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Does Monsanto know best?

By Deborah Rich

DenverPost.com

9/29/2006

 

http://www.denverpost.com/portlet/article/html/fragments/print_article.jsp?article=4414261

http://www.denverpost.com/perspective/ci_4414261

 

[Letters:

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The Open Forum

The Denver Post

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Fax: 303-820-1502

openforum (AT) denverpost (DOT) com ]

 

We Americans are eating a lot of genetically

engineered food, and for no good reason.

 

Since the mid-1990s, when corn and soybean varieties

began being injected with genes from bacteria and

other unrelated species, we've been paying

participants in a food experiment with potentially

unprecedented effects on human health, the environment

and food security.

 

By 2005, the Agriculture Department says, the vast

majority of U.S. soybean acres and 52 percent of corn

acres were planted with genetically engineered seed.

 

The bounty of these acres is in our candy, crackers

and chicken pot pies, in our pizza and pasta sauce, in

our Coca Cola and Campbell's soups. Corn and soybeans

are ubiquitous: tens of thousands of processed foods

contain soy, and the typical consumer takes in 200

calories of high-fructose corn syrup per day. Alter

the genomes of corn and soybeans, and you've altered

the diet of most Americans.

 

Corn and soybeans are staples of animal feeds, so

we're also modifying the diets of our beef cattle and

milk cows, our pigs and chickens.

 

Yet lending our grocery dollars and stomachs to this

venture gains us little.

 

The price of modified seed includes a technology fee

that effectively siphons off the bulk of any

additional revenue farmers might gain from reduced

pest damage or decreased management costs.

 

Many hoped that genetically engineered crops would

help the environment by cutting pesticide use. We

should have known that growing crops engineered to

tolerate herbicides could lead to more chemical use. A

2004 analysis funded by the Union of Concerned

Scientists found that the introduction of engineered

corn, soybeans and cotton caused a 122 million-pound

increase in pesticide use since 1996.

 

And because resistant crops have encouraged

near-constant use of one or two classes of herbicides,

superweeds that withstand the chemicals have now

emerged and will require ever more potent poisons to

control.

 

Another hope was that gene tinkering would help end

world hunger. But the dream of concocting

drought-tolerant, insect-resistant, nutrient-dense

supreme species ignores the reality of global markets

already awash in food. Hunger and malnutrition result

from poverty, not a lack of food in the world.

 

It's unlikely that we're getting health benefits from

eating these crops. Scientists are studying their

possible effects. Among the findings: abnormal white

and red blood cell counts and inflammation of the

kidney in rats fed genetically engineered corn,

accelerated growth of stomach and intestinal tissues

of rats fed engineered potatoes, and immune responses

in mice fed altered peas. The findings are

controversial, but they should, at the very least,

give us pause.

 

The only clear reason why we're eating so much

genetically modified food is that Monsanto, Dupont and

Syngenta, which together control greater than 25

percent of global seed sales, want us to.

 

In the United States, Monsanto dominates many a menu.

It owns half of the American corn seed market, and its

modified traits are present in roughly 90 percent of

soybean acres.

 

Monsanto is tossing salads too. In January 2005, it

bought Seminis, supplier of 3,500 varieties of fruit

and vegetable seed to 150 countries. Monsanto now

controls more than 30 percent of the world's cucumber,

hot pepper and bean seed sales, and more than 20

percent of onion, tomato and sweet pepper seed sales,

according to the Action Group on Erosion, Technology

and Concentration.

 

Now consider that Monsanto and its cohorts are free to

undertake the genetic modification of any plant

variety they own. The plant varieties they don't

modify, they can remove from the market. With

one-fourth of the total value of the worldwide

commercial seed market already coming from engineered

seeds, our choices for unmodified crops and foods are

rapidly dwindling.

 

As we relinquish control over our food to the gene

engineers, we must ask: Does Monsanto really know

best?

 

Deborah Rich grows olive trees near Monterey, Calif.

She wrote this essay for the Land Institute's Prairie

Writers Circle in Salina, Kan.

 

Live Simply So That

Others May Simply Live

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