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Proposition 37: Mandatory labeling of genetically engineered food
KABC TV Los Angelos ^ | 10/05/2012 | Robert Holguin

Posted on 10/21/2012 8:06:01 PM PDT by RushingWater

GLENDALE, Calif. (KABC) -- Proposition 37 is a measure to require mandatory labeling of genetically engineered food. There are two sides to this contentious issue.

(Excerpt) Read more at abclocal.go.com ...


TOPICS: Extended News; Government; Miscellaneous; Politics/Elections; US: California
KEYWORDS: 37; alinksytactics; alterhumangenome; antibusiness; anticapitalism; antigmotradewar; arpadpusztai; barbaraboxer; californiademocrats; californiafruitcakes; cancer; carryokie; communists; corporatistfascism; deathoffreewill; dehumanization; democratpropositions; demonizegmo; demonizemonsanto; elections; endocrinedisrupted; environmentalwackos; facists; flatearthers; foodnazis; foodslavery; fr4government; fr4greens; fr4occupy; fr4ows; freepers4regulation; friendsofearth; genocide; glyphosate; glyphosatemalformed; gmo; gmonazis; gmoobesitycrisis; gmotoxinsnewborns; government; governmentcontrol; greenfreepers; greenpeace; greens; idiocy; insanity; leftists; lobbyistinfda; lossofrights; luddites; lunacy; marxists; maxinewaters; monsanto; monsantodeclareswar; monsantovpfoodczar; moveon; neurotoxicity; occupy; occupyfood; occupyfr; occupygmo; paidposters; progessives; prop37; propaganda; proposition37; regulateplease; regulateusplease; roselawmonsanto; roundup; sierraclub; trolls; universitymarxists; usdiplomats4monsanto; usgovownebymonsanto; vilsackmonsanto; wallaroundcalifornia; wehategmo; welovegmo; weloveregulation; whoownsyourbody; wwf
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To: hedgetrimmer

Oceanside, CA


301 posted on 10/29/2012 10:51:38 PM PDT by dalereed
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To: Future Snake Eater; acapesket; editor-surveyor
The implication here is that we should just assume that food companies such as Monsanto really do have our best interests at heart.

That is absolutely NOT what I wrote. Go read that post again. For you to characterize it as such is so ignorant of my record here in twelve years at FR as to be both negligent and blinded by irrational fear. Go read my FR page. Go read my patent application for free market environmental management. If anything, I have stood for more stringent product standards, but in a competitive free market of risk management and product verification, not the bogus straw-man you infer.

So since you don't know how Underwriters' Laboratories works, go look it up. Nobody producing a product with a UL tag gets to do what you suggest. UL is a private service that tests and verifies the safety of manufactured products. It is funded by insurance companies. The insurer has a customer's stake in whether the product they insure is worthy of coverage, but they lack the expertise to make that determination. Hence, when you buy a product, you are paying the subscription cost of that testing for the insurance behind the product. The supplier maintains the integrity of his proprietary process and intellectual property and the UL seal assures that it is safe to use.

More important than malevolent intent is whether or not companies know what they are doing. The risks appear when the available data are insufficient for a deterministic estimate of risk. When a company has committed millions (or even billions) to a new technology, there is then the hurdle of denial that it might have its problems. Yet even then, most companies do realize that selling a dangerous product is a problem for them. Asbestos at least has taught them that, but there are many more instances that are pertinent to this very topic.

There is one other important reason that UL exists: besides providing assurance that the product is safe, it protects proprietary data about how the product is made. The final customer has no means to evaluate whether the contact plating should be copper, silver, gold over electroless nickel, or rhodium. UL has the experience to make that assessment.

Given what I have posted, I suppose you might all be surprised that I am in fact an avid reader of labels. Yet I would NEVER try to use government to FORCE company to disclose its product contents or processes. In a free market, they have the option to tell me what I want to know and I retain the option not to buy the product. Until I do buy that product, the information belongs to them as private property. It is up to them to convince me that their product is something I want to buy. That’s where label information is legitimate.

Oh, but that alone CAN’T get them to tell you enough, right? Well, neither can the government. In fact, they don't even try.

How many of you saw “corn sweetener” on labels for years and thought nothing of it? Did that label protect you from “high fructose corn syrup”? When you see that on a label today, it is as often to inform you that it is NOT there! Once people had heard about how addictive HFC was and how conducive it is to any number of health disorders, market incentives were absolutely sufficient to get the producers to change their product formulations and their labels. It happened fast too (and I promise you: it is NOT easy to do because FDA and USDA qualification processes are so protracted). There was a similar response to trans fats, and I’ll bet you all have bought products for decades that had them on the labels and thought nothing of it.

A label cannot guarantee you that a product is safe. I have plenty of chemical background with which to comprehend much of what is on the labels I read. Yet there are plenty of products I buy that I have no idea what that truly means in the finished article despite the fact that the label has the ingredients on them. I know a lot about cars, but I don't know enough to buy one without the advice of third parties. If fact, that is just as true with most of what you eat. The ingredients lists tell you what was added, but not what the reaction products are after processing such as cooking, much less anything about the witch's brew of chemistry that is in natural goods.

I would hazard that none of you have ever developed a product for the mass consumables market. I have. I was responsible for concept design, formulation, machine prototype development, process design, installation, permitting, and regulatory compliance, construction management, even drafting the patent applications. The product was a disposable medical device that was also qualified for the food processing industry. So I do have some familiarity with the kind of qualifications process demanded by both the FDA and the USDA. Neither one is easy.

Inexpensive new products are highly capital intensive. They are also very hard to get onto grocery shelves. Producers with market power have a far easier time than a new entrant. Our tiny division had the resources of a Fortune 200 company quality and compliance group to facilitate that qualification. Obtaining approval for a label means nothing to them. To a start-up, it's a big deal.

There are two things mass producers of cheap products guard jealously as trade secrets, material content and process knowledge. To force that new entrant to disclose what is in his product has the high likelihood of keeping the noob out of the market entirely. In other words, it’s the big guys who want this kind of bureaucracy, not the small producers, because of economies of scale in production, marketing, and compliance.

Hence, a label of ingredients not only cannot tell you the product is safe, it does not tell you enough to know what the product even is. But here is where that last attribute of UL I mentioned comes in: There is someone who knows exactly what those labels imply: the producer's competitors.

Are we to believe that adding a label that says "Contains Genetically Modified Ingredients" or "This product is genetically modified" would be prohibitively expensive?

I want you to find the words "prohibitively expensive" in anything I wrote. Nor is it the issue I have raised about this proposition.

This proposition is looking to inform the consumer of a potential danger, not forcing further dangers on us.

Nonsense. This proposition informs of whether the ingredients of the product ever contained a GMO, not whether or not the product is dangerous or even if the GMO is chemically present in the final product! An example is ascorbic acid (Vitamin C) made from Bt corn (ascorbic acid is often used as a preservative). In bulk form, the ascorbic acid has been refined to the point that there is nothing of Bacillus thuringiensis left. Is that any more dangerous than some other ascorbic acid? No, it’s not even chemically different. Yet the two labels would have to be different under this law.

Oh, but what about a residue? This is where it gets silly. You eat 5,000 to 10,000 times by weight naturally occurring carcinogens and mutogens compared to artificial sources. In not one of those goods are those carcinogenic chemicals listed as ingredients. Some are chemicals that plants use to resist pests, shown to be effective for millennia without being overcome by pest adaptation. The concentration of these chemicals is strongly affected by how the food is handled, whether it was chilled soon enough, bruised, or stored too long. Effectively, bruised food that sits in your refrigerator is far more toxic than fresh picked food; in effect, it is dangerous. Does the government tell you that?

That information about the principal source of carcinogens taken internally by humans is NOT on your Prop 65 label. Worse, agribusiness wants to hold that imported food is equivalent to fresh local produce, hence, the work done at NIH to establish toxicity as a function of product history was spiked. So much for label protection.

Other naturally carcinogens are induced because of how you process your food. Typically, frying, roasting, and broiling cause meats to form cancer causing toxins. So does toasting grain. Nobody knows all the implications. Effectively, even your fresh produce is too complex for anyone to understand fully. Labels do not guarantee safe food and yes, prop 65 is a perfect example of how idiotic this proposal is re GMOs.

You see, it will be equally complex as to whether a particular proprietary plant is or is not a GMO. You don't see that now, but just wait. There are plenty of reasons to do modifications that will benefit human health that have NOTHING, ZERO, NADA to do with changing what you eat. Is it a bad thing to put something of collard greens into spinach to make it more frost tolerant? Recombinant technology sure as hell is easier than cross breeding for decades with uncertain results. Is it a bad thing to link them to less tasty variants that happen to be more drought tolerant? I promise you: Plants raised under less stress are likely to be MORE healthful, but you would give those varieties the Scarlet Letter despite the fact that the plant's genetics would still fall within the range of variability found within the species.

Do I trust labels? To a degree they help, but no. When it is insufficient, I consult third party sources of information, FOR WHICH I PAY (if only by my tolerance for advertising). You see, the analysis cannot be done for free. Yet it is in the realm of virtually public information where food labels most often derive meaning. Food companies weren’t the original informers of risk re HFC or trans fats, nor should we expect them to be. They were making what we agree to buy. But competitive market forces have made them the biggest informers as to whose products have them and whose do not.

You clearly believe a consumer should be “fully informed” about a product before he buys anything. The reality is that any product these days including "simple" fresh vegetables, is so complex that even if you know EVERYTHING about how the grower, processor, and distributor handle EVERY aspect of the delivery of that product, you will not know how safe it is or is not when you buy it, never mind after you get done storing and preparing it. That spinach is producing toxic "defensins" from the moment it is picked. You don’t know if the picker practices decent hygiene. You don’t know how long it had been in transit or whether the mineral content of the soil is depleted. You can ask for that information, you can even refuse to buy the product without it, but you do not have that right to FORCE that producer to supply it. Even if you could, I doubt you could ever have enough information to absolutely know whether that the product is totally safe. More ironic, once “genetically modified” becomes a means to reduce carcinogenic defensin content by inhibiting the process by which they are produced, with no other difference to the material, what will you say then? Is the product any different? Yes, it's better. Thus, the criteria by which a product is deemed "genetically modified" will similarly be subject to question AND the good will be conflated with the bad.

This prop 37 label doesn’t even attempt to tell you whether the modification is adverse or beneficial; it simply presumes that ANY genetic modification, including those for purposes of controlling growing habits, is more likely to be harmful than natural. Why in G_d’s name would any conservative trust a political system instead of an independent third party with their survival at stake if they fail their customers?

As to expense, you can bet your booty that small local producers will be disproportionately affected by the legislation, the very people upon whose existence you depend for the survival of your community should a true meltdown occur. Your fear of Monsanto will help do them in and Monsanto will still be there with their fingers wrapped around your throat because you helped kill their competitors. Nice going, “conservatives.” You have fallen for the siren song of progressivism and to no good end.

You're referring to massive companies buying regulations they want to make themselves more powerful and keep competitors down. I fail to see how that problem relates to this matter.

You "fail to see" a lot more than you realize.

302 posted on 10/29/2012 11:01:22 PM PDT by Carry_Okie (Islam offers us choices: convert or kill, submit or die.)
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To: Carry_Okie
Thank you for the insight. Good read.

libs are practiced in the arts of deception, and many here fall into the hole with nary a thought as to why the hole is there.

303 posted on 10/29/2012 11:12:25 PM PDT by going hot (Happiness is a momma deuce)
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To: going hot
Even the LA Times has noticed that Prop 37 allows language that effectively makes GMO labeling meaningless. They also noted that the way it works, it will end up being exactly analogous to Prop. 65 labeling, providing cover for the bad guys while inhibiting the voluntary message of non-GMO producers.

To those of you having a hard time with where I'm coming from, I didn't get the observation from the LAT; it was obvious.

304 posted on 10/29/2012 11:26:51 PM PDT by Carry_Okie (Islam offers us choices: convert or kill, submit or die.)
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To: acapesket
No offense Carrie but I don’t know anyone who drinks gasoline....

The hell you don't. MTBE translocates in groundwater and has polluted thousands of municipal wells in California. In 1996, 70% of the wells supplying the City of Santa Monica were contaminated with MTBE.

305 posted on 10/29/2012 11:47:24 PM PDT by Carry_Okie (Islam offers us choices: convert or kill, submit or die.)
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To: acapesket
Their filthy workers will put their fecal matter on the food, and you’ll be happy.

Because I'll be growing my own fresh vegetables.

Ya gotta wash your food..period.

Anybody who thinks they can wash produce enough to be totally effective is living in a dream world.

306 posted on 10/29/2012 11:50:31 PM PDT by Carry_Okie (Islam offers us choices: convert or kill, submit or die.)
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To: hedgetrimmer

You are nuts. Don’t post to me again.


307 posted on 10/29/2012 11:57:06 PM PDT by antceecee (Bless us Father.. have mercy on us and protect us from evil.)
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To: Carry_Okie

Great post. Bookmarking.


308 posted on 10/29/2012 11:59:28 PM PDT by antceecee (Bless us Father.. have mercy on us and protect us from evil.)
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To: discostu
Our modern turkey CANNOT occur in nature, and was arrived at entirely through selective breeding.

Corn as we know it today cannot occur in nature either. It is assumed that Mesoamerican Indians succeeded in producing it by cross breeding, but it remains a mystery how they did it.

309 posted on 10/30/2012 12:01:11 AM PDT by Carry_Okie (Islam offers us choices: convert or kill, submit or die.)
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To: hedgetrimmer
How would you avoid that if you were allergic to brazil nuts? Its not like you could read the label. How would you know?

Food allergies are a reasonable concern. There exist market mechanisms for those very purposes. You would buy from suppliers that will back up the claim of "allergy free," just as you see in "gluten free" food now. Nobody needed a ballot proposition for that. Or you would subscribe to a service that tests food suppliers for the antigen and backs up their testing with a suitable insurance policy.

Hell, it might not be long before we see an industry service for precisely such purposes in order to manage such a reasonable concern without charge for which there are similar precedents in other industries.

310 posted on 10/30/2012 12:15:57 AM PDT by Carry_Okie (Islam offers us choices: convert or kill, submit or die.)
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To: hedgetrimmer
You know, I am beginning to believe that you are not very bright...where did I say that my family has ever used Monsanto products? In fact, they only used those evil conventional pesticides from the those other evil chemical companies...funny that they have lived so long using all those evil pesticides.
311 posted on 10/30/2012 3:47:58 AM PDT by Aussiebabe
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To: gunsequalfreedom
Why are all the far left groups for this amendment like the Democrat Party of California, the Communist Party, the Green Party, Greenpeace, Sierra Club, Friends of Earth, the LA Council, and individual like Barbara Boxer, Maxine Waters and Roseanne Barr. Why would conservatives side with all these far left groups?
312 posted on 10/30/2012 3:51:03 AM PDT by Aussiebabe
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To: Carry_Okie
Great post...but it is very difficult to have discussions with the far-left “true believers”...this leftist stuff is a religion to them and they never pay any attention to the science.
313 posted on 10/30/2012 3:53:59 AM PDT by Aussiebabe
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To: Carry_Okie
Exactly, some things, like sprouts, are very dangerous because of the growing conditions that support bacteria growth, no matter how careful you are in growing them. Some grocery chains have stopped carrying them, like Walmart and Kroger because of the dangers of salmonella contamination. It is a shame too, because they taste so good. It doesn't matter if they are organic or “natural”..in fact, organic fertilizers can increase the dangers of bacteria poisoning.
314 posted on 10/30/2012 3:59:12 AM PDT by Aussiebabe
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To: Aussiebabe
Beginning?

Lol. I mean, morning, first sip of coffee, hearty, loud, wake up the dogs, lol!

315 posted on 10/30/2012 7:32:58 AM PDT by going hot (Happiness is a momma deuce)
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To: Aussiebabe

Your location shows Australia.

Why are you interfering in a state election where you don’t live?


316 posted on 10/30/2012 9:02:33 AM PDT by hedgetrimmer
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To: Aussiebabe
Great post...but it is very difficult to have discussions with the far-left “true believers”...

None of these posters are "far leftist." As religious people, they believe they are to eat what G_d gave us, that we are not to tamper with His creation as they understand it, pretending to be creators ourselves. At worst, they see it as blasphemous mockery.

Little do they know what Genesis actually says in the Hebrew. If they did know, they'd be shocked and ashamed, and possibly go into depression for the way they have been deluded. Yet in fact, they had never studied the Word itself, but its human facsimile in translation, long distorted from a mistaken understanding through a mystical priestly lens.

This is a Book written by shepherds, not priests. Frankly, I don't think they know G_d as the shepherd does, or hear Him the way they heard Him speak. They need to get out a little more often.

Unfortunately, that lifelong "understanding" led them to discount the intent in the user of a technology, declaring the technology itself to be the evil. Yet they know very well that one doesn't blame the gun for the crime but the user. True it is (at least in my opinion) that what Monsanto is doing with recombinant technology is despicable, for which to my mind the members of the board should be jailed. Yet that is more for engineering a deliberate theft from the American people that enriched them (patent manipulation) and racketeering market access through the USDA. Little do these "true believers" understand that it is the regulatory architecture they wish to wield that is responsible for the motivations that abetted Monsanto's evil behavior. Little good and a lot of harm will come out of employing a tactic like Prop. 37.

Worse, it is that regulatory legal architecture that limits the array of weapons we can employ against pestilence, such that we use more of those few that are "permitted." This increases the likelihood that pests will develop resistance to these useful toxins and more of each must then be used (much to the delight of their producers), of which "RoundUp Ready" is a prime example. It is a fearful loop.

I do agree with you that it is shocking that they refuse to question the legion of Marxists in wholesale opposition to this technology as to what their usual misanthropic global corporatist agenda might be, but it isn't hard to see: export food production to countries with very little and VERY corrupt oversight systems with little to no domestic alternatives besides themselves. All Monsanto had to do was to put money into "anti-Prop. 37" advertising and they were all for it. "Oh please don't throw me into dat dare briar patch!" Strange bedfellows indeed.

If you haven't already, you might wish to check out my first book, Natural Process. It touched on Bt, and that was twelve years ago.

317 posted on 10/30/2012 9:44:45 AM PDT by Carry_Okie (Islam offers us choices: convert or kill, submit or die.)
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To: Aussiebabe

The proposition is about a label, but somehow you and other posters are twisting it into a thing so you can malign people who have joined the discussion.

Its about a label! Not religion, not for false association with the numerous groups you are familiar with, not for anything else.

What is wrong with you people that you can’t have a civilized discussion?


318 posted on 10/30/2012 12:28:57 PM PDT by hedgetrimmer
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To: hedgetrimmer
After all these days and with my logo as Aussiebabe, you just figured out I am from Oz? I am concerned because of my background in biology and just can't believe that people want to endanger feeding the world with proposition like 37. It is almost criminal when people deny food to the third world which can be increased dramatically through biology. The elite true GM haters would rather have children die in the third world than have them eat GM enable food.
319 posted on 10/30/2012 2:39:51 PM PDT by Aussiebabe
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To: Carry_Okie

Thanks for the post.


320 posted on 10/30/2012 2:41:38 PM PDT by Aussiebabe
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