It doesn't get much darker than this,
moaned the anti-GMO groups, when confronted with the new labeling bill that President Obama is expected to sign into law.
Which underscores just how screwed up
their priorities are. Really? A deadly drought is hammering East
Africa, 84 people in France were just mowed down by a terrorist, cops and citizens are killing each other in America and a
fricking food label is the darkest thing on the horizon?
Still, I can't help but chortle when I
see Andrew Kimbrell, director of Center for Food Safety, sputtering
and wringing his hands in despair. Whassa matter, Andy? Worried about
losing one of your longest-running fundraising gambits, the demand
for labeling?
Or are you just whimpering because you
gambled, and lost, when you believed that teeny-tiny Vermont would
serve as a labeling model for the nation? You folks pushed, and
Congress pushed back and voided Vermont. So suck it up and deal.
Kimbrell and crew took a similar gamble
in Hawaii with the anti-GMO bills they pushed through here. The
Hawaii laws have nothing to do with protecting anyone (save CFS's
fundraising machine) and everything to do with establishing a
precedent for supposed “home rule,” which groups like CFS define
as their right to meddle in local affairs.
Thus far, however, the courts have
dealt the antis a losing hand, firmly establishing the pre-emption
authority of state over counties in these matters. We'll see whether
the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals solidifies that authority further,
as it appears inclined to do.
It's also fascinating to watch these guys whine about how the law keeps people in the dark, when the
anti-GMO groups themselves are so very non-transparent about their own funding and actions. To use
their line against food manufacturers, if you've got nothing to hide,
why aren't you disclosing?
Speaking of which, I see that Kauai
House candidate Fern Rosenstiel is promising: “Personally I will
work to develop a strong reputation for very transparent and clear
decision-making relating to all positions I take.” So why not
start, Fern, by disclosing the finances of your anti-GMO group, Ohana
O Kauai — like who gave you money, how much and where it was spent?
Also, how much have you gotten in crowd-sourcing, and did you declare
it as taxable income? And why are you giving your occupation as
“environmental scientist” when you're a bartender at Tahiti Nui?
Meanwhile, the labeling issue is
becoming increasingly moot, anyway, since the USDA has declined to
regulate crops modified through the new process of gene-editing.
First up: canola oil rich in omega 3 fatty acids and mushrooms that
resist browning with age. Also in the works: genetically-edited
soybeans that produce oil able to withstand high cooking heat without
producing trans fat; low-gluten wheat and potatoes with fewer
neurotoxins.
Though the antis have lost labeling as
a powerful fundraising tool, they can still simplistically exploit
many other complex issues, such as pollinator health. The Hawaii
Branch of CFS just came out with a scary schtick in which they are
trying to blame pesticides for the decline of native Hawaiian birds —
uh, guess they never heard about habitat loss, avian malaria and
rat/cat predation — while painting a dire picture of honeybee
health.
In fact, Hawaii's managed honey bee
colonies are among the healthiest in the nation. There has been no
colony collapse disorder in the Islands, and there's a hearty feral
bee population. The greatest risks to Hawaii bees are the varroa mite
and small hive beetle, but they're not sexy fundraisers, so CFS
focuses on pesticides.
In the real world, pesticides are but
one of many threats facing pollinators. Scientists are now starting
to suspect a new culprit in the decline of bees: soaring levels of
carbon dioxide associated with global warming. As Yale Environment 360 reports:
The adverse impact of rising CO2
concentrations on the protein levels in pollen may be playing a role
in the global die-off of bee populations by undermining bee nutrition
and reproductive success.
Though beekeepers can supplement with
protein patties in the fall, no such option exists for native bees,
which actually do the lion's share of pollination.
Meanwhile, high
CO2 levels are affecting more than protein levels in pollen:
Samuel Myers, a senior research
scientist at Harvard’s School of Public Health, has published
groundbreaking studies on how rising CO2 levels lower the nutritional
quality of foods that we eat, like rice, wheat, and maize, which lose
significant amounts of zinc, iron, and protein when grown under
higher concentrations of CO2.
“We are fundamentally transforming
all of the biophysical conditions that underpin the global food
system,” said Myers. “Global food demand is rising at the same
time the biophysical conditions are changing more rapidly than ever
before.”
To quote Mr. Toad: “Hold on to your
hat, because away we gooooo.....”
Thanks for the information Joan. I was going to vote for Fern until last night. When she said that she would work to legalize recreational marijuana in Hawaii, she lost my support and respect. I support medical marijuana for conditions that have been shown to respond positively to MM. Recreational use is another story. Sorry Fern, I think you turned off a lot of people in your district. Good luck in recovering from that one.
ReplyDelete@8:10am. Are you kidding? Recreational use legalization is the reason Fern will win! This wave is building in every state and Hawaii needs to paddle in. The tax revenue from tourists is huge.
ReplyDeleteDear 8:10,
ReplyDeleteThere are so many reasons not to vote for Fern: inexperience, lack of understanding of the governmental process, propensity to lie, threatening and bullying behavior, questionable ethics, tunnel vision. Glad you found one that worked for you.
Yes Joan, many reasons to not vote for her. I was willing to give her a shot. I think Nadine is too connected to the old boy network. But I will vote for Nadine for many of the reasons that you have stated. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteI attended last evening's candidate forum and the differences between these two candidates is significant, as evidenced by the breadth of experience Nadine brings to our many issues, and her understanding of the many sides to our concerns. Fern may find herself very useful at the beginnings of her political future by learning from Boards and Commisions, community volunteering (in addition to her non-GMO interest) and earning her positions by filling in the many gaps. I wish her success, but it needs to be earned.
ReplyDeleteAnother Joan spin of constant regurgitation of pro gmo. Your side lost Joan. Gmo will be labeled with the stupid label that in time will mean the same as "made with gmo", no one will buy it but the poor because that's all they can afford, the profits will not sustain the greed, and gmo will be replaced with the next money making idea.
ReplyDeleteYou sound very bitter for someone who "won". 12:09
ReplyDelete@ 12:09pm - I have several anti-gmo friends, who ironically eat tortilla and potato chips made with GM corn. GM products are in a number of our food products and since scientists say they are safe, I have no problem eating them. Also GMO is not a money making idea - it's a resource and food sustainability issue.
ReplyDeleteFern gets my vote. Nadine is old boys network.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.foxnews.com/health/2016/07/05/judge-rules-against-monsanto-in-cancer-lawsuit.html?intcmp=ob_article_footer_text&intcmp=obnetwork
ReplyDeleteso what is your take on this?
Wonder where the money came from to fund the 'CO2 is killing the bees' study?
ReplyDeleteBecause surely the bees can't be dying from a little exposure to the GM crop pesticides, right?
You obviously didn't read the article, or apparently the blog post, which said pesticides are likely one factor in the decline of the bees. Instead, in typical anti fashion, you construct a conspiracy theory because you can't accept anything that doesn't fit into your narrow, blinders-on, knee-jerk interpretation of reality. Also, GM crops aren't the only ones using pesticides. Organic farmers also use pesticides, some of which kill bees. As I previously reported, the neem oil embraced so many holier-than-thou gardeners and small farmers is extremely toxic to bumble bees in very small doses. Wake up, sheeple . The world is far more complex than the one framed by your foolish ideologies.
ReplyDelete8:33. The take is "In last week's hearing, US District Judge Michael Seabright decided that a 2009 editorial in the Kona Coffee Farmer's Association newsletter in which Sheppard expressed misgivings about Roundup did not mean the 2-year statute of limitations for claims had passed..." The case now goes to trial with the burden on the plaintiff. It is a narrow decision on process and not on the facts of the suit. Your post is a red herring.
ReplyDeleteLet's see....we've been growing cane since the 1800s and using pesticides as they were developed for all these years and the bees on Kauai flourished.
ReplyDelete"Organic farmers also use pesticides". Your really reaching for it Joan. That's some serious spin.
ReplyDeleteJoan said
ReplyDeleteOrganic farmers also use pesticides, some of which kill bees. As I previously reported, the neem oil embraced so many holier-than-thou gardeners and small farmers is extremely toxic to bumble bees in very small doses. Wake up, sheeple . The world is far more complex than the one framed by your foolish ideologies.
Correct me if I am wrong but bumble bees do not produce marketable edible honey. Neem is ok for honeybees and won't cause cancer.
On a different note the ultra conservative President of Turkey believes in inequality for women. The flag wavers are similar to Trump flag wavers. What happened in Turkey could happen here with a Trump presidency.
Frankly right now GMO's are the last thing on my mind. The whole subject is boring. I am more worried about world events and our Presidential election!
@8:31-- It's not about honey. Bumblebees are important pollinators.
ReplyDeleteDear Dolt at 8:21,
I doubt you're really interested in educating yourself on the topic, but since others might be, here is useful data on organic pesticide use:
http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/science-sushi/httpblogsscientificamericancomscience-sushi20110718mythbusting-101-organic-farming-conventional-agriculture/
https://www.geneticliteracyproject.org/2015/12/07/myth-busting-on-pesticides-despite-demonization-organic-farmers-widely-use-them/
One of the most widely used pesticides on organic farms is Bt, the very same bacterium used in genetically engineered pest-resistant corn, eggplant, cotton and soybeans.
"The genetic literacy project" really Joan? This is equivalent to the "Natural News" for the GMO industry.
ReplyDeleteNatural News just makes stuff up. GLP at least offers meaningful links. But hey, since you seem unable -- or more likley, unwilling -- to follow any links on your own, this will take you directly to the list of allowed and not allowed substances in organic farming:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.ecfr.gov/cgi-bin/text-idx?c=ecfr&SID=9874504b6f1025eb0e6b67cadf9d3b40&rgn=div6&view=text&node=7:3.1.1.9.32.7&idno=7
Lol 8:21!!! The organic industry has you totally brainwashed!
ReplyDeleteOur birds were killed by Newcastle Disease (passed on from domestic chickens to the moa then to the wild forest birds), then the deforestation via cattle, then the damn Norwegian rat, wild cats, pigs, and invasive plant species. A compounding catastrophe played out over 200 years. There was another mass extinction of the low land birds upon the arrival of the Polynesians.Then too, the most damage appears to have occurred in the first two hundred years of settlement. That appears to be first by humans, then by dogs and the Polynesian rat. The nene and koloa duck are the notable survivors of the indigenous birds.
ReplyDeletewhat Joan said
ReplyDeleteDear Dolt at 8:21,
I doubt you're really interested in educating yourself on the topic, but since others might be, here is useful data on organic pesticide use:
what this actual dolt said
Anonymous Anonymous said...
Lol 8:21!!! The organic industry has you totally brainwashed!
July 16, 2016 at 10:30 AM
what I actually wrote
On a different note the ultra conservative President of Turkey believes in inequality for women. The flag wavers are similar to Trump flag wavers. What happened in Turkey could happen here with a Trump presidency.
Frankly right now GMO's are the last thing on my mind. The whole subject is boring. I am more worried about world events and our Presidential election!
If caring more about other issues makes me a dolt I am a proud card carrying dolt.
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/dolt
amazing.
Dear 11:28,
ReplyDeleteThe dolt comment was not directed at you -- unless you are the same anon who posted at both 8:21 and 8:31.
Organic farmers don't use pesticides. You trying to prove it by using industry propaganda to prove it just proves you are indebted to them because nobody else is going to pay you for writing this crap.
ReplyDeleteIndustry propaganda? I provided a link to the USDA organic certification standards.
ReplyDeleteBut I understand it's very hard for you to accept anything that counters your tightly held, but false, beliefs. And as I've repeated ad nauseum, no one pays me to write the "crap" that you so avidly read and comment on.
ReplyDeleteBlogger Joan Conrow said...
Dear 11:28,
The dolt comment was not directed at you -- unless you are the same anon who posted at both 8:21 and 8:31.
July 16, 2016 at 11:38 AM
I stand corrected thank you. No I am not. But still...can we not call names? This blog is a haven but I dislike name-calling, sorry.
Why would anyone vote for someone like Fern who makes threats on social media?. I'm pretty sure that she was the one who posted on FB a year ago about how she was going to be waiting for Joan at her PO box. Lovely. And another poster wouldn't vote for Nadine because she is part of the old "boys"?
ReplyDeleteGood thing Nadine will win overwhelmingly.
Nadine is more methodical than philosophical. Her comments were based on factual research and good planning. But her opposer claiming that she wanted to legalize recreational marijuana and gambling will probably set her back in the polls.
ReplyDeleteRising CO2 levels and no money to build new roads are why it is imperative to reduce vehicle miles traveled. Ride the bus, reduce traffic and carbon emissions.
ReplyDeleteThat's why there's electric and hybrid cars. Fuck your tax payer subsidized BUS.
DeleteWho pays for new roads? Get back to LA Californicating dipshit.
DeleteState of Hawaii has already budgeted 140 million for Kauai. The county of Kauai's budget is 70% or more allocated for salaries. That's why shit doesn't get fixed on Kauai. Everything is ass backwards on this dumb people island. The county of Kauai is filled with dummies running government offices pretending that they are professionals. Non/under qualified fucktards.
DeleteIF every American citizen were to BOYCOTT going to the polls or voting, it would send a very clear message to the world, not to mention ol boy American special interests like hilariousbillfoundations or trumpet tactics, federal to county clowns in this fake state setting. Do you really believe your lives matter?
ReplyDeletehttp://i2.cdn.turner.com/cnnnext/dam/assets/160715153719-extreme-weather-corn-sweat-exlarge-169.jpg
ReplyDeleteSO HERE
is the latest. Cornsweat.
As a science writer I would love to know Joans thoughts. Here is the link to the main article
http://www.cnn.com/2016/07/17/weather/extreme-weather-heat-dome/index.html
thanks.
ReplyDeleteimuakauai, you know I enjoy your thoughts..
"the very clear message attained "- "worldwide"---- if WE didn't vote'--------------------would be world wide anarchy...
And I must assume that is what you want! Love ya d but we gotta think a few more moves ahead than that.
ReplyDeleteDearCornsweat, you ain't gonna be happy till we grow corn " indoors"???
And furthermore Cornsweat, why don't you tell us YOUR thoughts before all the links???
I'm going to bet that you will not. If for no other reasons that scientists ( that your pretending to be) love getting opines published??
So unless your Nama is Cornsweat, I would love to hear your abriged opinion? Even if you keep it annon, say anything halfway intelligent !! Or even stupid would be fun. Go for it Cornsweat!!!!!
Fern's ag plan: weeeeeeeeed! And then we plant food for our munchies.
ReplyDeleteAnd roll bones and joints in paradise. Never mind the carbon footprint of a casino in the middle of the Pacific Ocean.
ReplyDeleteDearCornsweat, you ain't gonna be happy till we grow corn " indoors"???
ReplyDeleteAnd furthermore Cornsweat, why don't you tell us YOUR thoughts before all the links???
I'm going to bet that you will not. If for no other reasons that scientists ( that your pretending to be) love getting opines published??
So unless your Nama is Cornsweat, I would love to hear your abriged opinion? Even if you keep it annon, say anything halfway intelligent !! Or even stupid would be fun. Go for it Cornsweat!!!!!
July 17, 2016 at 9:57 PM
Um...lay off the sugar dude you are climbing the walls! Hey I was surfing CNN and saw it and thought it was funny. You are wound up pretty tight your gonna have an aneurysm. Actually I thought it might lighten things up a little but you got Rick Rolled.
3:06, you often allege the county department heads have no education. You are full of bull, they actually are educated, maybe you are not so.
ReplyDeleteHaving a paper doesn't make you competent so there's a difference and for your question, I'm a life long learner.
DeleteJuly 16 8:31 - Bumblebees don't produce marketable, edible honey so who gives a crap about them, right? Because that's the ONLY thing bees are good for, right? Nevermind about all the produce we consume every day that require POLLINATORS in order to grow. No, nevermind that, as long as you have marketable, edible honey. smh.
ReplyDelete