Over 90 percent of Americans have said they want labels on GMO products and yet the House passes a bill to prevent mandatory GMO food labeling . Our battle against GMO will be played out in either a Whole foods or Stop and Shop supermarket. The team will be divided in two groups. One group will go into one of these stores and place labels on products that may be GMO and the other group will hand out samples of a fruit or vegetable on the sidewalk with notes which aim at raising awareness of GMO. The following is information on Whole Foods’ GMO secrets, politicians who have made labeling GMO products illegal and facts on GMO:
Whole Foods and GMO:
1. Whole Foods has knowingly been selling GMO products for years, hiding them under the “natural” label.
2. Two-thirds of Whole Foods products are labeled “natural” instead of certified organic.
3. Whole Foods seeks a “coexistence” with Monsanto, making deals with the USDA for genetically modified alfalfa and commercialized engineered crops.
4. 20-30% of Whole Foods products contains GMOs.
5. GMO products can be found in Whole Foods salad bar, packaged foods, meats, dairy products and some of the Whole Foods branded vitamin line.
6. Whole Foods knowingly trains its employees to say they do not carry any GMO food.
7. Whole Foods has makes an estimated $2-$3 billion a year in sales of GMO products.
8. Whole Foods financially supports Monsanto through the GMO sourcing supply chain, selling all sorts of products made with Monsanto’s GM corn.
Politicians paid to make GMO labeling illegal:
– Representatives Collin Peterson of Minnesota, Frank Lucas of Oklahoma, Mike Conaway of Texas, and Kurt Schradler of Oregon are all cosponsors of the legislation (most of whom also sit on the House of Agricultural Committee). All of these representatives received six-figure dollar amounts from providers of agricultural services and products during the 2014 election cycle. That put them high among the top 20 recipients of funds from the industry.
Cosponsors such as representatives David Valadao of California, Steve Fincher of Tennessee, Devin Nunes of California, and Kevin Cramer of North Dakota are not on the Agricultural Committee but nevertheless received six-figure dollar amounts from the crop production and basic processing industry during the midterm cycle. This landed them among the 20 who received the most from that industry.
Representatives Mike Pompeo of Kansas and G.K Butterfield of North Carolina, two original sponsors of the legislation, were the top two current house members receiving the most money from the Grocery Manufacturers Association in 2014. The grocery Manufacturers-who have spent $4.1 million lobbying on all issues so far, have lobbied on the bill more than any other organization.
GMO Facts:
Most developed nations do not consider GMOs to be safe. In 61 countries around the world, including Australia, Japan, and all the countries in the European Union, there are significant restrictions or outright bans on the production and sales of GMOs.
In the U.S., the government has approved GMOs based on studies conducted by the same corporations that created them and profit from their sale.
Though a significant majority of Americans want to know if the food theyâre purchasing contains GMOs, the biotech lobby has succeeded in making sure labeling is not mandatory.
In the U.S., GMOs are in as much as 80% of conventional processed food.
Over 80% of all GMOs grown worldwide are engineered for herbicide tolerance. As a result, use of toxic herbicides like Roundup has increased 15 times since GMOs were introduced. GMO crops are also responsible for the emergence of âsuper weedsâ and âsuper bugs:â which can only be killed with even more toxic poisons like 2,4-D (a major ingredient in Agent Orange). GMOs are a direct extension of chemical agriculture, and are developed and sold by the worldâs biggest chemical companies.
Biotechnology companies have been able to obtain patents with which to restrict the use of their GMO sources. As a result, the companies that make GMOs now have the power to sue farmers whose fields are contaminated with GMOs, even when it is the result of inevitable drift from neighboring fields.