"Let thy food be thy medicine and thy medicine
be thy food."
Hippocrates, Father of
Medicine, 400 BC
This is no longer true today,
because some of the food you eat is not real food. It is
50 Harmful Effects of
Genetically Modified Foods

By Nathan Batalion
We are
confronted with what is undoubtedly the single most potent technology the world
has ever known - more powerful even than atomic energy. Yet it is being
released throughout our environment and deployed with superficial or no risk
assessments - as if no one needs to worry an iota about its unparalleled powers
to harm life as we know it - and for all future generations.
Introduction
Biotechnology
is a vital issue that impacts all of us. Largely between 1997 and 1999,
gene-modified (GM) ingredients suddenly appeared in 2/3rds of all US processed foods. This food alteration was
fueled by a single Supreme Court ruling. It allowed, for the first time, the
patenting of life forms for commercialization. Since then thousands of
applications for experimental GM organisms have been filed with the US Patent
Office alone, and many more abroad. Furthermore an economic war broke out to
own equity in firms which either have such patent rights or control the
food-related organisms to which they apply. This has been the key factor behind
the scenes of the largest food/agri-chemical company mergers in history. Few
consumers are aware this has been going on and is continuing. Yet if you
recently ate soy sauce in a Chinese restaurant, munched popcorn in a movie
theatre, or indulged in an occasional candy bar - you've undoubtedly ingested
this new type of food. You may have, at the time, known exactly how much salt,
fat and carbohydrates were in each of these foods because regulations mandates
their labeling for dietary purposes. But you would not know if the bulk of
these foods, and literally every cell had been genetically altered!
By
contrast, an unregulated, quiet, and lightning speed expansion has been
spearheaded in the US by a handful of companies in the wake of consolidations.
We hear from their sales departments that nothing but positive results will
follow - and for everyone from farmers to middlemen and the ultimate consumers.
This "breakthrough" technology will aid the environment by reducing
toxic chemical use, increase food production to stave off world hunger, and
lead to an agricultural boom. In addition it will provide nutritionally
heightened and much better storing and tasting foods. Finally, all of this is
based on nothing but "good
science" - which in the long run will convince the wary public that
GM foods are either equivalent or better than the ordinary.
The
size of a technology's market penetration - 1/4 of US agriculture - is not
necessarily indicative that the majority of these claims are true.
Biotechnology attempts a deeper "control" over nature. But a powerful
temporary control is illusionary. For example, a farmer in Ottawa planted three
different kinds of GM canola seeds that came from the three leading producers
(Monsanto's Roundup, Cyanamid's Pursuit, and Aventis' Liberty). At first, he
was happy to see he needed to use less of costly herbicides. But within just
three years, "superweeds" had taken in the genes of all three types
of plants! This ultimately forced him to use not only more herbicides, but far
more lethal products.
The
central problem underlying all of this technology is not just its short-term
benefits and long-term drawbacks, but the overall attempt to
"control" living nature based on an erroneous mechanistic view.
"Bioengineering"
thus offers a contradiction in terms. "Bio" refers to life, what is not mechanistically predictable or
controllable - and "engineering" refers to making the blueprints for machines that
are predictable - but not alive. They are dead. Thus there is the joining of what is living with
what applies to the opposite.
What is
patentable also needs to be mentally "distinctive" - fixed or mostly
unchanging in our minds to obtain an ownership or right-to-control patent.
Again, something unchanging is not constantly adapting to its surrounding
environment. It is less alive, and strategies to maintain that are often deadly. For
example, much of GM technology is directed at eliminating surrounding
biological environment - competing animals and plants, soaking them with lethal
toxins.
What
will happen if this technology is allowed to spread? Fifty years ago few
predicted that chemical pollution would cause so much environmental harm - with
nearly 1/3rd of all species now threatened with extinction. Or that cancer
rates would have doubled and quadrupled.
Farmers
who view their land as their primary financial asset have reason to heed this.
If new evidence of soil bacteria contamination arises - what is possible given
the numerous (1600 or more) distinct microorganisms we classify in just a
teaspoon of soil - and if that contamination is not quickly remediable but
remains permanent - someday the public may blacklist farms that have once
planted GM crops. No one seems to have put up any warning signs when selling
these inputs to farmers who own 1/4 of all agricultural tracks in the US.
Furthermore, the spreading potential impact on all ecosystems is profound.
Writes
Jeremy Rifkin, in the Biotech Century,
"Our
way of life is likely to be more fundamentally transformed in the next several
decades than in the previous one thousand years…Tens of thousands of novel
transgenic bacteria, viruses, plants and animals could be released into the
Earth's ecosystems…Some of those releases, however, could wreak havoc with the
planet's biospheres."
In
short these processes involve unparalleled risks. Voices from many sides echo
this view. Contradicting safety claims, no major insurance company has been
willing to limit risks, or insure bio-engineered agricultural products. The
reason given is the high level of unpredictable consequences. Over two hundred
scientists have signed a statement outlining the dangers of GM foods and The Union
of Concerned Scientists (a 1000 plus member organization with many Nobel
Laureates) has expressed similar reservations. The prestigious medical journal,
Lancet, issued a warning that GM foods should never have been allowed into the
food chain. Britain's Medical Association (the equivalent of the AMA) with
100,000 physicians and Germany's with 325,000 issued similar statements. In a
gathering of political representatives from over 130 nations, approximately 95%
insisted on new precautionary approaches. The National Academy of Science
released a report that GM products introduce new allergens, toxins, disruptive
chemicals, soil-polluting ingredients, mutated species and unknown protein
combinations into our bodies and into the whole environment. This may also
raise existing allergens to new heights as well as reduce nutritional content.
Even within the FDA, prominent scientists have repeatedly expressed profound
fears and reservations. Their voices were muted not for cogent scientific
reasons but due to political pressures from the Bush administration to buttress
the nascent biotech industry.
To
counterbalance this, industry-employed scientists have signed a statement in
favor of genetically engineered foods. But are any of these scientists
impartial? Writes the New York Times (about a similar crisis involving genetic
engineering and medical applications), "Academic scientists who lack
industry ties have become as rare as giant pandas in the wild…lawmakers,
bioethics experts and federal regulators are troubled that so many researchers
have a financial stake [via stock options or patent participation] … The fear
is that the lure of profit could color scientific integrity, promoting
researchers to withhold information about potentially dangerous side-effects.
"Looked
at from outside of commercial interests, perils are multi-dimensional. They
include the creation of new "transgenic" life forms - organisms that
cross unnatural gene lines (such as tomato seed genes crossed with fish genes)
- and that have unpredictable behavior or replicate themselves out of control
in the wild. This can happen, without warning, inside
of our bodies creating an unpredictable chain
reaction. A four-year study at the University of Jena in Germany conducted by
Hans-Hinrich Kaatz revealed that bees ingesting pollen from transgenic rapeseed
had bacteria in their gut with modified genes. This is called a
"horizontal gene transfer." Commonly found bacteria and
microorganisms in the human gut help maintain a healthy intestinal flora. These,
however, can be mutated.
Mutations may be able to travel internally to other
cells, tissue systems and organs throughout the human body. Not to be underestimated, the potential domino
effect of internal and external genetic pollution can make the substance of
science-fiction horror movies become terrible realities in the future. The same
is true for the bacteria that maintain the health of our soil - and are vitally
necessary for all forms of farming - in fact for human sustenance and survival.
Without
factoring in biotechnology, milder forms of controlling nature have gravitated
toward restrictive monocroping. In the past 50 years, this underlies the
disappearance of approximately 95% of all native grains, beans, nuts, fruits,
and vegetable varieties in the United States. GM monoculture, however, can lead
to yet greater harm. Monsanto, for example, set a goal of converting 100% of all US soy crops to Roundup
Ready strains by the year 2000. If effected, this plan would have threatened
the biodiversity and resilience of all future soy farming practices. Monsanto
laid out similar strategies for corn, cotton, wheat and rice. This represents a
deep misunderstanding of how seeds interact, adapt and change with the living world of nature.
One
need only look at agricultural history - at the havoc created by the Irish
potato blight, the Mediterranean fruit fly epidemic in California, the current
international crisis with cocoa plants, the regional citrus canker attack in
the Southeast, and the 1970's US corn leaf blight. In the latter case, 15% of
US corn production was quickly destroyed. Had weather changes not quickly
ensued, the most all crops would have been laid waste because a fungus attached
their cytoplasm universally. The deeper reason this happened was that
approximately 80% of US corn had been standardized to help farmers crossbreed -
and by a method akin to current genetic engineering. The uniformity of plants
then allowed a single fungus to spread, and within four months to destroy crops
in 581 counties and 28 states in the US. According to J. Browning of Iowa State
University: "Such an extensive, homogeneous acreage of plants… is like a
tinder-dry prairie waiting for a spark to ignite it. "
The
homogeneity is unnatural - a byproduct of deadening nature's creativity in the
attempt to grasp absolute control - what ultimately can yield wholesale
disaster. Europeans seem more sensitive than Americans to such approaches -
given the analogous metaphor of German eugenics.
Historical Context
Overall
the revolution that is presently trying to overturn 12,000 years of traditional
and sustainable agriculture was launched in 1980 in the US. This was the result
of a little-known US Supreme Court decision Diamond vs. Chakrabarty where the highest court decided that
biological life could be legally patentable. Ananda Mohan Chakrabarty, a
microbiologist and employee of General Electric (GE), developed at the time a
type of bacteria that could ingest oil. GE rushed to apply for a patent in
1971. After several years of review, the US Patent and Trademark Office (PTO)
turned down the request under the traditional doctrine that life forms are not
patentable. GE sued and won. In 1985, the PTO ruled that the Chakrabarty ruling
could be further extended to all plants, seeds, and plant tissues - or to the
entire plant kingdom.
Scouring
the world for valuable genetic heritage, W.R. Grace applied for and was been
granted fifty US patents on the neem tree in India. It even patented the
indigenous knowledge of how to medicinally use the tree (what has since been
called bio-piracy). Furthermore, on April 12, 1988, the PTO issued its first
patent on an animal to Harvard Professor Philip Leder and Timothy A. Stewart.
This involved the creation of a transgenic mouse containing chicken and human
genes. On October 29, 1991, the PTO granted patent rights to human stem cells,
and later human genes. A United States company, Biocyte was awarded a European
patent on all umbilical cord cells from fetuses and newborn babies. The patent extended
exclusive rights to use the cells without the permission of the `donors.'
Finally the European Patent Office (EPO) received applications from Baylor
University for the patenting of women who had been genetically altered to
produce proteins in their mammary glands. Baylor essentially sought monopoly
rights over the use of human mammary glands to manufacture pharmaceuticals.
Other attempts have been made to patent cells of indigenous peoples in Panama,
the Solomon Islands, and Papua New Guinea. Thus the Chakrabarty ruling evolved
within the decade from the patenting of tiny, almost invisible microbes to
virtually all terrains of life on Earth.
Certain
biotech companies then quickly moved to utilize such patenting for the control
of seed stock - including buying up small seed companies and destroying their
non-patented seeds. In the past few years, this has led to a near monopoly
control of certain commodities, especially soy, corn, and cotton (used in
processed foods via cottonseed oil). As a result, nearly 2/3rd of such
processed foods showed some GM ingredient. Yet again without labeling, few
consumers in the US were aware any of this was pervasively occurring. Industry
marketers found out that the more the public knew, the less they wanted to
purchase GM foods. Thus a concerted effort was organized to convince regulators
not to require such labeling.
Condensed Summary of Hazards
This
book reviews and disputes the industry claims that GM foods are the equivalent
of ordinary foods not requiring labeling. It offers an informative list of at
least fifty hazards, problems, and dangers. There is also a deeper
philosophical discussion of how the "good science" of biotechnology
can turn out to be nano-technology. When pesticides were first introduced, they
also were heralded as absolutely safe and a miracle cure for farmers. Only
decades later the technology revealed its lethal implications.
The
following list also is divided into easily referred to sections on health,
environment, farming practices, economic/political/social implications, and
issues of freedom of choice. There is a concluding review of inner concerns -
philosophical, spiritual and religious issues involving "deep
ecology" - or our overall way of relating to nature. Furthermore there is
a list of practical ideas and resources for personal, political and consumer
action on this vital issue. Finally, this book as a whole is subject to change
as new information becomes available.
The
reader is encouraged to keep in touch with the many web sites that have
updating information - and to contact Americans
for Safe Food to offer new information or feedback to help make this
book a timely resource.
Dr. George Wald: Nobel Laureate in Medicine, 1967
Higgins
Professor of Biology, Harvard University
Near-deaths from Allergic
Reactions In 1996, Brazil nut genes were spliced into soybeans by a company
called Pioneer Hi-Bred. Some individuals, however, are so allergic to this nut,
they go into anaphylactic shock (similar to a severe bee sting reaction) which
can cause death. Animal tests confirmed the peril and fortunately the product
was removed from the market before any fatalities occurred. "The next case
could be less than ideal and the public less fortunate," writes Marion
Nestle, head of the Nutrition Department of NYU in an editorial to the New
England Journal of Medicine. About 25% of Americans have adverse reactions to
foods. 8% of children and 2% of adults have food allergies as tested by blood
immunoglobins.
Cancer and Other
Degenerative Ailments
Direct Cancer and Degenerative
Disease Links In 1994, FDA approved Monsanto's rBGH, a genetically produced
growth hormone, for injection into dairy cows – even though scientists warned
the resulting increase of IGF-1, a potent chemical hormone, is linked to
400-500% higher risks of human breast, prostrate, and colon cancer. According
to Dr. Samuel Epstein of the University of Chicago, it "induces the
malignant transformation of human breast epithelial cells." Rat studies
confirmed the suspicion and showed internal organ damage with rBGH ingestion.
In fact, the FDA's own experiments indicated a spleen mass increase of 46% - a
sign of developing leukemia. The contention was that the hormone was killed by
pasteurization. But in research conducted by two Monsanto scientists, Ted
Elasser and Brian McBride, only 19% of the hormone was destroyed despite
boiling milk for 30 minutes when normal pasteurization is 30 seconds. Canada,
the European Union, Australia and New Zealand have banned rBGR. The UN's Codex
Alimentarius, an international health standards setting body, refused to
certify rBGH as safe. Yet Monsanto continues to market this product in the US.
Part of the reason may be that the policy in the FDA was initiated by Margaret
Miller, Deputy Director of Human Safety and Consultative Services, New Animal
Drug Evaluation Office, Center for Veterinary Medicine…. and former chemical
laboratory supervisor for Monsanto. She spearheaded the increase in the amount
of antibiotics farmers were allowed to have in their milk - and by a factor of
100 or 10,000 percent. Michael Taylor, Esq. was the executive assistant to the
director of the FDA. He drafted the Delaney Amendment that allowed for the
minimizing of cancer risk and was later hired as legal counsel to Monsanto, and
subsequently again became Deputy Commissioner of Policy at the FDA. Several
other GM approved products involve herbicides that are commonly known
carcinogens - bromoxynil used on transgenic cotton and Monsanto's Roundup or
glufonsinate used on GM soybeans, corn, and canola. Furthermore and according
to researcher Sharyn Martin, a number of autoimmune diseases are enhanced by
foreign DNA fragments that are not fully digested in the human stomach and
intestines. DNA fragments are absorbed into the bloodstream, potentially mixing
with normal DNA. The genetic consequences are unpredictable and unexpected gene
fragments have shown up in GM soy crops.
Indirect, Non-traceable Effects
on Cancer Rates The twentieth century saw an incremental lowering of infectious
disease rates – especially where a single bacteria was overcome by an
antibiotic– but a simultaneous rise in systemic, whole body or immune system
breakdowns - such as with cancer. Cancer is affected by the overall polluted
state of our environment - including in the air, water, and food we take in.
There are unimaginably many combinations for the 100,000 or so chemicals
released into the environment. The real impact cannot be revealed by a handful
of stringent experiments that isolate just a few controlled factors or
chemicals at a time. Rather all of nature is a testing ground. Scientists a few
years ago were startled that a random combination of chemicals (mostly
pesticides) caused a 1000 times more cancer than the sum of the individual
chemicals indicated in separate tests. More startling was the fact that some
chemicals were thought to be harmless by themselves. Similarly, there is the
potential, with entirely new ways of rearranging the natural order - with
genetic mutations - that such non-traceable influences can also cause cancer.
We definitively know X-rays and chemicals cause genetic mutations, and
mutagenic changes are behind many higher cancer rates - where cells duplicate
out of control. If nothing else, this should make us extremely cautious. In the
US in the year 1900 cancer affected approximately 1 out 11 individuals. It now
inflicts 1 out of 2 men, and 1 out of 3 women in their lifetime. These rates relentlessly
shot upward throughout the twentieth century.
Viral and Bacterial Illness
Superviruses Viruses can mix with
genes of other viruses and retroviruses such as HIV. This can give rise to more
deadly viruses – and at rates higher than previously thought. One study showed
that gene mixing occurred in viruses in just 8 weeks (Kleiner, 1997). This kind
of scenario applies to the cauliflower mosaic virus CaMV, the most common virus
used in genetic engineering - in Round Up ready soy of Monsanto, Bt-maise of
Novaris, and GM cotton and canola. It is a kind of "pararetrovirus"
or what multiplies by making DNA from RNA. It is somewhat similar to Hepatitis
B and HIV viruses and can pose immense dangers. In a Canadian study, a plant
was infected with a crippled cucumber mosaic virus that lacked a gene needed
for movement between plant cells. Within less than two weeks, the crippled
plant found what it needed from neighboring genes - as evidence of gene mixing.
This is significant because genes that cause diseases are often crippled to
make the end product "safe." Results of this kind led the US
Department of Agriculture to hold a meeting in October of 1997 to discuss the
risks and dangers of gene mixing and superviruses, but no regulatory action was
taken.
Resurgence of Infectious Diseases
The Microbial Ecology in Health and
Disease journal reported in 1998 that gene technology may be implicated
in the resurgence of infectious diseases. This occurs in multiple ways. There
is growing resistance to antibiotics misused in bioengineering, the formation
of new and unknown viral strains, and the lowering of immunity through diets of
processed and altered foods. There is also the horizontal transfer of
transgenic DNA among bacteria. Several studies have shown bacteria of the
mouth, pharynx and intestines can take up the transgenic DNA in the feed of
animals, which in turn can be passed on to humans. This threatens the hallmark
accomplishment of the twentieth century - the reduction in infectious diseases
that critically helped the doubling of life expectancy.
Allergies
Birth Defects, Toxicity, and
Lowered Nutrition
Lowered Nutrition A study in the
Journal of Medicinal Food (Dr. Marc Lappe, 1999) showed that certain GM foods
have lower levels of vital nutrients – especially phytoestrogen compounds
thought to protect the body from heart disease and cancer. In another study of
GM Vica Faba, a bean in the same family as soy, there was also an increase in
estrogen levels, what raises health issues - especially in infant soy formulas.
Milk from cows with rBGH contains substantially higher levels of pus, bacteria,
and fat. Monsanto's analysis of glyphosate-resistant soya showed the GM-line
contained 28% more Kunitz-trypsin inhibitor, a known anti-nutrient and
allergen.
General
Radical Change in Diet Humanity
has evolved for thousands of years by adapting gradually to its natural
environment - including nature's foods. Within just three years a fundamental
transformation of the human diet has occurred. This was made possible by
massive consolidations among agri-business. Ten companies now own about 40% of
all US seed production and sales. The Biotech industry especially targeted two
of the most commonly eaten and lucrative ingredients in processed foods - corn
and soy. Monsanto and Novaris, through consolidations, became the second and
third largest seed companies in the world. They also purchased related
agricultural businesses to further monopolize soy and corn production. Again
within three years, the majority of soybeans and one third of all corn in the
US are now grown with seeds mandated by the biotech firms. Also 60% of all hard
cheeses in the US are processed with a GM enzyme. A percentage of baking and
brewery products are GM modified as well. Most all of US cotton production
(where cotton oil is used in foods) is bioengineered. Wheat and rice are next
in line. In 2002, Monsanto plans to introduce a "Roundup" (the name
of its leading herbicide) resistant wheat strain. The current result is that
approximately two-thirds of all processed foods in the US already contain GM
ingredients – and this is projected to rise to 90% within four years according
to industry claims. In short, the human diet, from almost every front, is being
radically changed - with little or no knowledge of the long-term health or
environmental impacts.
General Soil Impact
These contracts had stiff
financial penalties if farmers used any other herbicide. As early as 1996, the
investment report of Dain Boswell on changes in the seed industry reported that
Monsanto's billion dollar plus acquisition of Holden Seeds ( about 1/3rd of US
corn seeds) had "very little to do with Holden as a seed company and a lot
to do with the battle between the chemical giants for future sales of
herbicides and insecticides." Also as revealed in corporate interviews
conducted by Marc Lappe and Britt Bailey (authors of Against the Grain - Biotechnology and the Corporate Takeover of your
Food), the explicit aim was to control 100% of US soy seeds by the year
2000 only to continue to sell Roundup - or to beat their patent's expiration.
In fact in 1996, about 5000 acres were planted with Roundup Ready soy seeds
when Roundup sales accounted for 17% of Monsanto's $9 billion in annual sales.
Not to lose this share but to expand it, Monsanto saw to it that by 1999, 5000
acres grew to approximately 40 million acres out of a total of 60 million - or
the majority of all soy plantings in the United States. Furthermore, Roundup
could now be spayed over an entire field, not just sparingly over certain
weeds.
Soil Sterility and Pollution
Seeds
Extinction of Seed Varieties A
few years ago Time magazine
referred to the massive trend by large corporations to buy up small seed
companies, destroying any competing stock, and replacing it with their patented
or controlled brands as "the
Death of Birth." Monsanto additionally has had farmers sign
contracts not to save their seeds - forfeiting what has long been a farmer's
birthright to remain guardians of the blueprints of successive life.
Plant Invasions
We can anticipate classic
bio-invasions as a result of new GM strains, just as with the invasions of the
kutzu vine or purple loosestrife in the plant world.
Destruction of Forest Life GM
trees or "supertrees" are being developed which can be sprayed from
the air to kill literally all of surrounding life, except the GM trees. There
is an attempt underway to transform international forestry by introducing
multiple species of such trees. The trees themselves are often sterile and
flowerless. This is in contrast to rainforests teaming with life, or where a
single tree can host thousands of unique species of insects, fungi, mammals and
birds in an interconnected ecosphere. This kind of development has been called
"death-engineering" rather than "life-" or
"bio-engineering." More ominously pollen from such trees, because of
their height, has traveled as much as 400 miles or 600 kilometers - roughly 1/5
of the distance across the United States.
Poisonous to Mammals In a study
with GM potatoes, spliced with DNA from the snowdrop plant and a viral promoter
(CaMV), the resulting plant was poisonous to mammals (rats) – damaging vital
organs, the stomach lining and immune system. CaMV is a pararetrovirus. It can
reactivate dormant viruses or create new viruses - as some presume have
occurred with the AIDES epidemic. CaMV is promiscuous, why biologist Mae Wan-Ho
concluded that "all transgenic crops containing CaMV 35S or similar
promoters which are recombinogenic should be immediately withdrawn from
commercial production or open field trials. All products derived from such
crops containing transgenic DNA should also be immediately withdrawn from sale
and from use for human consumption or animal feed."
Animal Abuse
Support of Animal Factory Farming
Rather than using the best of scientific minds to end animal factory farming -
rapid efforts are underway to
Genetic Uncertainties
Genetic Pollution Carrying GM
pollen by wind, rain, birds, bees, insects, fungus, bacteria – the entire chain
of life becomes involved. Once released, unlike chemical pollution, there is no
cleanup or recall possible. As mentioned, pollen from a single GM tree has been
shown to travel 1/5th of the length of the United States. Thus there is no
containing such genetic pollution. Experiments in Germany have shown that
engineered oilseed rape can have its pollen move over 200 meters. As a result
German farmers have sued to stop field trials in Berlin. In Thailand, the
government stopped field tests for Monsanto's Bt cotton when it was discovered
by the Institute of Traditional Thai Medicine that 16 nearby plants of the
cotton family, used by traditional healers, were being genetically polluted. US
research showed that more than 50% of wild strawberries growing inside of 50
meters of a GM strawberry field assumed GM gene markers. Another showed that
25-38% of wild sunflowers growing near GM crops had GM gene markers.
A recent study in England showed
that despite the tiny amount of GM plantings there (33,750 acres over two years
compared to 70-80 million acres per year in the US) wild honey was found to be
contaminated. This means that bees are likely to pollinate organic plants and
trees with transgenic elements. Many other insects transport the by-products of
GM plants throughout our environment, and even falling leaves can dramatically
affect the genetic heritage of soil bacteria. The major difference between
chemical pollution and genetic pollution is that the former eventually is
dismantled or decays, while the later can reproduce itself forever in the wild.
As the National Academy of Science's report indicated - "the containment of
crop genes is not considered to be feasible when seeds are
Disturbance of Nature’s
Boundaries
IMPACT ON FARMING
Jemery Rifkin
Of the one-third remaining US
farms, 100,000 or 5% produce most of our foods. Agri-corporations have taken
economic and legislative power away from the small, self-sufficient family
farms – sometimes via cutthroat competition (such as legal product dumping
below production costs to gain market share - what was legalized by GATT
regulations). The marketing of GM foods augments this centralizing and
small-farm-declining trend in the US - as well as on an international level.
For example, two bioengineering firms have announced a GM vanilla plant where
vanilla can be grown in vats at a lower cost – and which could eliminate the
livelihood of the world’s 100,000 vanilla farmers – most of whom are on the
islands of Madagascar, Reunion and Comoros.
Organic Farming
One of the most misleading hopes
raised by GM technology firms is that they will solve the world’s hunger. Some
high technology agriculture does offer higher single crop yields. But organic
farming techniques, with many different seeds interplanted between rows,
generally offer higher per acre
yields. This applies best to the family farm, which feeds the majority
of the Third World. It differs from the large-scale, monocrop commercial
production of industrialized nations. Even for commercial fields, results are
questionable. In a study of 8,200 field trials, Roundup Ready soybeans produced
fewer bushels of soy than non-GM (Charles Benbrook study, former director Board
of Agriculture at the National Academy of Sciences). The average yield for
non-GM soybeans was 51.21 bushels per acre; for GM soybeans it was 49.26. This
was again confirmed in a study at the University of Nebraska's Institute of
Agricultural Resources.
Lower Yields and More
Pesticides
ECONOMIC, POLITICAL AND
SOCIAL THREATS
"Even for the biggest
"winners," it is like winning at poker on the Titanic."
Jerry
Mander: Facing the Rising Tide
Monopolization of Food
Production
The rapid and radical change in
the human diet was made possible by quick mergers and acquisitions that moved
to control segments of the US farming industry. Although there are
approximately 1500 seed companies worldwide, about two dozen control more than
50% of the commercial seed heritage of our planet. The consolidation has
continued to grow, In 1998 the top five soy producers controlled 37% of the
market (Murphy Family Foods; Carroll’s Foods, Continental Grain, Smithfield
Foods, and Seaboard). One year later, the top five controlled 51% (Smithfield,
having acquired Murphy’s and Carroll’s, Continental, Seaboard, Prestige and
Cargill). Cargill and Continental Grain later merged.
With corn seed production and
sales, the top four seed
companies controlled 87% of the market in 1996 (Pioneer Hi-Bred, Holden’s
Foundation Seeds, DeKalb Genetics, and Novaris). In 1999, the top three controlled 88% (Dupont having
acquired Pioneer, Monsanto having acquired Holden’s and DeKalb, and Novaris. In
the cotton seed market, Delta and Land Pine Company now control about 75% of
the market. The concentration is
staggering. National farming associations see this dwindling of price
competition and fewer distribution outlets as disfavoring and threatening the
small family farm. Average annual income per farm has plummeted throughout the
last decade. Almost a quarter of all farm operating families live below the
poverty level, twice the national average – and most seek income from outside
the farm to survive. A similar pattern is developing in Europe.
Biocolonization
Under the new regulations of WTO,
the World Bank, GATT, NAFTA, the autonomy of local economies can be vastly
overridden. Foreign concerns can buy up all the major seed, water, land and
other primary agricultural resources – converting them to exported cash rather
than local survival crops. This is likely to further unravel the
self-sufficiency of those cultures - and as with the past failures of the
"green revolution."
RIGHTS
"The FDA's failure to require
labeling of genetically altered foods is effectively restricting Americans from
exercising this right and subjects individuals to foods they have sound…reasons
to avoid. FDA policy thus appears to violate the First Amendment of the
Constitution….the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, which requires that added
substances to food be labeled…and mandates disclosure of material
facts." From the Alliance
for Bio-integrity Statement - in a lawsuit filed against the DFA by nine
scientists and twelve religious leaders.
For
Health/Environmental/Socio-Political Reasons
The lack of labeling violates the
right to know what is in our foods - given the list of health, environmental,
and socio-political reasons to avoid GM ingredients. Even if GM foods were 100%
safe, the consumer has a right to know such ingredients - due to their many
potential harms.
Previously if someone wanted to
avoid foods not permitted in certain religions, the process was simple. With
transgenic alterations, every food is suspect – and the religious and
health-conscious consumer has no way of knowing without a mandated label.
DEEP ECOLOGY
Imposing a Non-Living Model onto
Nature "The crying of animals is nothing more than just the creaking of
machines," wrote the philosopher René Descartes in the 17th century. This
powerfully expressed an inhumane and mechanical view of nature that does not
respect life. The genetic model is derivative of this mechanistic way of
relating to nature.
Call and send a letter to the
largest companies that distribute GM foods. Ask them to change their policies (see a sample list below) A
national consumer action plan is being coordinated by the People's Earth
Network (see www.peoplesearth.com). For
more information send them an email on their site - to be part of their
listserve to contact companies. You can also reach the Network by mail at 35
Asticou Road, Jamaica Plain, MA 02130 or call 617-522-9605. As a result and as
of this writing, 17 companies have taken positive steps. This includes Hain's
Food Group, the largest health food conglomerate along with Wild Oats and Whole
Foods, the largest health-oriented supermarkets in the US. A sample letter to a
corporation, which should be restated in your own words, might be :
Dear
President,
I am
writing to express my very serious concern about genetically engineered
ingredients in your products. Research has shown many negative health and
environmental effects such as ……what effects me and my family. Other companies
have begun to take steps to eliminate these ingredients and I am urging you and
XXXX Corporation to do the same.
Contact Store Owners
| Safeway | 800-723-3929 |
| Frito-Lay | 800-352-4477 |
| Kellogg's | 800-962-1413 |
| Nestle's | 800-452-1971 |
| Hershey's | 800-468-1714 |
| Kraft | 800-543-5335 |
| Heinz Foods | 888- 472-8437 |
| Starbucks | 800-782-7282 |
| McDonald's | 630-623-3000 |
| Healthy Choice | 800-323-9980 |
| Coca Cola | 800-438-2625 |
| General Mills | 800-367-6287 |
| Quaker Oats | 800-367-6287 |
| Nabisco | 800-862-2638 |
| Proctor & Gamble | 800-595-1407
|
Boyens, Ingeborg, Unnatural Harvest: How Corporate Science Is
Secretly Altering Our Food. Doubleday Books, 1999.
Dawkins, Kristin, Gene Wars: The Politics of Biotechnology (Open
Media Pamphlet Series). Seven Stories Press, 1997.
Fox, Michael W. Beyond Evolution, The Genetically Altered Future of Plants,
Animals, the Earth Humans. Lyons Press, 1999.
Heinberg, Richard, Cloning the Buddha: The Moral Implications
of Biotechnology. Quest, 1999.
Jack, Alan, Imagine Life Without Monarch Butterflies.
Bookworld Services, 2000.
Keen, Brewster, Farmageddon: Food and the Culture of Biotechnology. New Society Publishers,
1999.
Kimbrell, Andrew and Nathanson,
B. The Human Body Shop: The Cloning,
Engineering, and Marketing of Life. Regnery Publishing, 1998.
Marshall, Elizabeth, High-Tech Harvest: A Look at Genetically
Engineered Foods. Franklin Watts, 1999.
Raeburn, Paul, The Last Harvest: The Genetic Gamble That
Threatens to Destroy American Agriculture. University of Nebraska, 1996.
Rifkin, Jeremy, The Biotech Century: Harnessing the Gene and
Remaking the World. J.P. Tarcher, 1999.
Rissler, J. and Mellon, M. The Ecological Risks of Engineered Crops.
MIT Press, 1996.
Shiva, Vandana, Biopiracy: The Plunder of Nature and Knowledge. South End Press, 1997.
Teitel, M. and Wilson, K.A. Genetically Engineered Food: Changing the
Nature of Nature: What You Need to Know to Protect Yourself, Your Family, and Our
Planet. Inner Traditions International, Ltd. 1999.
Alliance for BioIntegrity www.bio-integrity.org
Australian GenEthics Net www.essential.zero.com/agen
Binas ( Biosafety Info
Network ) http://binas.unidos.org/binas/binas.html
Biodemocracy www.purefood.org
Bioengineering Action Network www.tao.ca/~ban
Campaign to Ban GE Foods www.netlink.de/gen/home.html
Center for Food Safety www.icta.org
Center for Food Policy www.wolfson.tvu.ac.uk/
Centro Internazionate Crocevia www.crocevia.org
Council of Canadians www.canadians.org
Council for Responsible Genetics www.gene-watch.org
Earth Island Institute www.earthisland.org
The Ecologist www.gn.apc.org
Ecoropa www.ecoropa.org
Edmonds Institute www.edmonds-institute.org
Environmental Defense Fund www.edf.org
Food First Institute http://foodfirst.org
Friends of the Earth www.foe.co.uk
The Genetics Forum www.geneticsforum.org.uk
Global 2000 ( Friends of the
Earth) www.global2000.org
Greenpeace www.greenpeace.org
Indigenous Peoples Coalition
Against
Biopiracy www.niec.net/ipcb/
Institute for Agriculture &
Trade Policy www.iatp.org
International Centre for Trade
&
Sustainable Development www.ictsd.org
International Forum on
Globalization www.ifg.org
Mothers for Natural Law www.safe-food.org
Natural Law Party www.naturallaw.org
Norfolk Genetic Information Net
(ngin) http://members.tripod.com/~ngin
People's Earth Network www.peoplesearth.org
RAGE (Resistance Against GE) nerage@sover.net (Northeast)
RAFI (Rural Advancement
Foundation) www.rafi.org
Organic Consumers Association www.organicconsumers.org
Red interamericana de
Agriculturas y
Democracia (RIAD) www.sustain.org/riad
SAGE (Students for Alternatives
to GE) www.sage-intl.org
Union of Concerned Scientists www.ucsusa.org/agriculture/biotech.html
Washington Biotech Action Council
http://students.washington.edu/radin
"The fact
is, it is virtually impossible to even conceive of a testing procedure to
assess the health effects of genetically engineered foods when introduced into
the food chain, nor is there any valid nutritional or public interest reason
for their introduction."
Richard Lacey: Professor of Food Safety,
Leeds University