From foodconsumer.org
Obama's team includes dangerous biotech "Yes Men"
By news release
Nov 30, 2008 - 1:56:15 PM
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Biotech “Yes Men” on Obama’s
team threaten to expand the use of dangerous genetically modified (GM)
foods in our diets. Instead of giving us change and hope, they may
prolong the hypnotic “group think” that has been institutionalized over
three previous administrations—where critical analysis was abandoned in
favor of irrational devotion to this risky new technology.
Clinton’s agriculture secretary
Dan Glickman saw it first hand:
“It was almost immoral to say
that [biotechnology] wasn’t good, because it was going to solve the
problems of the human race and feed the hungry and clothe the naked. .
. . If you’re against it, you’re Luddites, you’re stupid. That,
frankly, was the side our government was on. . . . You felt like you
were almost an alien, disloyal, by trying to present an open-minded
view”
When Glickman dared to question the lax regulations on GM food, he said he “
got slapped around a little bit by not only the industry, but also some of the people even in the administration.”
By shutting open-minds and slapping dissent, deceptive myths about genetically modified organisms (GMOs) persist.
-
The industry boasts that GMOs reduce herbicide use;
USDA data show that the opposite is true.
-
We hear that GMOs increase yield and farmer profit; but USDA and independent studies show an average
reduction in yield and no improved bottom line for farmers.
-
George H. W. Bush
fast-tracked GMOs to increase US exports; now the government spends an
additional $3-$5 billion per year to prop up prices of the GM crops no
one wants.
-
Advocates continue to repeat that GMOs are needed to feed the world; now the prestigious
International Assessment of Agricultural Knowledge, Science and Technology for Development has joined a long list of experts who flatly reject GMOs as the answer to hunger.
Food Safety Lies
Of all the myths about GMOs,
the most dangerous is that they are safe. This formed the hollow basis
of the FDA’s 1992 GMO policy, which stated:
“The agency
is not aware of any information showing that foods derived by these new
methods differ from other foods in any meaningful or uniform way.”
The sentence is complete
fiction. At the time it was written, there was overwhelming consensus
among the FDA’s own scientists that GM foods were
substantially different,
and could create unpredictable, unsafe, and hard-to-detect allergens,
toxins, diseases, and nutritional problems. They had urged the
political appointees in charge to require long-term safety studies,
including human studies, to protect the public.
Their
concerns stayed
hidden until 1999, when 44,000 pages of internal FDA memos and reports
were made public due to a lawsuit. According to public interest
attorney Steven Druker, the documents showed how their warnings and
“references to the unintended negative effects” of genetic engineering
“were progressively deleted from drafts of the policy statement,” in
spite of scientists’ protests.
“What has happened to the
scientific elements of this document?” wrote FDA microbiologist Louis
Pribyl, after reviewing the latest rewrite of the policy. “It will look
like and probably be just a political document. . . . It reads very
pro-industry, especially in the area of unintended effects.”
Who flooded the market with dangerous GMOs
Thanks to the FDA’s
“promote biotech” policy, perilously few safety studies and
investigations have been conducted on GMOs. Those that have, including
two government studies from
Austria and Italy published just last month, demonstrate that the
concerns by FDA scientists should have been heeded. GMOs have been
linked to
toxic and allergic reactions in humans, sick, sterile, and dead
livestock, and damage to virtually every organ studied in lab animals.
GMOs are unsafe.
At the highest level, the
responsibility for this disregard of science and consumer safety lies
with the first Bush White House, which had ordered the FDA to promote
the biotechnology industry and get GM foods on the market quickly. To
accomplish this White House directive, the FDA created a position for
Michael Taylor. As the FDA’s new Deputy Commissioner of Policy, he
oversaw the creation of GMO policy.
Taylor was formerly the
outside attorney for the biotech giant Monsanto, and later became their
vice president. He had also been the counsel for the International Food
Biotechnology Council (IFBC), for whom he drafted a model of government
policy designed to rush GMOs onto the market with no significant
regulations. The final FDA policy that he oversaw, which did not
require any safety tests or labeling, closely resembled the model he
had drafted for the IFBC.
Michael Taylor is on the Obama transition team.
Genetically engineered bovine growth hormone and unhealthy milk
Taylor was also in
charge when the FDA approved Monsanto’s genetically engineered bovine
growth hormone (rbGH or rbST). Dairy products from treated cows contain
more pus, more antibiotics, more growth hormone, and more IGF-1—a
powerful hormone linked to cancer and increased incidence of fraternal
twins (see
www.YourMilkonDrugs.com.)
The growth hormone is banned in most industrialized nations, including
Canada, the EU, Japan, Australia, and New Zealand. But under Michael
Taylor, it was approved in the US, without labeling.
As more and more consumers
here learn about the health risks of the drug, they shift their
purchases to brands that voluntarily label their products as
not using
rbGH. Consumer rejection of rbGH hit a tipping point a couple of years
ago, and since then it has been kicked out of milk from Wal-Mart,
Starbucks, Kroger, Subway, and at least 40 of the top 100 dairies. In
2007, Monsanto desperately tried to reverse the trend by asking the FDA
and FTC to make it illegal for dairies to label their products as free
from rbGH. Both agencies flatly refused the company’s request.
But Monsanto turned to an
ally, Dennis Wolff, the Pennsylvania Secretary of Agriculture. Wolff
used his position to single-handedly declare rbGH-free labels illegal
in his state. Such a policy would make it impossible for national dairy
brands to declare their products rbGH-free, since they couldn’t change
packaging just for Pennsylvania. Wolff’s audacious move so infuriated
citizens around the nation, the outpouring caused the governor to step
in and stop the prohibition before it took effect.
Dennis Wolff, according to
unbossed.com, is being considered for Obama’s USDA Secretary.
Although Pennsylvania did not
ultimately ban rbGH-free labels, they did decide to require companies
who use the labels to also include a disclaimer sentence on the
package, stating that the according to the FDA there is no difference
between milk from cows treated with rbGH and those not treated. In
reality, this sentence contradicts the FDA’s own scientists. (Is this
sounding all too familiar?) Even according to Monsanto’s own studies,
milk from treated cows has more pus, antibiotics, bovine growth
hormone, and IGF-1. Blatantly ignoring the data, a top FDA bureaucrat
wrote a “white paper” urging companies that labeled products as
rbGH-free to also use that disclaimer on their packaging. The
bureaucrat was Michael Taylor.
Betting on biotech is “Bad-idea virus”
For several years,
politicians around the US were offering money and tax-breaks to bring
biotech companies into their city or state. But according to
Joseph Cortright,
an Oregon economist who co-wrote a 2004 report on this trend, “This
notion that you lure biotech to your community to save its economy is
laughable. This is a bad-idea virus that has swept through governors,
mayors and economic development officials.”
He said it “remains a money-losing, niche industry.”
One politician who caught a
bad case of the bad-idea virus was Tom Vilsack, Iowa’s governor from
1998-2006. He was co-creator and chair of the Governors’ Biotechnology
Partnership in 2000 and in 2001 the Biotech Industry Organization named
him BIO Governor of the Year.
Tom Vilsack was considered a
front runner for Obama’s USDA secretary. Perhaps the outcry prompted by
Vilsack’s biotech connections was the reason for his name being
withdrawn.
Change, Truth, Hope
I don’t know Barack Obama’s position on GMOs. According to a November 23rd Des Moines Register article,
Obama, like Bush, may be Ag biotech ally, there are clues that he has not been able to see past the biotech lobbyist’s full court spin.
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His top scientific advisers during the campaign included Sharon Long, a
former board member of the biotech giant Monsanto Co., and Harold
Varmus, a Nobel laureate who co-chaired a key study of genetically
engineered crops by the National Academy of Sciences back in 2000.
- [Obama] said biotech crops
“have provided enormous benefits” to farmers and expressed confidence
“that we can continue to modify plants safely.”
On the other hand, Obama may
have a sense how pathetic US GMO regulations are, since he indicated
that he wants “stringent tests for environmental and health effects”
and “stronger regulatory oversight guided by the best available
scientific advice.”
There is, however, one unambiguous and clear promise that separates Obama from his Bush and Clinton predecessors.
President
Obama will require mandatory labeling of GMOs.
Favored by 9 out of 10 Americans, labeling is long overdue and is certainly cause for celebration.
(I am told that now Michael
Taylor also favors both mandatory labeling and testing of GMOs. Good
going Michael; but your timing is a bit off.)
To sign a petition asking President Obama to make his GMO labeling plan comprehensive and meaningful,
click here
.
© copyright Institute For Responsible Technology 2008
Jeffrey M. Smith is the author of publication
Genetic Roulette: The Documented Health Risks of Genetically Engineered Foods, which presents 65 risks in easy-to-read two-page spreads. His first book,
Seeds of Deception,
is the top rated and #1 selling book on GM foods in the world. He is
the Executive Director of the Institute for Responsible Technology.
www.
responsibletechnology.org, which is spearheading the Campaign for Healthier Eating in America. Go to
www.seedsofdeception.com to learn more about how to avoid GM foods.