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To: WCH

No biotech event is commercialized until it is tested and approved. Once it is approved, farmers and downstream purchasers need to be able to rely on the determination. Suppose Farmer Bob has planted an approved event. The corn is up, or in the bin, or on a boat to China. An anti-biotech advocacy group goes judge shopping and finds a left wing tool willing to overturn the event approval based on Luddite fantasies and fear mongering press releases. Suddenly everyone in the supply chain has tons of unapproved product, which has very likely been commingled with other varieties, and you’ve now got a major trade disruption. All this legislation does is allow USDA to throw a circuit breaker and buy time for a rational review. Remember that this is with regard to reconsideration of previously approved events that have now entered the supply chain.

Political risk is a growing problem in our brave new world, and a lot of it is judge driven. If an activity is regulated and you have the relevant permits, licenses, or approvals, you should be able to proceed in good faith without gunslinging activist judges changing the rules retroactively.

As to GMOs, most U.S. corn and soybeans have been GM for 15 years. The technology is also spreading rapidly around the world. Activist groups hate it not because it is unsafe (it’s not), but because it’s big corporate agriscience and is best adapted to modern hi tech farming. Those who are nostalgic for endless lines of peasants toiling in the fields hate modern agriculture. The rest of the world, however, is not obligated to remain poor in order to provide photo ops for vacationing westerners.

For its part, Europe doesn’t like biotech because Europe doesn’t want to compete with modern producers in the U.S., Argentina, and Brazil. Partly as a result, Europeans pay twice to three times what we do for food, measured as a percentage of disposable income. Sane people in Europe understand perfectly well that they’ve created a mythological bogeyman as a smokescreen for naked protectionism, but the politics have taken over and reform will be difficult.

Some here seem not to like biotech because they’ve bought in to some of the hobgoblin stories put about by the usual Luddite suspects. If you are one of these folks, the good news is that you have a perfectly simple solution. Buy organic. You will pay a stiff premium and incur the higher health risks attendant on premodern production methods, but that is your call to make.


35 posted on 03/28/2013 6:52:40 AM PDT by sphinx
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To: sphinx

Thank you for your ray of rationalistic light in this.


36 posted on 03/28/2013 6:53:58 AM PDT by mnehring
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To: sphinx

Bump.


38 posted on 03/28/2013 7:09:01 AM PDT by Mase (Save me from the people who would save me from myself!)
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To: sphinx

I’ll add in that much of this opposition to agribusiness is by environmental depopulation proponents. Companies like Monsanto have made farming a lot more efficient to support greater populations. Radical environmentalists want to push that our population is unsustainable.


39 posted on 03/28/2013 8:02:01 AM PDT by mnehring
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To: sphinx

Show us Luddites the alledged “science” that proves the safety of these seeds.
Fifteen years ago we did not have half the proliferation of diseases that we have now. Coincidence? When man convinces himself that he is smarter than God and Mother Nature, we are all in trouble.
Nothing to see here.. move along folks.


40 posted on 03/28/2013 8:35:17 AM PDT by acapesket
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