Thursday, 12 January 2012

What will our children be eating?

The problem with progress is that often you reach a tipping point. You can’t go back.  Sometimes this can be good of course.  Someone commented on my last blog post that maybe the answer to racism is to mix up our genes until we are all one big juicy gene chowder. That would be good, yes?  Well, it might be one solution though it would take quite some time and inclination.  
But when it comes to turning our food into genetic soup, well, I think we need to need to be deeply racist; we keep to keep the genes firmly segregated. Spiders should not mate with tomatoes. No sirree. 
I spent a fair bit of time researching this many years back and what I saw scared the bejesus out of me. Because the thing is, once you let GM loose in the environment, you can’t put it back in the lab. The genie is well and truly out of its bottle.
Yesterday Linda Lazarides, a nutritional expert I’ve known for decades, sent me a message via LinkedIn:  
Hi Jane, I was horrified to be informed Sainsbury's may be taking a positive stance in favour of GM foods.”
 What?  I checked out the link she sent and it seems that Sainsbury’s brand director had given an ill-advised quote to Farmer’s Weekly saying, in effect, that Sainsbury’s were missing an opportunity to be involved in the GM industry.  The CEO of Sainsbury’s has now apologised and reassured customers that Sainsbury’s will continue to listen to their customers and won't be stocking GM food.  (is it just me that hears 'for now' tacked onto that?)

But I’m not reassured. Not remotely.  Because, even if the UK stands firm, the rest of the world isn’t.  And you can’t contain GM.  You simply cannot have GM and non-GM.  GM contamination of conventional and organic crops is already increasing.  The US rice supply has already been contaminated by a ONE YEAR field trial of GM rice.  In Canada, the organic oilseed rape industry has been destroyed by contamination from GM rape.  In Spain, GM maize is wiping out organic cultivation. The time has come to choose between a GM-based, or a non-GM-based, world food supply. The two can’t co-exist.  The problem is that, if some places choose to grow GM, it affects us all. Effectively we’re all stuffed. 
Why does it worry me?  Because we simply don’t know the environmental consequences or the health consequences.  We have no idea.  It’s an imprecise science with unpredictable outcomes. We have NO idea what GM food could do. There are very few studies on the effects of humans eating GM food (interesting that) but animal studies have shown that GM foods can have toxic effects, including shifts in the immune system, accelerated ageing and genetic alterations.
As toxicologist Dr Suzanne Wuerthele of the EPA (US Environmental Protection Agency) says,  ‘We are confronted with the most powerful technology the world has ever known, and it is being rapidly deployed with almost no thought whatsoever to its consequences.’
Oh but, say the pro-GM brigade, people in the US have been eating GM food for ages with no ill-effects.  But how would they know? They’re not labelled.

So why is it being promoted?  The powerful pro-GM lobby says that it is going to save the world, that GM will feed the world. No. GM food won’t solve the world food crisis.   Expert analysts also doubt the much-touted ability of GM crops to increase crop yields and to decrease or end the need for pesticides.  In fact, data shows that GM crops in the US need more, not less, pesticides.

So then. Why?  Money.  Politics.  What else?  L

It’s your choice of course.  Although, sadly, it won’t be our children’s choice.  They will have no choice. 

My devildaughter, the Mistress of All Evil (coming up to 14) lent me a book recently.  It's a dystopian YA novel called Uglies by Scott Westerfield and it's pretty (ho ho) good.  But the scene that stayed with me, long after I shut the book, was one in which the protagonist, escaping from the 'perfect' world comes across a vast field of beautiful white flowers.  Then, suddenly, a helicopter appears and flame-throwers burn the ground.  Why? she asks. Why did you do that?  Because, the flame thrower explains, the white orchids were once the rarest flowers but genetic modification turned them into the ultimate weed - a monoculture, crowding out every other species of plant and animal.  Biological zero. 

Want to know more?  Probably not.  But should you feel inclined GM Watch is very informative. 

They also have a great links page which will plug you into all the latest research, campaigns and actions, wherever you are.  


5 comments:

Isobel Morrell said...

Oh, how I do agree with your sentiments. If the Good Lord had intended spiders and tomatos to mate - as you so graphically suggest - then it would have been written in at the time of Creation.

It is all being done in the name of profit - principally the US firm Monsanto, if memory serves. Those who get sucked in once, cannot buy seeds in future from any other source, because Monsanto cannot "guarantee their efficacy". Eventually, everything will have a Monsanto source! And, no one seems to be able to stop it. Fortunately, I don't think I'll be alive to worry about it - but like you, I do worry for our children and grandchildren

the veg artist said...

As a coeliac I am more concerned than most people about what goes into my mouth, and cook from scratch every day. I have to, to make sure my food is not contaminated with gluten.
Guarding against GM, though, seems to an impossible task, and you are so right. We have absolutely NO IDEA of the consequences on our bodies. Growing my own veg is not enough. I eat meat - what is that fed on? I have to buy cereal ingredients - I have no idea about their purity.
Like Isobel, I am of an age where I worry more about younger generations than my own.

Yvonne Johnston said...

Got to disagree on this one. I think it is a lack of understanding of the science behind it which causes people to fear GM food.
Also there are scientists in the UK (only a few miles from where I live) who are not working for Monsanto but are developing GM crops over here mainly out of a desire to ensure that there will be enough food available for our children and grandchildren.
This is an informative article written by one such researcher http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2011/jul/21/gm-debate

Anonymous said...

I'm more concerned about where they will eat. You see, I took an astral trip and guess what?

The mighty powers that be are turning England into a Tesco megamarket. Scotland will be the car park. Wales will be the toilet (that didn't need much of a refurb btw) and Ireland will be the landfill. Where the fuck are they gonna sit to have their butties FFS?

mrs green @littlegreenblog.com said...

Thanks so much for taking part in the first Britmums Green linky and with such an amazing and important post too. GM food scares the you-know-what out of me too. I think we DO have enough food to feed the world, so long as we'd stop wasting so much by demanding perfect specimens in our supermarkets and planning and shopping properly. And perhaps if we'd stop growing crops for fuel we could use them to feed people instead - what a novel idea. Anyway, this is a bit of a soapbox issue for me and you've put it all so eloquently so thank you for that :)