Pesticide and Environmental Update
Monsanto
Nation: Taking Down Goliath
By Ronnie Cummins Organic Consumers
Association, July 27, 2011
"If you put a label on genetically
engineered food you might as well put a skull and crossbones on it."
- Norman Braksick, president of Asgrow Seed Co., a subsidiary of Monsanto,
quoted in the Kansas City Star, March 7, 1994
After two decades of biotech bullying and
force-feeding unlabeled and hazardous genetically engineered (GE) foods to
animals and humans, it's time to move beyond defensive measures and go on
the offensive. With organic farming, climate stability, and public health
under the gun of the gene engineers and their partners in crime, it's time
to do more than complain. With over 1/3 of U.S. cropland already
contaminated with Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs), with mounting
scientific evidence that GMOs cause cancer, birth defects, and serious
food allergies and with new biotech mutants like alfalfa, lawn grass,
ethanol-ready corn, 2,4 D-resistant crops, and genetically engineered
trees and animals in the pipeline, time is running out.
Living in Monsanto Nation there can be no
such thing as "coexistence." It is impossible to coexist with a
reckless industry that endangers public health, bribes public officials,
corrupts scientists, manipulates the media, destroys biodiversity, kills
the soil, pollutes the environment, tortures and poisons animals,
destabilizes the climate, and economically enslaves the world's 1.5
billion seed-saving small farmers. It's time to take down the Biotech
Behemoth, before the living web of biodiversity is terminated.
But, to bring down Goliath and build an
organic future, we need to be strategic, as well as bold. We must take the
time to carefully analyze our strengths and weaknesses and critique our
previous efforts. Then we must prepare to concentrate our forces where our
adversary is weak, like a chess master, moving the field of battle from
Monsanto's currently impregnable territory into more favorable terrain.
Given the near-dictatorial control of Monsanto, the Farm Bureau, and the
Grocery Manufacturers Association over the Congress, the White House,
regulatory agencies, and state legislators, we have no choice in the
present moment but to revert to "asymmetrical" guerrilla
tactics, to seek out the Achilles heel or fundamental weakness of the
biotech industry.
Consumers' Right to Know: Monsanto's
Achilles Heel
The Achilles heel of Monsanto and the
biotech industry is consumers' right to know. If GE-tainted foods are
labeled in supermarkets and natural food stores, a massive rejection of
chemical and GMO foods will take place, transforming the marketplace and
supercharging the organic and local foods revolution. The biotech industry
has been aware of their tremendous vulnerability in the United States ever
since Monsanto forced their controversial recombinant Bovine Growth
Hormone on the market in February 1994. In the wake of nationwide "Frankenfood"
protests and milk dumps, industry made sure that no federal labeling or
safety testing would be required. As the biotechnocrats understand full
well, mandatory GE food labels will cripple the industry: consumers will
not buy gene-altered foods, farmers will not plant them, restaurants and
food processors will avoid them, and grocery stores will not sell them.
How can we be certain about this? By looking at the experience of the
European Union, the largest agricultural market in the world. In the EU,
there are almost no genetically engineered crops under cultivation or GE
consumer food products on supermarket shelves. And why is this? Not
because GE crops are automatically banned in Europe. But rather because
under EU law, all foods containing genetically engineered ingredients must
be labeled.
European consumers have the freedom to
choose or not to choose GE foods; while farmers, food processors, and
retailers have (at least legally) the right to lace foods with GMOs, as
long as these gene-altered are safety-tested and labeled. Of course the EU
food industry understands that consumers, for the most part, do not want
to consume GE foods. European farmers and food companies, even junk food
purveyors like McDonald's and Wal-Mart, understand quite well the concept
expressed by the Monsanto executive quoted above: "If you put a label
on genetically engineered food you might as well put a skull and
crossbones on it."
The biotech and food industry are acutely
conscious of the fact that North American consumers, like their European
counterparts, are wary and suspicious of GMO foods. Even without a PhD,
consumers understand you don't want your food safety or environmental
sustainability decisions to be made by out-of-control chemical companies
like Monsanto, Dow, or DuPont - the same people who brought you toxic
pesticides and industrial chemicals, Agent Orange, carcinogenic food
additives, PCBs, and now global warming. Industry leaders are definitely
aware of the fact that every poll over the last 20 years has shown that
85-95% of American consumers want mandatory labels on genetically
engineered foods. Why do consumers want labels? So that we can avoid
buying these mutant foods, gene-spliced with viruses, bacteria,
antibiotic-resistant marker genes and foreign DNA. Gene-altered foods have
absolutely no benefits for consumers or the environment, only hazards.
This is why Monsanto and their friends in the Clinton, Bush, and Obama
administrations have prevented consumer GMO truth-in-labeling laws from
ever getting a public discussion, much less coming to a vote, in Congress.
Although Congressman Dennis Kucinich
(Democrat, Ohio) perennially introduces a bill in Congress calling for
mandatory labeling and safety testing for GE foods, don't hold your breath
for Congress to take a stand for truth-in-labeling. Especially since the
2010 Supreme Court decision in the so-called "Citizens United"
case gave big corporations, millionaires, and billionaires the right to
spend unlimited amounts of money (and remain anonymous, as they do so) to
buy media coverage and elections, our chances of passing federal GMO
labeling laws against the wishes of Monsanto and Food Inc. are all but
non-existent.
Perfectly dramatizing the "Revolving
Door" between Monsanto and the Federal Government, Supreme Court
Justice Clarence Thomas, formerly chief counsel for Monsanto, delivered
one of the decisive votes in the Citizens United case, in effect giving
Monsanto and other biotech bullies the right to buy the votes it needs in
the U.S. Congress.
With biotech and industrial agriculture's
big money controlling Congress, the White House, and the corporate mass
media, we have little choice but to shift our focus and our campaigning to
more favorable terrain: the state level and the marketplace.
Besides boycotting non-organic foods likely
containing GMOs (even those marketed as "natural") and demanding
that natural food stores adopt truth-in-labeling practices, we've got to
push for mandatory GE food labeling laws in the legislatures of those few
remaining states like Vermont where Monsanto and corporate agribusiness do
not yet have total control. Of the 18 states where GE food labeling
legislation has been introduced over the past two years, only in Vermont
does our side seem to have the votes to push labeling through, as well as
a Governor who will not cave in to Monsanto.
State Ballot Initiatives: Monsanto and
Biotech's Greatest Weakness
Although passing a mandatory GE foods
labeling law in Vermont is a distinct possibility, and something we should
all support, the most promising strategy for restoring consumers' right to
know lies in utilizing one of the most important remaining tools of direct
citizen democracy, state ballot initiatives. A state ballot initiative is
a means by which a petition signed by a certain minimum number of
registered voters can bring about a public vote on a proposed statute or
constitutional amendment, in this case a law requiring mandatory labeling
of genetically engineered foods. Ballot initiatives are also called,
depending on the state, "popular initiatives," "voter
initiatives," "citizen initiatives" or just
"initiatives."
Twenty-four states, mainly west of the
Mississippi, allow ballot initiatives. Each state has its own requirements
for how many signatures are required, how many days can be spent
collecting the signatures, and when petitions must be turned in. States
also vary on the average amount of money spent by initiative committees to
support or oppose ballot measures.
The essential advantage of state ballot
initiatives is that they enable the grassroots (in our case the 85-95% of
consumers who want labels on GE-tainted foods) to bypass corrupt
politicians, industry lobbyists, and special interest legislative
practices. In addition, the very strategic point to keep in mind is that
it will not be necessary to pass GMO labeling ballot initiatives in all 24
of these states. In fact, passage in just one large state, for example,
California, where there is tremendous opposition to GE foods as well as a
multi-billion dollar organic food industry, will likely have the same
impact as a national labeling law.
If Vermont passes a state labeling law
though its legislature in 2011, or California voters put a GMO labeling
initiative on the ballot in 2012 and pass it, the biotech and food
industry will face an intractable dilemma. Will they dare put labels on
their branded food products in just one or two states, admitting these
products contain genetically engineered ingredients, while still
withholding label information in the other states? The answer is very
likely no. Withholding important and controversial information in some
states, while providing it to consumers in other states, would be a public
relations disaster.
A clear precedent for this situation was
established in California in 1986 when voters passed, over the strenuous
opposition of industry, a ballot initiative called Proposition 65, which
required consumer products with potential cancer-causing ingredient to
bear warning labels. Rather than label their products sold in California
as likely carcinogenic, most companies reformulated their product
ingredients so as to avoid warning labels altogether, and they did this on
a national scale, not just in California.
This same scenario will likely unfold if
California voters pass a ballot initiative in 2012 requiring labels on
food containing genetically engineered ingredients. Can you imagine
Kellogg's selling Corn Flakes breakfast cereal in California with a label
that admits it contains genetically engineered corn? Or labeling their
corn flakes as GE in California, but not divulging this same fact to
consumers in the other 49 states or Canada? Of course not. How about Kraft
Boca Burgers admitting that their soybean ingredients are genetically
modified? How about the entire non-organic food industry (including many
so-called "natural" brands) admitting that 75% of their products
are GE-tainted? Once food manufacturers and supermarkets are forced to
come clean and label genetically engineered products, they will likely
remove all GE ingredients, to avoid the "skull and crossbones"
effect, just like the food industry in the EU has done. In the wake of
this development American farmers will convert millions of acres of GE
crops to non-GMO or organic varieties.
The biotechnocrats and their allies have
indeed used their vast resources to buy off Congress, the White House, and
most state legislatures with campaign contributions. Monsanto, DuPont, and
other corporate giants have used their enormous clout to send their
lawyers and scientists through the revolving door into jobs as government
regulators. Biotech's financial power has polluted state and federal
governments, along with trade associations, universities, research
institutions, philanthropic organizations, and media outlets.
But there are two things Monsanto's money
can't buy: Our trust, and our votes.
Polls Show Consumers Overwhelmingly
Support GE Food Labels
Poll after poll has shown that most
consumers want to know whether their food includes engineered ingredients.
The results of a recent MSNBC poll that
posed the question, "Do you believe genetically modified foods should
be labeled?" indicate that nearly all Americans believe that foods
made with genetically modified organisms should indeed be labeled.
Of the more than 45,000 people who
participated in the poll, over 96% answered "Yes. It's an ethical
issue - consumers should be informed so they can make a choice."
It's not news that most Americans support
labeling of GMO foods. Since genetically modified foods were first
introduced in mid-1990s, scores of public opinion polls have shown that
the vast majority of consumers want mandatory labeling of all genetically
modified foods. These include recent polls by CBS News/New York Times,
NPR/Thomson Reuters and the Consumers Union. Unfortunately, Congress and
the White House have ignored these polls, accepting instead the claims of
lobbyists and indentured scientists that genetically engineered foods are
perfectly safe, and that uninformed and scientifically illiterate
Americans must not be given the choice to buy or not to buy GMOs, because
they will reject them.
Monsanto spent more than $1 million on the
2010 election cycle, splitting its contributions evenly between state and
federal candidates. It spends much more on lobbying - more than $8 million
in each of the last three years. Monsanto's money has bought it influence
and allowed it to move its lawyers and scientists through the revolving
door into roles within the regulatory agencies. The USDA, FDA and State
Department are full of appointees with connections to Monsanto. Monsanto's
efforts have successfully stifled attempts in Congress and state
legislatures to pass GMO labeling legislation.
The Slingshot that Can Bring Down
Goliath
The most important advantage or weapon in a
ballot initiative (or in a grassroots legislative lobbying campaign) is to
have the overwhelming support of the people, especially registered voters.
As poll after poll has shown, 85-95% of Americans support mandatory GE
food labels. No matter how much money Monsanto and their allies spend to
defeat a ballot initiative, it is very difficult to turn back overwhelming
public sentiment. Monsanto has become one of the most hated corporations
on earth.
The second requirement for a successful
ballot initiative is to have the active support of a massive grassroots
movement, like the growing anti-GE food movement and OCA's Millions
Against Monsanto campaign. This grassroots movement can gather petition
signatures, mobilize public opinion, and get out the vote. No matter how
much money Monsanto and their allies spend, it will be very difficult to
defeat a volunteer grassroots army of organic consumers who enjoy the
massive support of the public.
The third prerequisite for victory is to
have the ability to raise significant sums of money. Not only do we have
millions of organic consumers in the U.S. who are passionately opposed to
GMOs, and willing to donate to a labeling campaign, but we also have a
rapidly growing $30 billion organic food industry that depends upon
keeping GMO contamination out of the organic sector. We probably won't be
able to raise enough money to outspend Monsanto, the Farm Bureau, and the
Grocery Manufacturers Association, but we can raise enough money to defend
our popular position and maintain majority support.
Just like everything in U.S. politics,
ballot initiatives have a price tag.
According to the Ballot Initiative
Strategy Center:
"The chances of victory are directly
correlated with the amount of money raised and are almost always
proportional to the amount of money the opposition spends."
"People power is equally important to factor in. Particularly for
Citizen-based ballot initiative efforts, it is imperative to have people
on the ground across the state that are connected and invested in the
initiative." Biotechnology or BioDemocracy?
Restoring consumers' right to know and
driving genetically engineered foods off supermarket shelves are not going
to solve all of the life and death issues that are currently staring us in
the face: the climate crisis, endless wars, economic depression, corporate
control over government, and the health crisis. But cutting Monsanto and
the biotechnocrats down to size and restoring consumer choice are a good
first step to move us toward sustainability and a healthy food and farming
system. Just as important, in political terms, by defeating the Biotech
Bullies and indentured politicians, we can begin to restore the tattered
self-confidence of the American body politic. A resounding victory by the
organic community and OCA's Millions Against Monsanto campaign will prove
to ourselves and the currently demoralized public that we can indeed take
back control over the institutions and public policies that determine our
daily lives. Now is the time to move forward.
|