Shortage Weakens Resistance To Biotech Crops

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New York Times   |  Andrew Pollack   |   April 21, 2008 08:59 AM


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Soaring food prices and global grain shortages are bringing new pressures on governments, food companies and consumers to relax their longstanding resistance to genetically engineered crops.

In Japan and South Korea, some manufacturers for the first time have begun buying genetically engineered corn for use in soft drinks, snacks and other foods. Until now, to avoid consumer backlash, the companies have paid extra to buy conventionally grown corn. But with prices having tripled in two years, it has become too expensive to be so finicky.

"We cannot afford it," said a corn buyer at Kato Kagaku, a Japanese maker of corn starch and corn syrup.

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The peasants have no bread to eat?

Qu'ils mangent de la brioche. (Let them eat cake.)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:18 PM on 04/22/2008

Read the new Vanity Fair article on Monsanto. Very frightening.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:37 PM on 04/21/2008
    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:15 AM on 04/22/2008

This is going to get really bad, I worry about the future:(

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:49 PM on 04/21/2008

When one company controls the entire supply of a product, that company can create artificial shortages, and can charge whatever they want, as long as there is a demand for the product. I would not assume there is any food shortage. Instead, there likely is commodities manipulation of the market, with some big boys on wall street getting rich off the starving folks in the third world.

Remember, we had the artificial tech bubble in the 1990s. When it burst, the smart money then moved into real estate, created an artificial bubble there, and now it has burst. So where to go to make a killing, so to speak? Commodities?

The chemical companies that have genetically modified the basic food stuff of the world (the one that God made, or that nature made) want to destroy all the "real" food, and make everyone only buy, grow, eat, use their artificial food, so everyone has to pay chemical companies money for every bite of rice, every kernel of corn. The U.S. should ban this genetic modification of food which could lead to its destruction and the death of all people. But they don't because the corporations control the government, and all any of them care about is money now. If starvation of others is the inevitable result, they could care less.

That's why we need to get Obama in office and then immediately begin presenting a list of our demands. This should start with banning genetically modified food.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:50 PM on 04/21/2008

Why are modified seeds cheaper? Monsanto doesn't allow the farmers to reuse seeds, so why is it cheaper than normal seeds? they have to buy new seeds every year. Do we even know what, if anything, these seeds do to us, the environment, in the long-run? America needs to stop paying farmers not to farm, and we need to focus on hydrogen and hybryd technology. Ethanol isn't the only game in town is it? I really think our shitty schools, lack of creativity in our education has produced a generation of lazy thinkers. Certainly if we can build an a-bomb, we can help our cars run on something else, or a combo of all three.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:11 PM on 04/21/2008

Ten Reasons Why GE Foods Will Not Feed the World

Link to the detailed article: http://www.organicconsumers.org/ge/tenreasons.cfm

Great website too: www.organicconsumers.org

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:22 PM on 04/21/2008

Monsanto. The Devil's right hand.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:33 PM on 04/21/2008

'In Japan and South Korea, some manufacturers for the first time have begun buying genetically engineered corn for use in soft drinks, snacks ...'
Is rather telling-they need it to make junk food so folks can get more obese, not to feed starving folks in other countries. I heard on a tv program all this tech and trading in food doesn't really benefit those who need it most it mostly benefits those who can pay for it, not necessarily those starving millions who really need the food. End result folks just keep popping out more babies.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:34 AM on 04/21/2008


Yes. Remember when genetically-modified crops were new, and they advertised it as a way to feed the poor and hungry around the world? The truth is, Monsanto has done nothing to feed the poor and hungry.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:05 PM on 04/21/2008

With a third of our corn crop (we produce 54% of the world's corn) being converted to ethanol, anything that boosts yield is appreciated. It's obscene to have people starving when the amount of corn needed to fill up a toyota camry can feed a person for 270 days.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:16 AM on 04/21/2008

I'm not a big fan of bioengineered crops - but mostly because adding herbicide resistance and pesticides like Bt to crops just gives large-scale industrial farmers a reason to avoid good crop practices and farm management because they can just lob sh*tloads of chemicals at a pest.

It's not like vast quantities of Roundup dumped on a field of soybeans just immediately breaks down into completely harmless compounds. It stays with us for a while.

That - and by integrating the presence of a herbicide resistance gene with the need for a specific chemical, and making it so seed saving (especially in poorer regions) is either illegal or difficult - it doesn't really do anything useful except guarantee repeat business to both the seed producing and the chemical company.

Besides - organic foods taste good!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:05 AM on 04/21/2008

'Specially when you pluck it from the garden a few minutes before dinner...mmmmm good.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:16 PM on 04/21/2008

Yeppers,... can't wait for my garden grown (and organic of course) tomatoes, egplant and peppers to start coming in. Given - it will be a couple of months in the meantime as they aren't even planted in the old garden yet.

Fixin' to remedy that problem next weekend if the weather cooperates,...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:13 PM on 04/21/2008

Here in the frozen tundra, doc, it's been in the 70s and we had two nice weekends. In a row! I know!! The garden beds have a new layer of compost worked in and the boss has the seedlings in the temp greenhouse.

We hang two cherry tomato plants from the deck in those 'topsy turvey' planters and every morning I go out on the deck with my coffee and pick a handful to start the day...soooo good! Then a few more for dinner salad....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:15 PM on 04/21/2008

NYT does it again.

Genetically engineered crops are another corporate hoax. The generational seeds produce less and less. Go check it out.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:59 AM on 04/21/2008
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