╌>

Are You Eating Frankenfish?

  

Category:  News & Politics

Via:  community  •  9 years ago  •  11 comments

Are You Eating Frankenfish?

THIS month, Congress may decide whether consumers are smart enough to be trusted with their own food choices. Some lawmakers are trying to insert language into must-pass spending legislation that would block states from giving consumers the right to know whether their food contains genetically modified ingredients.

They must be stopped.

Nine out of 10 Americans  want G.M.O. disclosure on food packages, according to a 2013 New York Times poll, just like consumers in 64 other nations. But powerful members of the agriculture and appropriations committees, along with their allies in agribusiness corporations like Monsanto, want to keep consumers in the dark. That’s why opponents of this effort have called it the DARK Act — or the Deny Americans the Right to Know Act.

As a chef, I’m proud of the food I serve. The idea that I would try to hide what’s in my food from my customers offends everything I believe in. It’s also really bad for business.

Why, then, have companies like Kellogg and groups like the Grocery Manufacturers Association spent millions in recent years to lobby against transparency? They say, in effect: “Trust us, folks. We looked into it. G.M.O. ingredients are safe.” But what they’re missing is that consumers want to make their own judgments. Consumers are saying: “Trust  me.  Let me do my  own  homework and make my  own  choices.”

In fact, some of us have done our homework, and here’s what we found: The use of G.M.O.s has led to unintended consequences. For instance, most G.M.O. crops are engineered to withstand blasts of a powerful weed killer that the World Health Organization  has decided probably causes cancer . New “superweeds” are appearing that require even more lethal formulations. Since the introduction of G.M.O. crops, use of these chemicals has  increased 16-fold .

G.M.O. advocates like to label anyone who objects “anti-science.” It’s true that genetic technology has had an amazing impact on the development of medicine and the eradication of infectious diseases. If G.M.O. foods were actually providing a clear benefit to the public, like improved nutrition, lower costs or better taste, without creating a spiral of ever-increasing toxicity in our environment, I’d be all for them. And if G.M.O.s ever deliver on their promise to improve food security, which they have yet to do in the more than 20 years since they were introduced, I’d be over the moon.

Vermont recently  passed a law  requiring the labeling of these foods. Other states are considering doing the same. That’s the impetus behind this backdoor effort: Opponents want Congress to pre-empt Vermont and other like-minded states from implementing these rules.

The federal government already requires labeling of ingredients and basic nutritional information and regulates against marketing that misleads the public. In this context, labeling G.M.O.s makes sense.

But that’s not what is happening. Consider the situation of genetically engineered salmon.

Last month the  Food and Drug Administration   approved  for sale to the public the first genetically engineered animal approved for human consumption — a fish they are calling the  AquAdvantage salmon .

This “super” salmon was conceived by combining genes from Chinook salmon that produce extra growth hormone with an “antifreeze” gene from a bottom-feeder, the non-Kosher ocean pout. The result is a fish that grows far faster and larger than non-engineered salmon.

The F.D.A. insists the transgenic fish is safe for humans, but many experts believe they have yet to prove AquAdvantage will be safe for the environment or other fish. Factory fish farms depend on the use of antibiotics  and pesticides to control disease and parasites that flourish in high-density environments. The waste they release can decimate other marine life and contaminate the water supply. Farmed fish  often escape into larger waters, endangering native species. While these new salmon will be sterile, mistakes can happen.

Fine, you say. Enough already. If you don’t like the Frankenfish, don’t buy it.

But there’s the rub. This new engineered fish could be marketed as … Atlantic salmon. There might be no way for consumers to identify it as genetically engineered.

Consumers have a right to seek out food produced in accordance with their values, and not be misled by an industry’s strenuous efforts to keep them in the dark. When G.M.O. ingredients are clearly labeled, consumers can exercise those rights.

Blocking the labeling of G.M.O. foods would be a step in the wrong direction, away from greater accountability and responsibility. Congress should reject these efforts to block our right to know.

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/12/15/opinion/are-you-eating-frankenfish.html?mwrsm=Email&_r=0

 


Tags

jrDiscussion - desc
[]
 
Perrie Halpern R.A.
Professor Principal
link   seeder  Perrie Halpern R.A.    9 years ago

We should all know what we are eating. Why would our government not let us know when we are eating GMO's? 

 
 
 
Cerenkov
Professor Silent
link   Cerenkov  replied to  Perrie Halpern R.A.   9 years ago

Except that being genetically modified is irrelevant. Food costs should not be increased to pay for labeling that provides no real information.

 
 
 
Jim Cassity
Freshman Silent
link   Jim Cassity  replied to  Perrie Halpern R.A.   9 years ago

Perrie there is  too much confusion about GMO (genetically modified organism) vs GEO (genetically engineered organism). GMO plants occur all the time in nature, through the cross pollination of plants, GEO plants are produced by science either introducing DNA or suppressing DNA to enhance specific traits.

GMO is used all the time in the plant world to produce a bigger, better, longer storage life crop, this does not have to be through GE, but can be accomplished through the cross breeding of different varieties of the same genus of plants and more commonly the cross breeding of different varieties of the same plant.

Most if not all commercial and organically grown tomato plants are GMO, they are F1 Hybrid open pollinated tomatoes, which basically means that the seeds taken from this generation of plant if replanted will not produce the same plant, it will revert back towards it's parentage.

GEO products should be required to be labeled but GMO products would require that almost all produce be labeled GMO.

 

 

 
 
 
Petey Coober
Freshman Silent
link   Petey Coober  replied to  Perrie Halpern R.A.   9 years ago

Why would our government not let us know when we are eating GMO's?

All GMO foods should glow in the dark to reveal what it is . It works for cats :

 

 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
link   JohnRussell    9 years ago

I hardly ever eat fish, but you all have my sympathy. 

 
 
 
Enoch
Masters Quiet
link   Enoch    9 years ago

Five Signs You are Dining On the Frankenfish.

1. It glows in the dark.

2. When you lift a knife and fork, the fish stares you in the eye and says, "Planning on sticking me with that blade? Let's dance"!

3. The fish advises you that, "I was trapped in a net in the Love Canal near the Hooker Chemical plant. Bon Apetit"!

4. The fish looks morose, so with compassion you lean down near the plate and pet each if its three heads, saying, "There there there".

5. Your plate contains three portions of various aquatic fare. They are labeled, 89, 91 and 93 Octane. 

Full disclosure is the least companies wishing to sell edible merchandise owe to their consumers. Or isn't poisoning a crime any more?

Enoch, Reading Labels Very Carefully.

 
 
 
Dowser
Sophomore Quiet
link   Dowser    9 years ago

If this is about eating BF, then, no, I am surely NOT doing that!  Although I'm sure he would taste good-- no insult meant, dear BF!

However, I would like to know what has been genetically modified.

Jim, your notes are welcome!  Thank you!  As far as doing it the old-fashioned way, like Mendelssohn and his sweet peas, I'm all for it.  But, I'm not for genetically modifying by gene slicing.  

I still want heirloom things around.  Nothing tastes quite as good as those heirloom tomatoes...  winking   

How much more would it cost, Cerenkov?  $.01 per can?  It would be an excuse for the companies to raise their price by $.10-- which they have already done as a fuel tax.  I notice they never lowered the prices for the cheap fuel...

 
 
 
Jim Cassity
Freshman Silent
link   Jim Cassity    9 years ago

Jim, your notes are welcome!  Thank you!  As far as doing it the old-fashioned way, like Mendelssohn and his sweet peas, I'm all for it.  But, I'm not for genetically modifying by gene slicing.

 

And this is where the confusion is, GMO is to broad based, it needs to be narrowed to GE genetic engineering and gene splicing.

 
 

Who is online



82 visitors