Are you wondering about the benefits and potential harms in genetically modified foods?
Tuesday, 10. April 2007, 17:02:37
I know you all were sitting around asking yourselves the very same question just this morning. Probably while you were eating your Cornflakes. I know I was...On the one hand, GMOs could seem like a godsend - we could produce tons more food with the same amount of land through the modern miracle of science. The problem is - it's all untested - we don't know what GMOs will do to our bodies (three eyes anyone?) or to the environment because there hasn't been enough time to test the potential side effects. It's possible that we could create something that we can't stop, like food plants that spread like wildfire and suffocate out the indigenous, ecosystem-essential plants. And you thought Attack of the Killer Tomatoes was a work of fiction! http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0080391/combined
The Benefits
Since genetic engineering is a relatively new way of producing foods, scientists have not determined long-term health risks. And, most testing is done by the companies that produce these foods in the first place, so it is like a drug company certifying its own drug, sans FDA.
Genetically modified food is considered "biological pollution" - tinkering with nature too much can lead to permanently altering natural foods. Too see a great example of how supposedly good science can cause unforeseen results, visit RMI.org. http://www.rmi.org/sitepages/pid831.php
Check your soy products - even if they are grown organically, more than 50% of soybeans grown worldwide are grown off of GMO seeds. Same goes for bio-diesel, which is made mostly from soybean byproducts, which are usually produced with tons of pesticides and fertilizers. (Tip on bio-diesel coming up, hold onto your green hats.)
If the world were to face a future hunger shortage, GM technology would not be the panacea, and could actually lead to massive ecosystem destruction. Planting small farms and gardens with a diverse array of crops can grow several times more food per acre than the large, mechanized farms for which GM seeds were developed.
Wanna Try?
If you want to learn more about Frankenfood or to even join the fight against GMO-based foods, check out these sites:
True Foods Campaign - you can print a shopping guide of non-GMO foods. http://www.truefoodnow.org/
Friends of the Earth - UK based site useful in gaining a global perspective. http://www.foe.co.uk/campaigns/real_food/index.html
Ideal.









