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King
Yuggoth
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Dec 2001 time: 12:40
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I donīt think so.
AFAIK the EU just wanted to have genetically altered food mandatory marked in the List of ingredients and won.
There was no intention to top the import of all GM Food into the EU (although it may be that some EU countries tried to individually stop Import of GM Food into their Territories).
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Prince
People's Republic of the East Village
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Oct 2001 time: 06:40
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quote: Originally posted by paiktis22
The EU rejected the US demand and said that the consumers have the right to be informed. But it also said the GM foods will not enter the EU? Or did it not?
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So much for allowing the customer to express his or her preferences in the marketplace, right? I thought an informed customer was considered a good thing (except by big bizness).
In the US, Monsanto is suing a small dairy in Maine. Why? Because the dairy labels its milk free of artificial hormones. Which it is. But Monsanto is losing money on its artificial hormone business because for some odd reason, consumers prefer their milk artificial hormone-free. Monsanto is arguing that such a label is misleading because - get this - it might convince people that there is something wrong with artificial hormones. Nevermind the fact that the label is true or anything. (And of course, Monsanto has the money to litigate into eternity where the dairy will feel the pinch soon.)
Monsanto is lucky I'm not the judge on that case. The rule 11 sanctions I'd impose would send them into chapter 11.
Anyway, it just goes to show that big bizness isn't satisfied with just not labeling their products with a "contains" label - they don't want the competiton labeling competing products with a "does not contain" label.
Excuse me while I pull this giant corporate **** out of my rectum.
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Emperor
of the whooooo?
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Jun 2002 time: 11:40
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paiktis; the problem with this is that almost all food you eat now, or at least what is produced in the US, is in some form or another already genetically altered through breeding, hormones, or other additives. The FDA is looking into this and requires any producers of such foods to notify the FDA if they do so.
What does it matter if the chicken is altered or not? It is still a chicken.
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Prince
People's Republic of the East Village
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Oct 2001 time: 06:40
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quote: Originally posted by Japher
What does it matter if the chicken is altered or not? It is still a chicken. |
Depends how much alteration went on.
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Emperor
of the whooooo?
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Jun 2002 time: 11:40
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heck, they only just set labeling guidelines for the term "organic"... it will be sometime before they have labeling guidlines for the term "treated" or "altered". Since they have define it's difference between "processed" and "natural"... By flagrantly setting these definitions you could actually end up hurting the consumer more than helping by causing companies that are "natural" to register their product as "altered" all because a slip up in the wording or the lack of forsight in the defining.
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Emperor
of the whooooo?
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Jun 2002 time: 11:40
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my problem with requiring GM foods to contain such a lable is that there have not been any studies that have shown that it is worse or different than any of the normal products made, while there are studies showing the contrary. If one were to lable the GM food as GM food the uneducated target would assume it is worse or different than the normal product. This would hurt the manufacturer, who the FDA is suppose to protect, as well as the consumer. The who reason for GM food is to help feed the growing population, yet if you require this labeling without need than you are denying the public of it's need nutrients...
Yes, it would be nice to know what it is I am eating or buying. Yet I don't know this when I go to a restaurant, not many people even bother to ask. With the ignorant scare for genetics that is going on someone would be dumb to actually advertise this let alone have a restaurant that lists all the ingredients they use in their food for the consumer to decide if they want it.
I think my "what is this" thread proved that not only the average consumer but us here at poly are rather ignorant to ingredients of consumable products that we use everyday, and electing things as GM is just one more thing to think shouldn't be in our food when it hasn't been proven to hurt. Like glycerin in a lot of things we use; the word people associate with explosives and not a food.
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Prince
Tory Party of 'Poly
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Jul 2001 time: 11:40
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geneticly modified food is bassicly doing to food in a few months what farmers usually have to pend centuries doing.
All food is geneticly modified, a farmer will breed to biggest carrots, and ditch the small ones, GM just means this process is ALOT quicker.
the EU is just a load of greedy farmers to scared to fight over seas competition, europe has been like that since the 1870's.
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Settler
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Oct 2000 time: 13:40
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However GM food implications aren't known yet. In past decades (1930 or so) noone ever suspected the ill effects of smoking for example and every onw was just enjoying it. A lot of time passed before studies showed what it can do and even now, some companies proclaim studies are not conclusive.
What I mean is that keeping the consumer informed (besides that that's the obvious thing to do IMO) might also be a social "safety valve" untill products such as GM foods are judged safe (and which are judged safe and which are not) or unsafe and rejected.
As long as people know they can make those decisions and I think society would be better for it. Some might simply dismiss the GM indication on the ingredients list, others might not and avoid such products due to what they know, think or even due to superstition, it doesn't matter.
Society on the whole would remain free to accomodate, judge and evaluate GM foods where science is still in very uncertain paths.
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Emperor
of the whooooo?
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Jun 2002 time: 11:40
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quote: untill products such as GM foods are judged safe |
and how much proof do you need? 100 years of trials?
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Settler
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Oct 2000 time: 13:40
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I think that's for each of us and society as a whole to decide.
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Settler
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Oct 2000 time: 13:40
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While I accept that it can be used for commercial purposes (the same of course goes for the other wayaround) I'd like to see society free to decide for itself. Everyone has the freedom of speech. Let them speak and convince.
About the mad cow disease, it was a serious scare. Again it could have been protectionism but even if it was better to be safe than sorry. Imports will eventually continue.
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Prince
Tory Party of 'Poly
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Jul 2001 time: 11:40
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quote: About the mad cow disease, it was a serious scare. Again it could have been protectionism but even if it was better to be safe than sorry. Imports will eventually continue |
Yeah, but several years after it has quite clearly gone is pushing it
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Deity
of Rocks.
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Sep 2001 time: 03:40
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The second point is how much evidence will ever be enough? Scientists have spent 15 years dutifully compiling reprots show GM foods are not substantially different then nonGM foods and that there are no negitive side effects yet the EU just sits there yelling "MORE, MORE, MORE evidence is needed". When will it ever be enough for these people and don't you find it suspecious that they are the ones who are financially benifiting from the continued restricts?
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Prince
People's Republic of the East Village
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Oct 2001 time: 06:40
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quote: Originally posted by Japher
my problem with requiring GM foods to contain such a lable is that there have not been any studies that have shown that it is worse or different than any of the normal products made, while there are studies showing the contrary. If one were to lable the GM food as GM food the uneducated target would assume it is worse or different than the normal product. |
Whoa, there partner! The consumer should not be deprived of full information on a product due to potential ignorance. It is up to the producer to educate the consumer. (I.e. Monsanto could advertise "see, almost no flipper babies have ever been born after mom ate frankenpotatos.")
On the other hand, not labeling GM foods is in some ways irrelevant because organic and non-GM producers will label their own foods as 'natural' or 'non-GM'. My bigger worry is nuisance lawsuits brought by the likes of Monsanto against organic producers. We can all at least agree that one is entitled to market their food as GM-free if the food is in fact GM-free right?
quote: This would hurt the manufacturer, who the FDA is suppose to protect, as well as the consumer. |
Talk about a conflict of interest! No the FDA is not supposed to protect the manufacturer (although the USDA does have this conflicting dual role ...)
quote: The who reason for GM food is to help feed the growing population, yet if you require this labeling without need than you are denying the public of it's need nutrients... |
Labeling won't do this. Who, if they are starving, is going to choose death over golden rice? The big problem is not with starvation but agricultural markets. Europeans won't buy GM foods, so African farmers who depend on European markets won't plant the stuff. But the Europeans are entitled to their values right? Their freedom of choice, right? If they want to buy only non-GM foods they should be allowed to do so right? And if this puts the African farmer in a dilemma, that's the farmer's problem, right?
This is just classical libertarianism, you know.
quote: Yes, it would be nice to know what it is I am eating or buying. Yet I don't know this when I go to a restaurant, not many people even bother to ask. With the ignorant scare for genetics that is going on someone would be dumb to actually advertise this let alone have a restaurant that lists all the ingredients they use in their food for the consumer to decide if they want it. |
I don't know where you live, but around here macrobiotic and organic restauraunts are quite vocal about the provenance of their ingredients. One may assume then, that (given the added expense involved with those ingredients) that any restauraunt not touting their ingredients is using just any old ingredients.
quote: I think my "what is this" thread proved that not only the average consumer but us here at poly are rather ignorant to ingredients of consumable products that we use everyday, and electing things as GM is just one more thing to think shouldn't be in our food when it hasn't been proven to hurt. Like glycerin in a lot of things we use; the word people associate with explosives and not a food. |
It's one thing to be ignorant because you don't care, and another thing to care and not be able to get the information because Monsanto doesn't want you to have an informed choice because "they know better".
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Prince
Tory Party of 'Poly
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Jul 2001 time: 11:40
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it should be for society to decide, if it wasn't for the fact the EU had already corrupted them with extremley biased propaganda.
'Geneticly Modified' brings up images of green slimy monsters to most europeans now.
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Settler
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Nov 2002 time: 12:40
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quote: Originally posted by Oerdin
Look how France continues to ban British beef |
The ban is still on? Funny, I used to think it was lifted in October 2002.
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Prince
People's Republic of the East Village
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Oct 2001 time: 06:40
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quote: Originally posted by DanS
The problem with that analogy is that Philip Morris generated data in the 50s showing this causal link. Further, it didn't have to submit this data to the relevant authorities. Lastly, the industry sought to keep any scientific information about this link out of the public eye. Indeed, the tobacco industry did most of its business under cover of attorney-client privilege in order to attempt to shield itself from litigation and regulation.
None of these aspects are what is happening with GM foods. |
Once someone argues the specifics of a clever jab instead of the substance of your argument, you know you have won the argument.
Have anything to say about the Monsanto suit, or consumer choice, or maximization of individual values via the marketplace?
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Emperor
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Aug 2000 time: 12:40
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quote: Originally posted by Oerdin
When will it ever be enough f |
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