiasm for consumers' right-to-know from Whole Foods as we saw against the right-to-know from Monsanto, the playing field would have been more level, and the misleading information spewed by giant corporate agribusinesses would quite possibly not have prevailed on election day,' said Kastel. "Meaningful participation from Whole Foods could have been a game changer.'
 
 
-30-
 
 
MORE:
 
Cornucopia encourages organic consumers who shop at Whole Foods to continue doing so.  Rather than boycott the multi-billion-dollar corporate food retailer, Cornucopia encourages Whole Foods shoppers to write  corporation leadership, through their website, and share their discontent with the major retailer's unwillingness to fully step up to the plate on financially supporting the 'Yes on 37' campaign.
 
In its annual report for shareholders, Whole Foods writes, 'We walk our talk when it comes to our core values.'  Whole Foods shareholders should be concerned with the corporation's lackluster participation in this 'food fight of the decade,' when they passed up an opportunity to walk their talk and refused to step up to the plate in terms of financial support for this grassroots effort.   "It will remain to be seen whether Whole Foods has squandered some of their goodwill," Kastel lamented.
 
Many consumers who do feel betrayed might seek out one of the country's almost 300 member-owned co-ops, or one of the iconic independent natural food grocers for purchases of organic, non-GMO food.
 
A chart delineating where retailers stood, pro and con, in backing proposition 37 can be found at: www.cornucopia.org/2012/08/prop37
 
 
 
The Cornucopia Institute is engaged in research and educational activities supporting the ecological principles and economic wisdom underlying sustainable and organic agriculture.  Through research and investigations on agricultural and food issues, The Cornucopia Institute provides needed information to family farmers, consumers, stakeholders involved in the good food movement, and the media.
 


Source: WebWire

From Our Blogs

Patryna Goosby -- It’s Your Life

Patryna Goosby of Gadsden will be interviewed on It’s Your Life on June 21, 2003.

Oxford Lumber -- Featured Advertiser

Oxford Lumber is a locally-owned hardware and builder supply retail outlet.

"Four Feet Tall and Rising: A Memoir by Shorty Rossi

Book Review

I Hate Bullies

An Opinion about those who try to bullie others to get their way without compromising themselves


Sign up for our weekly newsletter.

Our Website Sponsors

Doc's Furniture

Good used furniture,antiques & collectibles. Located on the corner of Hwy 202 & 300 1st Ave. W. (Anniston) Open Mon-Sat 9-5. Call 256-310-8223

Sunny King Ford

We offer new Ford cars, trucks, SUVs and crossovers online at www.sunnykingford.com. Call 256-831-5300.

Valley Heating and Cooling

It's hard to stop a Trane. Your local heating and cooling company. Located in Saks at 521 Post Oak Road. Call us at 256-820-3369.

Pizza Hut

Two locations to serve your. 322 Blue Mountain Road in Anniston. Call 256-237-3251. 292 Hamric Dr E in Oxford. Call 256-831-7721.

Sunny King Toyota

Sunny King Toyota has received almost as many accolades as our Toyotas,including more than 25 prestigious industry awards from Toyota and Southeast Toyota. Stop by to see how all of this can benefit you! 2570 US Hwy 78 E, Anniston.1-800-365-3001