MESSING
WITH
MOTHER
NATURE
Miracle of Seeds
Versus
GMO and other
Freak of Nature Foods
A VERY BRIEF HISTORY
OF AGRICULTURE
Courtesy of The Santa
Barbara Independent
It all
started with Seeds, the Source of Life, the first link in the Food Chain. Every
seed is a dormant, living, breathing embryo, composed of living cells that require
only water to sprout, and rich soil and the magic of photosynthesis to grow
into plants. Just as in human conception, each individual seed is a miracle,
containing all the software contained within the DNA of each cell in the
organism to replicate the hardware of a new plant, and eventually infinite
numbers of new seeds to replicate unlimited new plants.
For
about 10,000 years, people all over the world have been tilling the soil, planting
seeds, tending to the plants, weeding, watering, harvesting crops, and finally
collecting seeds, so that they could grow vegetables, fruits, and grains again
the following year. The development of Agriculture and Culinary Art was essential
for any society or culture that ceased being nomadic and hoped to survive.
Protein rich meat and milk from herbivores like cows and sheep and from
omnivores like pigs and chickens, and their eggs, as well as seafood,
supplemented the human diet. Although the farming tools grew in size, and
styles changed through the Iron Age and over the eons, and eventually beasts of
burden were employed, the basic cycle of tilling, sowing seed, tending,
harvesting, and collecting seeds for the following year was the same year after
year. The farmers, in many societies mainly women, learned early on that
certain plants fared better or tasted better than others of the same species,
and learned to favor these better plants when collecting seeds, in order to
yield better crops the following year given changing environmental conditions,
like pests, weather and drought. With this limited human intervention, plants
adapted, and their genetic composition, their DNA, was naturally altered.
People
ate locally, but not by intention. Transportation was too expensive and simply
impractical. And there was no need to do otherwise. Seeds were free, a
renewable resource, and grew in abundance year after year. In most areas the
soil was rich, the water was adequate, the herbivores and omnivores were
fruitful and multiplied, fertilizing the soil while grazing on perennials such
as grass (no need to replant each year), and scraps from kitchens, and the
seafood was plentiful and took care of itself. And there were lots of farmers. Nobody
considered feeding herbivores grain because it was just too expensive. The
reason it was expensive was the many steps in producing cereal grain like wheat
(tilling, sowing, cultivating, reaping, sheaving, threshing, and
winnowing-blowing away the chaff, husks) and finally milling the grain into
flour. Before mechanization, farmers would never dream of feeding grain to
herbivores that have historically fed on grass or hay (dried grass), and have fared
quite well.
And so the
cycle of Agriculture was inexorably interwoven into every society, and man’s
relationship to Mother Earth as Provider didn’t change much for 10,000 years. Despite
occasional famines in various parts of the world, for the most part all was
well. We are not aware of the type of hunger crises in scope or degree similar
to what we are experiencing in many parts of the world today. Of course,
population was far less, but the social, cultural, and physical relationship
between People and the Farm was much closer, and Biodiversity insured (unlike
the Irish Potato Famine in the mid 19th Century, which was due to
Monoculture) that if one crop failed, there were more often than not others to
fall back on to feed the masses.
So all
was going fairly well for 10,000 years until about 100 years ago, when during
the 20th century the whole plan went helter-skelter and out of
control. The most remarkable and tragic change was that farmers around the
world were convinced to stop gathering seeds, and instead to buy them from
newly formed seed companies that offered hybrid varieties (bred by the seed
companies for better yields and characteristics) as well as traditional open-pollinated
seeds. This practice of buying rather than collecting seed started in the US
(way before the advent of GMO seeds) in the 19 teens after World War I. In
India and around the world this transition to buying rather than gathering seed
happened much later, but by now it has taken place in most parts of the world.
The
Seed Corporations and those who would profit by having the farmers stop
gathering seeds conspired with the bureaucrats from the USDA (US Department of
Agriculture) and the politicians who gained support from these corporations.
They coerced, pressured and cajoled the farmers to convince them that the “modern”
ways of farming were changing, and that with all the labor intensity of
Agriculture, it was no longer necessary for “modern” farmers to collect seeds,
that it would be better for them to purchase their seed and thereby get more
consistent, robust outcomes. They brought the farmers together in Farm Associations
and Grange Halls, bought them drinks and free dinners, and applied pressure also
through community, civic, and church organizations so that they would learn the
new “modern” plan and comply. They also indoctrinated the youth in these US
farming communities to the new “modern” methods of farming through the 4H
(stands for Head, Heart, Hands, and Health) Club, a youth organization founded
in the early 1900’s and administered by the USDA. Most adults, male and female,
in farming communities were at one time members, where they learned the latest
practices espoused by the Government, as well as had lots of valuable
experiences related to the farm.
The
coercion of farmers to stop collecting seeds has been repeated around the world
in nation after nation on every continent. Corruption amongst businessmen and
politicians in other parts of the world is known to be even more prevalent, or
at least less masked, than it is in the US. Everybody’s “on the take” and lots
of people are getting rich, (but usually not the small farmer). And the farmers
that comply are made to feel that they’re morally, legally, and ethically right
to go along with the Government’s program
But
other than the purchasing of seeds from big seed companies, the early limited
use of fertilizers and pesticides, and the initial use of internal combustion
trucks, tractors, combines and farm equipment, farming of our food crops was
still essentially organic, and nothing much had changed in US Agriculture until
the end of World War II.
So they
would not miss any profits, rather than dismantle the factories of the
Military-Industrial Complex, the owners of the explosive munitions plants
(nitrogen-based explosives) converted them to manufacture nitrogen-based
fertilizers. And the chemical weapons and nerve gas factories (though by
international convention, none were used by the US in World War II, much was
produced) were converted to manufacture herbicides (weed killers) and
pesticides. By doing this, the owners of these factories wouldn’t miss a beat,
and they could profit from Agribusiness with their newly formed Agrochemical
plants. But now they had to create a market for these new Agrochemical
products.
Again,
the farmers were invited to participate in meetings and drinks and dinner by
the Farm Associations in Grange Halls and restaurants and they were coerced,
cajoled and intimidated by bureaucrats, politicians and businessmen to go along
with the new “modern” farming practices chemical program, and lots of people
got rich, (but again, usually not the small.farmer).
Courtesy of Google
Images
They
were adapting Agriculture to become more automated, the Factory Farm, and there
came the disconnect. Rather than working with Nature to yield our food, our
farmers were led to believe that with chemicals, they could fertilize their way
out of depleting the soil with monoculture cash crops like cotton and tobacco, and with chemicals they could kill
the crop eating bugs and fungi, and also kill the weeds. With chemicals and
“modern science” they could dominate Nature. The War mentality lived on. And
with the leadership and blessings of the Department of Agriculture, the largest
farms were favored, Agriculture became Agribusiness, and thousands of small
farmers couldn’t compete and were forced to sell out. In an effort to fight
this trend and to support the small family farmer, the annual benefit concert,
Farm Aid, was organized in the US starting in 1985, and is still going on
today.
Courtesy of Google
Images
But the
biggest change from the last 10,000 years of relatively successful Agriculture
was the invention in the ‘70s, the successful patenting in the ‘80s (in the
US), and the commercialization in the ‘90s of GMO’s (Genetically Modified
Organisms), also known as GM (genetically modified), GE genetically engineered,
“biotech”, or “transgenic” crops. (All these terms are essentially describing
the same thing.) Monsanto, Dow Chemical, Syngenta, Bayer and DuPont, among some
others, were huge chemical companies and were already supplying chemicals for
Agriculture. Monsanto, the producer of deadly carcinogenic PCB’s and the deadly
herbicide, Agent Orange, bought up many of the Seed Companies worldwide, and
began to dominate the Seed Industry. So besides their Agrochemical business to
supply Agribusiness, they could also supply the Seeds.
Their
R&D (Research and Development) departments began to experiment. If they
could develop hybrid varieties that could resist the herbicides and be the only
living plant in the field left standing, they could sell their herbicide
chemicals along with their special GMO seeds, and they could persuade the
farmers on their use by eliminating the need to hire laborers for pulling weeds.
And if they could develop crops that would produce their own pesticides, there
would be major savings for the farmers in that as well. On the automated
Factory Farm, “modern science” could do the trick with chemicals and machinery
alone. They also promised all sorts of other advantages for the farmers like
better yields.
In order to accomplish the mutation of these
crops they had to experiment with altering the genes in the DNA, the double
helix blueprint of life in all living cells, made up of RNA, shorter chains of
genes, and the accompanying proteins. So they took genes from other plants, or
insects, or bacteria, they attached these genes to particles of metal and with
the use of gene guns fired them into the DNA of these crops. (Another method
used to create GMO’s was to create a tumor in the plant to change its DNA.) Unbelievably
enough and I’m sure that the scientists working on this project were just as
surprised, it worked! Monsanto mutated first Soybeans and then Corn that would
survive the herbicide, Glyphosate, already a popular weed killer produced by
Monsanto, they called Round-up, calling it “biodegradable” and “safe,” that
would kill any weed or plant left standing other than the GMO. Dow mutated Cotton
and other crops that would produce a Bt toxin (Bacillus thuringiensis Bacteria)
and the accompanying protein that would paralyze and explode the bellies of
insects that dared to bite into it
Now the
executives of these corporations must have been jumping for joy, and they got
their large in-house legal departments on the case. What if they could patent
these GMO seeds, which they had been able to mutate by inserting new genes into
the DNA, as Intellectual Property, just as inventions could be patented? Then
they could own not just the Seed Companies, but the Seeds themselves, and they
would be able to profit by the Royalties from that ownership, and not only from
the sale of the Seeds and the Chemicals. Can you imagine the executives’ delight
when the US Patent Office agreed to issue those initial patents in the 1980s
(most likely having submitted to huge pressure of bureaucrats, politicians, and
businessmen)?
Now
they had one last hurdle. They had to get the approval of the FDA (Food and Drug
Administration) before they could commercialize and profit from their “inventions”.
It is well known that the FDA works hand-in-hand with business, and that there
is a revolving door of administrators who came from business (and the opposite
of that) and somehow (again much pressure must of been exerted to get this
outcome) in the mid-90s the FDA approved the commercialization of first GMO
Soybeans and then GMO Corn. And so began the biotech industry in US
Agriculture.
The
most remarkable thing about the FDA’s approval of GMOs is that they made this
determination of Safety, with virtually no independent testing, certainly not
any long term testing even on animals. They used the doctrine of Substantial
Equivalence. Here’s a very good explanation directly from Monsanto’s website. “Substantial
equivalence means that a GM crop has similar components and nutritional
characteristics as its conventional (non-GM) counterpart. Specifically that the
range of concentrations for components and nutritional characteristics of the
GM crop falls within the typical range for the non-GM counterpart. Substantial
equivalence is accepted and utilized by most regulatory agencies worldwide.”
Even Codex Alimentarius, the UN’s FDA, has approved GMOs on this basis.
In other
words, despite the US Patent Office being persuaded otherwise as evidenced in
their issuing of Intellectual Property patents for these GMO “inventions”, to
the FDA, Corn is Corn, Soybean is Soybean. No need for further testing. It’s
Food. It’s safe! And they haven’t changed that stance, or even questioned it,
in almost 20 years of GMOs, despite lots of independent research to the
contrary. So, by default, we and our children have become the lab rats in a
massive long term Experiment with billions of test subjects.
Meanwhile
the biotech industry employs an army of scientists (with non-disclosure
agreements) to dispute any independent research that opposes the claims to
Safety and Nutritional equivalence. And every one of the independent studies
that have positively identified heath risks and nutritional deficiencies in
GMOs, and believe me, there’ve been plenty, have been matched by the industry’s
army of hired hand scientists, that always refute any negative findings. One
example is the French research on lab rats fed GMOs, versus a control group fed
non-GMOs, in which the GMO fed group was found to grow large cancerous tumors
and have a shortened life span. Another recent study involved the examination
of pig stomachs and digestive tracts versus a control group fed non-GMO grain,
which showed marked swelling, lesions, and color change, all photographically
evident in the GMO fed pigs. (This, and the finding that gut flora is affected
killing good bacteria, may have something to do with “loose gut syndrome” and
the increase in childhood allergies.) The Industry scientists’ answers to all
of these peer reviewed studies on animals were that they were inapplicable to
humans.
Even
before the biotech/seed/chemical corporations got the “All Clear” from the FDA
in the mid-90’s, (and continuing today) they embarked worldwide on massive
multi-million dollar Public Relations and Propaganda campaigns with websites,
social networking sites, and publication and TV advertising, promoting the
“advantages” of GMOs, and attacking and discrediting any nay-sayers, (just as
the US Corn Industry had done in the promotion of High Fructose Corn Syrup). Instead of calling GMOs, “God Move Over”, as
we sometimes laughingly use, they called it paradoxically, the “Green Revolution”,
with the promise of wiping out World Hunger. Now, who could argue with a
concept as charitable as “wiping out World Hunger”? A Nobel Peace Prize was
actually awarded to one of the pioneers of Genetic Modification, Norman Borlaug,
with that promise in mind, and with the resulting promise of world stability.
Despite the deforestation for bigger and bigger GMO mono-crop farm fields and
the heavy involvement of toxic pesticides and herbicides and the heavy reliance
on nitrogen-based chemical fertilizers (which we now know releases CO2 relative
to factories), the world accepted the use of the term, “Green Revolution”. And
the Industry, which only cared about the Sustainability of Profits, made full
use of this euphemism.
With the
full cooperation of USDA bureaucrats and, once again, in corporate sponsored
Farm Association meetings with dinners and drinks, they got the farmers on
board with the GMO program. The farmers believed the ‘modern farming” hype they
were fed that GMOs would free them up from the need and expense of pulling
weeds and killing crop-eating insects, while increasing yields, and thereby
profits.
Courtesy of
Yeson522.com
(Washington State GMO
Labeling Initiative)
Fast
forward 17 years to 2013, and find 86% of Corn grown in the US to be GMO, 93%
of Soybeans, 93% of Cottonseed, 90% of Rapeseed (Canola), 95% of Sugar Beets,
and 80% of Hawaiian Papaya. Billions of dollars worth of expensive GMO Seed
have been purchased and millions of acres of staple GMO crops have been
planted. And Monsanto, with their monopoly on Seeds (GMO and non-GMO) in the US
and worldwide, and the other biotech companies are making billions in profits
in annual revenues from royalties, the sale of seeds, and the sale of
Agrochemical herbicides, pesticides, and fertilizers, and lots of people (not
so much the farmers) are getting rich. Sounds like a great success story,
doesn’t it?
Courtesy of EcoWatch.com
But all
is not well in Agribusiness, with GMOs, or with the health impacts of GMOs.
First of all, the promise of higher yields was never fulfilled. Even in the
early years of GMO, the higher yields reported each period were as a result of
more and more area planted with GMO. We doubt whether yield per acre ever
actually exceeded non-GMO varieties. More recently Super-weeds have evolved
through genetic selection that tolerate the herbicides, and compete with the
GMO crops, even though the farmers have increased their volume of herbicide application,
raising the farmers’ costs. And Super-bugs have evolved that tolerate the previously
lethal affects on insects of pesticides within Bt GMO crops, and more and more
pesticides are being sprayed onto the crops, again raising costs. Another
factor adversely affecting yields of GMO crops are plant diseases caused by
bacteria, like the one affecting Corn called, Goss’s Wilt, which has spread
from Nebraska, North all the way to Minnesota and South to Louisiana, and will
decrease total US yield by 10% this year. Even Monsanto has acknowledged that
some of their “high yield” GMO varieties are particularly susceptible to this
disease.
Now,
let’s get down in the dirt under these expanses of GMO crops in the “modern
factory farm”. Instead of finding healthy, rich Soil filled with earthworms,
microbes, fungi, and nutrients, you find hard, compact dirt. But, what do you
expect to find after submitting the Soil to years and years of chemical warfare
in the form of ever increasing pesticides (neurotoxins), herbicides (toxic to
plants), and chemical fertilizers? The dirt is so hard that the fields require
more water and irrigation, due to less absorption. When the farmers are lucky
enough to see rain, unless it is minimal, puddles of chemical soup form and run
onto adjacent fields (causing damage to non-resistant crops) and into meadows,
forests, and waterways, causing further ecological damage. (There is a Dead
Zone in the Gulf of Mexico roughly the size of the State of Connecticut, caused
by agricultural runoff.)
The
dirt is so hard that you can only pull a plant out to examine its roots with
the use of a shovel, and even then, it won’t easily shake off. And you’ll find
a smaller root system than that of non-GMO varieties with less of the round
nodules that draw in nutrition from the Soil, which accounts for GMOs being
less nutritious (per studies contested by Industry scientists). Another factor
robbing the Soil of Nutrients is less Crop Rotation. After all, if you’re
cultivating Round-up Ready GMOs, nothing but other Round-up Ready GMO crops
will grow in that field, so you could rotate a field between Corn and Soybeans,
but that’s about all you can do. In this Monoculture system, you certainly
can’t take advantage of the nutritionally symbiotic relationship of multiple
species of plants grown next to one another, one of the many advantages of
Biodiversity.
The affects
of chemical cultivation of the Soil with herbicides and pesticides (billions of
pounds/year annually worldwide) that accumulate year after year is a major
reason why this type of GMO Agriculture is not Sustainable. And these chemicals
are not “biodegradable”, (contrary to Monsanto’s labeling of Round-up -
Glyphosate - which they have since been forced to remove from the label), nor
are they “safe”. These chemicals themselves are not only dangerous to the Soil,
but bioaccumulate within the crops, and within all species, including humans,
that come into contact with, or feed on, these crops, or feed on animals fed
these crops, so they are a threat to all species on this planet. They are found
to be endocrine disrupters (mimicking estrogen) and to be toxic and
carcinogenic. People (children in nearby schools, for one example) that live
and work near the spraying of pesticides and herbicides (that drift in the
winds), and farm workers, who work at Ground Zero, are particularly vulnerable,
and routinely complain about rashes, respiratory problems, and other symptoms.
And there have been many instances of cancer clusters in communities near farms.
Levels of pesticides and herbicides have been found to be not only in our food,
but in the blood, tissues, organs, and mother’s milk of people living close to
farms and in cities far from farms. Although the FDA and Codex Alimentarius,
the UN’s FDA, have set maximum levels of these toxics in our Food, (and the FDA
has recently raised the acceptable level of Glyphosate - Round-up in our blood),
we find any levels to be Unacceptable Levels. We absorb these Agrochemicals and
more than 8,000 other modern chemicals through our food, our drink, through
respiration, and through our skin. (Take a look at the ingredients in hair care
products and cosmetics. Many should be avoided.) Though we expel some, much of them bioaccumulate
in the fat, tissue and organs of our bodies, and no one knows how these various
chemicals interact.
Courtesy of
EcoWatch.com
Livestock,
pets, and wildlife exposed to these dangerous agrochemicals are no doubt also
at risk, though we’ve found less on that subject. The exception to that are the
many reports of Colony Collapse Disorder in Honeybees, a species on which we
all depend for the pollenization of crops, flowers and plants, a major threat
to our food supply. Though there have been many theories for this threat to our
ecosystem, it is widely accepted that Neonicotinoids, a very popular pesticide
(many seeds are delivered with a coating of this substance) is in part responsible
for the loss of Honeybees, and though many countries in the EU and elsewhere have
outlawed its use, the EPA, FDA, and USDA still allow its widespread use in the
US, as 30% of our Bee population perish each year.
Despite
Monsanto and the FDA’s position that testing GMO’s is not necessary, (on the
basis of Substantial Equivalence), literally dozens of published independent
research papers have found a staggering list of health risks through animal
studies. These findings (against control groups fed non-GMO) include various degrees
of infertility, low birth weight, shortened life span, irritation and lesions
in intestinal tracts, enlarged livers, pancreases, and intestines, inhibited
development of brains and testicles, changes in and alteration in cell growth
and structure, changes in gene expression, and development of cancerous tumors.
These findings showed a great degree of consistency of affects on multiple
species of subject animals.
More
than one retired biotech scientist has acknowledged that genetic engineering is
not an exact science. Much is yet unknown. When they fire a gene into the DNA
of a living cell, they’re not exactly sure where that gene ends up, and what
other original genes are turned down or off by this intrusion, and they are not
exactly sure how this affects the accompanying proteins in the cells, and what
the repercussions of all of this are in the organism. Could unintended genes be
turned down or off in humans by ingesting this genetic information? Nobody
knows.
We do
know, since it has been scientifically accepted, that micro-RNA, a component of
the DNA that contains genetic information, can migrate into the cells of
animals and humans from food eaten. It may be possible that GMOs are the cause
of the recent significant rise in many human health conditions such as
infertility, childhood allergies, low birth weight, autism, intestinal disease,
cancer, etc. (And the medical and pharmaceutical industries are booming in
response to these issues.)
Since
more than 75% of the products in the grocery store in the US today contain GMO
and since GMO’s are being eaten in most of the world today, (even if the only
GMO ingredients in the product is Canola, Soybean, or Cottonseed Oil, all “Vegetable
Oil”), this makes us all test subjects in a massive, long-term multi-billion human
subject experiment, despite the claims to safety from the biotech industry and
from our regulatory agencies, which resist re-exploring its safety. Those of us
that wish to opt ourselves and our children out of this “experiment”, insist on
our Right to Know whether a product contains GMOs or is GMO-free. 64 countries
around the world have enacted GMO labeling laws, but the US and Canada and many
other countries do not require, or don’t allow, such labeling. More than $8
million have been spent recently in Washington State alone by Monsanto, DuPont
and Bayer in an effort to defeat the approval of Initiative 522 demanding Labeling
of GMO’s. The Biotech Industry, the Food Industry and the FDA are adamantly
opposed to Labeling. Many States are trying to enact laws that would require
the Labeling of GMOs, despite federal legal and regulatory resistance (such as
the Monsanto Protection Act, hopefully soon to expire). Other such legislation restricting
labeling and/or putting limitations on GMOs have popped up in many countries of
the world, reflecting the powerful influence of these corporations.
We must
also be wary of International Trade Agreements like the Trans PacificPartnership (TPP), which President Obama is attempting to Fast Track, or Canada’s
21 Foreign Investment Promotion and Protection Agreements (FIPAs), or more than
2,400 such Bilateral Investment Treaties (BITs) worldwide, which would
compromise nations’ sovereignty, and put nations in jeopardy of being sued by
corporations for potential loss of profits, for examples, if they were to
legislate labeling or the banning of GMO’s, or if they were to ban Fracking.
Corn,
always considered one of our major Food crops, has been reduced to an
industrial commodity. It is traded on commodities exchanges and is considered a
Raw Material for the production of High Fructose Corn Syrup, Ethanol for fuel,
and Feed for Livestock. Some byproducts of Corn, now mostly GMO Corn, can be
found in many processed foods in the grocery store, and only a small percentage
(less than 10%) is actually eaten by humans as Corn. And Seeds are no longer
Seeds. They have become Plant Reproductive Material in an industrial world. And
if pollen from the GMO Corn crop drifts in the wind and pollinates some nearby
non-GMO Corn crops, and genetically modified DNA is found to be in that Corn,
farmers, through no fault of their own, can be sued for stealing Intellectual
Property without paying Royalties or for the Seeds.
Courtesy of Google
Images
The
whole system of Agriculture today is a Failed System. It is not Sustainable. It
is Broken beyond repair with Big Agribusiness subsidized by Governments, with GMOs
and all of their Repercussions, with Monoculture Factory Farming, with Corporate
Monopoly of Seeds and Inputs, with Corporate Influence on Regulatory Agency
Bureaucrats and on Politicians, with the Proliferation of Toxic, Carcinogenic
and Ecocidal Chemicals (and Homicidal-exposing farm workers to them), with Confinement
of Livestock and the resulting Pollution, with Lack of Crop Biodiversity, and with
Lack of Support for the Small Farmer. Need we say more? We must basically throw
the entire system out and start all over again.
But the
good news is that more and more uninfluenced experts on Agriculture are
arriving at many of these same conclusions. The United Nations Conference on
Trade and Development (UNCTAD) notably issued a 341 page report on September
18, 2013 entitled, WAKE UP BEFORE IT IS TOO LATE, with the subtitle, Make
Agriculture Truly Sustainable Now for Food Security in a Changing Climate. This
report was written with the caveat that it does not necessarily represent the
policies of the UN, or its member nations, or the FAO (Food and Agriculture
Organization of the UN), but it is certainly speaking to them. Here’s a quote from
the Key Messages page of this report:
“The world needs a
paradigm shift in agricultural development: from a “green revolution” to an
“ecological intensification” approach. This implies a
rapid and significant shift from conventional, Monoculture-based and
high-external-input-dependent industrial production towards mosaics of
sustainable, regenerative production systems that also considerably improve the
productivity of small-scale farmers. We need to see a move from a linear to a
holistic approach in agricultural management, which recognizes that a farmer is
not only a producer of agricultural goods, but also a manager of an agro-ecological
system that provides quite a number of public goods and services (e.g. water,
soil, landscape, energy, biodiversity, and recreation).”
There are
close to a billion hungry people in this world, while the UN’s FAO has reported
that we have enough food at this time to feed 170% of the world population. The
only problem is getting it to them. They can’t afford the price of that food,
and transportation is a problem. Why not have the poor people themselves (75%of
whom live in rural far-flung areas) produce the food locally, rather than ship
it across continents and oceans?
Take a page
out of Jesus’ Book. Teach a man to farm, and help him to accomplish it, rather
than feed him in charity. And I’m suggesting actually helping him, and not charging him expensive prices for
seeds, chemicals, etc., plus royalties, and killing his farm, (the reason more
than 284,000 farmers in India have committed suicide, some by drinking the very
pesticides purchased from Monsanto). Give a man open- pollinated seeds, and
teach him to cultivate them and to collect seeds for the following year, so that
his seed cost could be zero, and help him to learn how to raise these crops and
livestock organically. It’s not so simple, but it could be the plan.
Biodiversity
is known to be the strength of any ecosystem, and tragically, in less than 100
years, we have allowed corporations to lead us to the loss, the extinction, of
over 98% of the species that were made available to us by our Mother Earth for millennia.
A simple, yet elegant explanation of the importance of Biodiversity can be
found in The Law of The Seed, a very recent publication, which presents a model
for the writing and establishment of new national laws according to this
paradigm. It was written in part and inspired by Vandana Shiva, a woman from
India, who is a Guru to me and to many of us. She is a former quantum physicist
who has dedicated her life to what she calls, Seed Freedom.
“Agricultural biological
diversity, or more specifically, genetic resources for food and agriculture, is
the storehouse that provides humanity with food, clothes and medicines. It is
essential in the development of sustainable agriculture and food security.
“Evolution is the process
by which nature practices its capacity of selection; for selection to exist,
nature needs diversity. Diversity is also the basis for the farmer, for the
breeder and for the agricultural scientist in general. We need diversity to
allow evolution and thus capacity of adaptation. We need diversity in order to
be able to select the best characteristics for crops. This diversity has been
developed over thousands of generations and our duty is to safeguard it for
those in the future.
“In spite of its vital importance for human survival, agricultural
biodiversity is being lost at an alarming rate. It is estimated that some
10,000 species have been used for human food and agriculture. Currently no more
than 120 cultivated species provide 90% of human food supplied by plants, and
12 plant species and 5 animal species alone provide more than 70% of all human
food. A mere 4 plant species (potatoes, rice, maize and wheat) and 3 animal
species (cattle, swine and chickens) provide more than half. Hundreds of
thousands of farmers’ heterogeneous plant varieties and landraces (meaning
non-hybrids), that existed for generations in farmers’ fields until the
beginning of the twentieth century, have been substituted by a small number of
modern and highly uniform commercial varieties. The loss of agricultural
biodiversity has drastically reduced the capability of present and future
generations to face unpredictable environmental changes and human needs.”
A farmer from Virginia named Forrest Pritchard, author of a new
book, Gaining Ground, A Story of Farmers' Markets, Local Food, and
Saving the Family Farm (Lyon Press), when questioned by Staci Strauss of
HandPickedNation.com, explained why he farms in the organic, biodiverse and
sustainable ways that works for him and his crops and livestock (and for us,
his virtual customer):
“What we do on this farm is a very ancient tradition. If we want
to say, we’re going organic, we’re going sustainable, we’re going grass fed! Let’s put it in perspective, we’re not going all these directions. We are
returning to these directions, the ways they were bred, and raised, and
cultivated by our ancestors. These traditions that we’re picking up in 2013 are
not new wave or trendy or the next hot thing.
These are just sensible efficient economic platforms that our forefathers had
the sense to recognize as truly sustainable.”
Photo
courtesy of Staci Strauss – HandPickedNation.com
Rather than cultivate one or two crops, Forrest’s kind of farm
is a beautiful patchwork of many crops, vegetables, grains, and fruits, all working
together in a symbiotic relationship. Rather than kill his soil with chemicals,
and confine and feed his livestock grain, he lets them roam and fertilize the
soil, and grind it into the soil with their hooves, and they eat grass and hay
(dried grass) and scraps from the kitchen. In doing so, his produce, crops, meats,
and eggs are much more nutritious and less toxic than anything coming out of
the modern factory farm, and ecologically, his kind of farm does not produce
the toxic waste pollution, or emit as much CO2, or rob the Aquifers of so much
water. And with his outlet in Farmer’s Markets, it’s a win, win situation all
around.
But, unfortunately, most farms in the US are not like that at
all. They are still being operated according to the factory farm paradigm as
sanctioned by the USDA, and as described in the earlier part of this story. And
though Agribusiness, despite the ravages of its methods, is still profitable
and is subsidized by the Government, and Monsanto and their likes are “raking
it in”, the small farmers are struggling just to stay “afloat”.
But there is room for optimism. There are so many initiatives
occurring and growing today, in an effort to reverse the trend, and to save and
bring back what we can of the former richness of Agricultural Biodiversity. More
than 1,400 Seed Libraries (Seed Banks) have been set up in over 100 nations,
many of them here in the US, where farmers and gardeners (horticulturalists)
are contributing, cataloging, and saving heirloom and traditional varieties of
seeds, and thereby saving them from extinction. Because of restrictive laws to
the contrary in many parts of the world, some of this work is being done by
brave individuals clandestinely, or they would face prosecution. Though many
species and varieties have been lost forever, it’s amazing how many special
seeds have been squirreled away by older people, stored in socks in drawers,
and are now making their way into these Seed Libraries, and back into the mix.
(It’s reminiscent of a scene from the science fiction novel, Fahrenheit 451, by
Kurt Vonnegut, only with Seeds instead of Books.)
And there are so many new and older organizations that, through
the miracle of the internet and social networking, are providing education,
instruction, and tutorials on everything from soil preparation, to plant
cultivation by species, to how to collect seeds, wet or dry. One such
organization, Project Harlem Inc. offers the know-how on Twitter and Facebook on
what to do once you get some of those seeds into your hands. They claim you can
grow 700 pounds of vegetable produce in only 100 square feet, that’s 10 feet
square, offer instruction on how to accomplish the task. Even in cities, people
are finding gardens to be much more efficient than lawns, and this is
empowering and feeding young and older people who lack jobs.
All over the world, small farms are popping up to fill the
demand for nutritious pesticide-free organic food, remarkably caused by the
scarcity of healthy food today. So in that sense, by robbing the world of real
food in their never-ending hunger for profit, the corporations have created a
market for something better. We hear of brave, young people in Greece, whose
economy is in shambles, and who can’t find jobs, setting up small farming
operations and finding some success. YoungFarmers.org is another notable
organization with a website and lots of resources, and there are dozens of
other similar initiatives out there from and for the small farmer.
Courtesy of Google
Images
And more and more Farmers Markets are showing up in our cities
and by the roadsides, where consumers are reestablishing direct relationships
with farmers, supporting them, and learning from them. This provides the
smaller farmers with an outlet, a means to make a living, and provides the
consumers with a means to get healthy food, and hopefully, at a fair price.
A burgeoning grassroots effort has emerged in many corners of
the world to protest the ravages of corporate Agriculture and the monopoly of
the Seed by Monsanto. The March Against Monsanto in May, 2013, was a massive
demonstration in over 100 locations spanning 36 nations, and more even larger
demonstrations are being planned in October and beyond. (In some countries,
there have actually been riots with some violence.) But Monsanto and their cronies in the
corporate world, the regulatory world, the judicial world (one example, the US
Supreme Court, which recently ruled for Monsanto in Bowman v. Monsanto),the
world of law enforcement, and the world of Government (one example, 71 out of
100 US Senators voted against a bill to give individual States the right to
label GMOs), they are not about to capitulate any time soon. And Monsanto has
hired a Security Firm out the remnants of the paramilitary group, Blackwater,
so in effect, they have their own army. But, as the public gets educated to the
evils of GMOs, millions, perhaps billions, of citizens could turn the tide.
Though there is much reason for concern, this is a very exciting
time in which we live. Some day we hope to look back on the Rise and Fall of
the Factory Farm and the GMO, and on the early 21st Century
Renaissance of Biodiversity in Agriculture, as governed and inspired by the Law
of the Seed.
Courtesy of Google
Images
MESSING
WITH
MOTHER
NATURE
Part 2
Freak of Nature Foods
We had
planned to include this information in the main article, but in the writing, it
became clear that it would slow down the pace of the story on Seeds, the Brief
History of Agriculture, the GMO Debacle, and then back to Seeds. But we
couldn’t leave the Freak of Nature Foods out of the discussion, so we decided
to write a second article, in which to very briefly cover this vast subject.
GMOs
are not the only Freaks of Nature, but they are prime examples. We’ve written
about High Fructose Corn Syrup, which by the way is triple GMO, with GMO
Bacteria and Genetically Engineered Enzymes to turn the Glucose derived from
GMO Corn into the molecule, Fructose. We’ve written about our illustrious FDA,
and how they allow the food manufacturers to lie to the public right on the
label about zero grams of Transfat, an item that everyone agrees is deadly,
when it’s clearly written in the Ingredients. Partially Hydrogenated Oil is Transfat,
while the “Nutrition Facts” label on powdered Coffee Creamer says zero grams of
Transfat. And we ask you to please avoid
margarine or any substitute for butter.
There
are also lots of other Freak of Nature Foods that many Americans eat on a daily
basis. Fast Food, Processed Food, Canned Food. It’s all Junk Food. Besides all
the Additives that make it bad for you, it’s processed so much, there’s very
little left in it that’s nutritionally good for you. An elementary school
teacher in California instructs her students about Processed Food by having
them bury food in a large tray full of soil and earthworms. Two weeks later,
they dig up the food. There is little left of the organic food, but the
processed food is virtually untouched. If it isn’t good enough for worms, it
isn’t good enough for us.
We’ve also
heard anecdotally from more than one source that when given the choice on two
ends of the same feeding trough, cows and pigs always go for the non-GMO grain.
I guess that’s a sign of Animal Intelligence, right?
There
are so many other “Freaky” items in our food supply that they’re too numerous
to mention, but let’s mention a few. Artificial Food Coloring or Dye,
Artificial Sweeteners, (If it starts with the word Artificial, chances are it’s
not Real Food.), Growth Hormones, Antibiotics in Milk and Meat, all Processed
Meats, MSG, and all the Chemicals, Emulsifiers, and Preservatives, all names in the
Ingredients you can’t even pronounce. If you can’t pronounce or recognize a
word in the Ingredients, chances are, you shouldn’t be eating it. The fact that
they creep into our food supply makes these foods, Frankenfoods, Freaks of
Nature, and they should all be avoided.
Another
kind of Freak in our Food Supply is what they have done to the species, both
plant and animal. I’ll just mention one vegetable, the tomato. The tomato I see
in the grocery store bears no resemblance to the ones I remember when I was
younger. They have been bred to be tough, to withstand thousands of miles in
the back of trucks. Even the tomatoes on the vine and the vines themselves look
like plastic. Homegrown, is where it’s at.
We’ll
mention just one Freak of Nature Animal, and that’s the popular Thanksgiving
Turkey. It’s not the same Turkey that we used to eat. It’s called the Great
American Buff, and it’s bred to grow incredibly big and unbelievably fast, with
breasts so large that the Rooster can’t reach the Hen, so it must be
artificially inseminated. It has no muscle tone, because of confinement, and it
is so tasteless, that cooks inject it with hypodermic needles filled with salty
chicken bouillon to give it any taste at all. (Some farmers are bringing back
and raising traditional breeds of Turkey free range, provided that they can be
assured of a market, but don’t expect large breasts and lots of white meat.)
Stay
away from white bread, white sugar, white rice or instant rice or instant
anything. Again, they process everything out of it, even the color. Especially be
wary of Nutritional Drinks, considered Food Supplements. They even make a brand
of it for children now. And parents who use it as a substitute for Food, or
children who use it to feed their elderly parents, are culpable of ignorance
and neglect. Besides all the chemicals, that stuff is full of GMO Corn
Sweeteners. And brightly colored Sports Drinks, amongst other reasons to avoid
them, contain Brominated Vegetable Oil to bind with the coloring. Now, we’re
really talking Freak of Nature and Danger.
Contrary
to what they would have you believe, processed Soup is not Good Food, and a dose of Ketchup or some Microwave Popcorn is
not a Serving of Vegetables. We’ll mention three more things to avoid, only
because we must, GMO Salmon, any kind of Farmed Fish, and Soy. Everybody
considers Soy to be synonymous with Health, yet that couldn’t be further from
the truth. Besides the fact that 93% of the Soy grown in the US is GMO, it is a
strong endocrine disrupter, with serious effects, especially on infants and
male fertility. So it’s best to stay away from all Soy products, including Soy
Protein Isolate and Unfermented Soy, and especially, Soy Milk and Soy Infant
Formula..
As you no
doubt noticed, it’s a minefield out there, and we’re just scraping the surface.
I’m no health expert or guru, but my theory as discussed in our article, Killer
Acid, about how not eating fruits and vegetables will kill you, is that any
improvement in a person’s diet is better than no improvement at all. Rather
than judge people for what you consider bad food choices, and treat them with
disdain, it is better to encourage them. I’m not in favor of the orthodoxy that
criticizes others for not measuring up any more than the orthodoxy of the USDA
where distributing Raw Milk is considered a crime, for just one of many
examples of USDA orthodoxy.
We all
have to make our own choices of where to eat and what to eat, and it’s no easy
task, especially if we travel, or if money’s an issue. You are what you eat,
and you will bear the consequences, but in some cases, hunger forces
compromise, and that’s just the way it is.
Maybe
not you, but most people believe they have several layers of protection. First,
they have faith in the brand, the manufacturer, to protect us, that there’s no
way a big brand would produce an item that isn’t safe. Second, they have faith
in the big name store, that they certainly wouldn’t sell something that isn’t
safe. And lastly, they have faith in the Government, that it will protect us,
that it wouldn’t allow a product that’s unsafe to be made or sold. The bottom
line is that we must realize there is no basis for trust, and that no one will
protect us and our families better than ourselves.
In this
unscrupulous world, where Profit rules, we must read the Ingredients every time
and make our own Food choices. Be assured that we are all active participants
in changing the world through educating as many people as we possibly can, and
through our purchases.
Courtesy of
EatLocal.com
Just a
note before we introduce the videos. This was the first article with Twitter as
one of our major resources (My handle: @Mikethemikeman1). In six months of
research, my esteemed colleagues, much more expert than myself in the fields of
GMOs and Food, delivered us literally hundreds of articles, research studies,
publications, and videos on Twitter breaking on a daily basis. Just touching on
every subject, we were able to connect the dots, and tell the whole story, and
what a story it is!
The
first video is of a very dynamic and inspirational TED lecture by Bill McDorman,
entitled Seeds Will Save Us. He starts off by comparing the seed in the palm of
his hand to a cell phone. Every member of the audience is holding a seed in
their hand, and I encourage you to do the same while you watch.
The
second video is of a lecture with Vandana Shiva, addressing members of the
European Parliament, the Congress of the EU. There were dozens of better shot
and edited videos of our beloved Vandana Shiva, but we chose this one, because,
in response to the EU’s proposed Seed Law (May 6, 2013) to restrict seeds, she
is introducing her extraordinary new publication, The Law of the Seed, (which
we encourage you to download here.) Since the video is very long and the
introduction is partially in French, we encourage you to go to 14:30 where her
lecture in English begins, and it ends at 55:40, followed by a
question-and-answer session.
The
third video is of another TED lecture by Joel Salatin, organic farmer and author
of Folks, This Ain’t, Normal, a very dynamic speaker. It starts off with Soil
and points to the insanity of modern day society vis-à-vis the production of
Food.
The
fourth video is a full-length movie, entitled, Seeds of Death. This is a
consummate piece, which will offer an education on the subject of GMOs and how
they represent a threat to life on this planet.
For the
fifth presentation, this is the first time we are using an audio-only podcast.
It is a delightful interview by Staci Strauss (HandPickedNation.com) of a
farmer, farmer’s market advocate and author named Forrest Pritchard, who we
quoted in the main article. Worth listening to, and again inspirational.
After
the podcast, check out the world map regarding the Labeling of GMO’s, provided
to us by the Center for Food Safety.
Finally
we’d like to thank our readers in Germany, the UK, Russia, and France (our
biggest audience outside the US), and to all of our US and international
readers. We
really appreciate you taking the time to read our articles. And we extra-appreciate when you refer them to friends.
We love getting feedback from our readers. Our email address is woodstockearthblog@gmail.com. For the
sake of our people, our families, and Mother Earth, we encourage all of you, as
charter members of Woodstock Earth, to spread the word and help get these
stories out.
Seeds
Will Save Us – Bill McDorman
The
Greens/EFA EuropeanParliament -
Vandana
Shiva on
The Law
of the Seed
Joel Salatin at
TEDMED 2012
Seeds Of Death -
Full Movie
Farm,
Forrest, Farm! (Podcast)
How To Eat ORGAINICALLY ORGANIC On A Budget (Over 75 Tips!)
ReplyDeletehttp://foodbabe.com/2013/05/20/how-to-eat-organic-on-a-budget/