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The Latest Plot to Keep You in the Dark about GMOs

Ronnie Cummins- Organic Consumers Assoc.

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Oct. 28, 2015

 

 

ESSAY OF THE WEEK

The Plot Thickens

The Plot Thickens

 

 

“The [Oct. 21, 2015] Senate Agriculture hearing reaffirmed the broad consensus among scientists and regulators that GMOs are safe . . . We were pleased to hear Senator Stabenow’s [D-Mich.] personal commitment to work to develop a bipartisan bill that can pass the Senate by the end of this year…”. - Pamela Bailey, Grocery Manufacturers Association, in an October 21, 2015 press release

When the U.S. Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition & Forestry held its hearing on H.R. 1599 last week, the session ended just as the hearing in the House ended—with all of the witnesses in the room concurring that GMOs are safe.

In fact, not one single member of the U.S. Congress, in several well-publicized hearings in the House and Senate this year, has had the intelligence or the courage to say that GMO-tainted foods and the pesticides that go along with them are toxic or unsafe.

Worse yet, the few token spokespersons from public interest groups—Center for Science in the Public Interest, Environmental Working Group and Just Label It—despite portraying themselves as the “loyal opposition” to Monsanto and Big Food, and, have either repeated Monsanto’s lies of “no-scientific evidence of GMO harm” or claimed disingenuously “we don’t know.”

Now, it seems the loyal opposition may go along with a scheme, supported by USDA Secretary Tom Vilsack and Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.), to pass a federal law that would substitute QR codes for labels.

Read Ronnie’s essay

 

 

SUPPORT THE OCA & OCF

Dog Pack Journalism

Dog Pack Journalism

 

 

The author of a recent blog post on Daily Kos lamented the failure of mainstream media to adequately cover, much less tell the truth, about GMOs. He called it "Dog pack journalism."

We all know why. Corporations like Monsanto (which is now advertising in publications like Good Housekeeping and National Geographic) and Kellogg’s, General Mills and others buy advertising in major newspapers. Lots of it.

And those advertising dollars not only sway consumers, they sway publishers.

Last week’s Senate hearing on the DARK Act (H.R. 1599), an industry-written bill intended to legalize the fraudulent practicing of withholding information that 90 percent of Americans believe they have the right to know, didn’t go in our favor.

Any day now, Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.) is expected to introduce a Senate version of the DARK Act, one that will likely include the words “voluntary” and “QR codes.”

We can’t count on the media to help us stop this attack on our rights. Can we count on you? Your donation today will help us mobilize more volunteers to email, call and knock down the doors of their Senators. Thank you!

Donate to the Organic Consumers Association (tax-deductible, helps support our work on behalf of organic standards, fair trade and public education)

Donate to the Organic Consumers Fund (non-tax-deductible, but necessary for our GMO labeling legislative efforts)

 

 

 

FAIR WORLD PROJECT

Halloween Horror Show

Halloween Horror Show

 

 

Would you buy chocolate from a company if you knew that company knowingly obtained its chocolate from suppliers that used child labor?

Some consumers in California say no. So they’re suing Mars, Nestlé and Hershey for failing to disclose that their suppliers rely on child laborers.

It’s once again the season of ghosts, goblins and candy. Lots and lots of candy. Nearly $2 billion worth of it. For most of the world's kids, Halloween is fun. But for the more than 2 million children who work long hours, under hazardous conditions, to make all that money for Big Candy, Halloween—and almost every other day of the year—is a real horror show.

The chocolate industry has a long history or exploiting children, and a bad track record when it comes to fixing the problem. That’s not news. What may surprise you is that the problem is getting worse, not better, according to a recent study.

How do we end the cycle of child slavery in chocolate production? By boycotting the companies that allow it. And by demanding fair prices for farmers.

TAKE ACTION: Tell the International Cocoa Initiative to Address Fair Pricing as Part of Its Strategy to Eliminate Child Labor

Find fair trade chocolate

Learn more

 

 

 

VIDEO OF THE WEEK

A ‘Devious Act’

A 'Devious Act'

 

 

“Any law that prevents GMO labeling simply legalizes fraud.”

If you read this newsletter, you probably support mandatory labeling of GMOs. And you probably know why you want GMOs labeled.

You probably also have friends who don’t know what a GMO is, much less why more than 90 percent of consumers want GMOs labeled. And 100 percent of Big Food companies don’t.

Now would be a good time to reach out to those friends. From the bogus cost argument, to the dangers of glyphosate, to the threat of GMO salmon—in five short minutes, this video covers all the bases.

Watch the video and share it!

 

 

ronniecummins@organicconsumers.org