<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN">
<HTML><HEAD><TITLE>MESSING UP OUR FOOD SYSTEM</TITLE>
<META http-equiv=Content-Type content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">
<META content="MSHTML 5.50.4134.600" name=GENERATOR>
<STYLE></STYLE>
</HEAD>
<BODY bgColor=#ffffff>
<DIV><B></B> </DIV>
<DIV><B>From:</B> <A title=paul@deburghday.com
href="mailto:paul@deburghday.com">Paul de Burgh-Day</A> </DIV>
<DIV style="FONT: 10pt arial">
<DIV><B>Sent:</B> Thursday, June 21, 2001 8:36 AM</DIV>
<DIV><B>Subject:</B> [TasTalking] MESSING UP OUR FOOD SYSTEM</DIV></DIV>
<DIV><BR></DIV><TT>Hello again,<BR><BR>Be warned - this will almost certainly
flow on into Australia. We have to face the fact that the biotechs and the
agrigiants have already achieved sufficient contamination of the food supply to
make 100% GE free almost impossible. My guess is that the reality today is
far worse than anyone will admit to. Do we face a fait
accompli?<BR><BR>Paul<BR><BR><BR>HOW MAGIC MARKERS ARE MESSING UP OUR FOOD
SYSTEM<BR>June 20, 2001<BR>Globe and Mail<BR>A15<BR>Naomi Klein<BR><FONT
color=#0000ff><U>http://www.theglobeandmail.com/gam/Commentary/20010620/COKLEIN20.html<BR></U></FONT>In
the aisles of Loblaws, between bottles of President's Choice Memories<BR>of Kobe
sauce and Memories of Singapore noodles, columnist Klein says there<BR>is a new
in-store special: blacked-out labels on organic foods. These boxes<BR>used to
say "free of genetically modified organisms," but then Canada's<BR>largest
grocery chain decreed that such labels were no longer permitted.<BR>At first
glance, its decision doesn't seem to make market sense. Klein says<BR>that when
the first frankenfoods protests came to Europe, chains such as<BR>Tesco and
Safeway scrambled to satisfy consumer demand by labelling their<BR>own lines
GMO-free. And when Loblaws entered the health-food market with its<BR>line of
President's Choice Organics, it seemed to be going the same route.<BR>In
ads, the company proudly pointed out that certified organic products<BR>"must be
free of genetically modified organisms." Then the about-face, made<BR>public
last week: Not only won't Loblaws make the GM-free claim on its own<BR>packages,
it won't allow anyone else to make the claim. Company executives<BR>say there is
just no way of knowing what's genuinely GM-free -- apparently,<BR>it's too
confusing. The Loblaws argument points to a much broader strategy<BR>that
North American food and agriculture giants appear to be using to take<BR>on
anti-GMO forces.<BR>Klein says that the goals seems to be to mess up the food
system faster than<BR>consumers can demand labelling. Political will is pitted
against<BR>nuts-and-bolts practicality, so that by the time the political will
arrives,<BR>effective labelling is no longer a pragmatic option. More than
90 per cent<BR>of Canadians tell pollsters they want labels telling them if
their food's<BR>genetic makeup has been tampered with, but Galen Weston,
chairman of Loblaw<BR>Cos. Ltd., has publicly warned that "there will be a cost
associated" with<BR>such an initiative. This, in part, explains the magic
markers: If Loblaws<BR>carries organic products that are labelled GMO-free, it
weakens attempts to<BR>block GM labelling for the roughly 70 per cent of
Canadian foods that<BR>contain GM ingredients. So the grocer has made a rather
brutal choice:<BR>Rather than give consumers some of the information they are
demanding, it<BR>will provide none of it. And this is only one salvo in a
war being waged by<BR>the agribusiness industry on consumer choice in the
genetic engineering<BR>debate -- not just in Canada but, potentially, around the
world. Faced with<BR>35 countries that have developed, or are developing,
mandatory GE labelling<BR>laws, the industry seems to be doing everything it can
to make those<BR>European and Asian labels as obsolete as the ones that have
been scratched<BR>out at Loblaws. How? By polluting faster than countries can
legislate.<BR>Klein says that Nature's Path president Arran Stephens told The
New York<BR>Times that GM material is, indeed, finding its way into organic
crops. "We<BR>have found traces in corn that has been grown organically for
10-15 years.<BR>There's no wall high enough to keep that stuff
contained."<BR>Some organic food companies are considering suing the biotech
industry for<BR>contamination, but the law is going in the opposite direction.
Saskatchewan<BR>farmer Percy Schmeiser was sued by Monsanto after its
patented genetically<BR>altered canola seeds blew into the farmer's field from
passing trucks and<BR>neighbouring fields. Monsanto says that, when the airborne
seeds took root,<BR>Mr. Schmeiser was stealing its property. The court agreed
and, two months<BR>ago, ordered the farmer to pay the company $20,000, plus
legal costs.<BR>The most well-known contamination case is StarLink corn. After
the<BR>genetically altered crop (meant for animals and deemed unfit for
humans)<BR>made its way into the food supply, Aventis, which owns the patent,
proposed<BR>a solution: Instead of recalling the corn, why not approve its
consumption<BR>for humans? In other words, change the law to fit the
contamination.<BR>Around the world, consumers are exercising a renewed political
power,<BR>demanding organic options at the supermarket and asking their
governments<BR>for clear labelling of GMO foods. Yet all the while, the
agribusiness giants<BR>-- backed by predatory intellectual property laws -- are
getting the global<BR>food supply so hopelessly cross-pollinated, contaminated,
polluted and mixed<BR>up that legislators may well be forced to throw up their
hands. As biotech<BR>critic Jeremy Rifkin says, "They're hoping there's enough
contamination so<BR>that it's a fait accompli." When we look back on this
moment, munching our<BR>genetically modified Natural Valuestm health-style food,
our human-approved<BR>StarLink tacos, and our mutated-farmed Atlantic salmon, we
may well remember<BR>it as the precise point when we lost our real food options.
Perhaps Loblaws<BR>will even launch a new product to bottle that wistful
feeling: Memories of<BR>Consumer Choice.<BR><BR></TT><FONT size=2><BR>--
<BR>Paul de Burgh-Day <paul@deburghday.com><BR>Box 132 Sheffield
Tasmania 7306 Australia<BR>Tel: 61(0)3 6363 5060 Fax: 61
(0)3 6363 5065<BR>or 61 (0)3 8660 2166 (FaxBank)<BR><BR><BR></FONT><BR><!-- |**|begin egp html banner|**| -->
<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=2 border=0>
<TBODY>
<TR bgColor=#ffffcc>
<TD align=middle><FONT color=#003399 size=-1><B>Yahoo! Groups
Sponsor</B></FONT></TD></TR>
<TR bgColor=#ffffff>
<TD width=470><A target=_top
href="http://rd.yahoo.com/M=168002.1477935.3051340.2/D=egroupmail/S=1700985009:N/A=624151/*http://mojofarm.mediaplex.com/ad/ck/990-1736-1039-2?bn=Take4DVD468"><IMG
height=60 alt="Click for Details"
src="http://us.a1.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/a/co/columbiahouse/Take4_DVD_468.gif"
width=468 border=0><BR>Click for Details</A></TD></TR>
<TR>
<TD><IMG height=1 alt=""
src="http://us.adserver.yahoo.com/l?M=168002.1477935.3051340.2/D=egroupmail/S=1700985009:N/A=624151/rand=616073443"
width=1></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><!-- |**|end egp html banner|**| --><BR><TT>To
unsubscribe from this group, send an email
to:<BR>TasTalking-unsubscribe@egroups.com<BR><BR></TT><BR><BR><TT>Your use of
Yahoo! Groups is subject to the <A
href="http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/">Yahoo! Terms of Service</A>.</TT>
<BR></BODY></HTML>