from centerforfoodsafety.org:A bill is pending in the United States House of Representativesthat would eliminate dozens of food safety and labeling laws.The bill, H.R. 4167, the National Uniformity for Food Act, doesthis by stripping away the power of states to regulate foodsafety. This bill is set to hit the House floor for a vote thisThursday, March 2nd - please contact your representatives TODAYand urge them to vote NO on HR 4167! Take action now at:http://ga3.org/ct/BdLBgq113z5d/ Here is how the bill works. Under the guise of promoting"uniformity" of food safety and labeling laws in the U.S., thebill requires all state food safety laws to be identical to therequirements of the Federal Food and Drug Administration. If theFDA has not passed a regulation on a food threat, then all stateregulations on that threat would immediately be voided. And,since the states regulate many food safety issues not covered bythe FDA, many food safety laws will be voided and replaced withno law at all. For example, the bill would preempt Alaska?snewly passed law to label genetically engineered fish andCalifornia's Proposition 65, a very effective law that requireslabeling of food and consumer products that contain substancesknown to cause cancer or reproductive harm. It would alsothreaten state laws governing the safety of milk and shellfish.The "uniformity" to be achieved by the bill is in many instancesthe uniform absence of food safety regulation that the foodindustry seeks.Local and state officials are now responsible for 80% of thenation's food safety enforcement. H.R. 4167 puts a strangle holdon the people most informed about local needs. It is opposed bydozens of environmental health groups, by California's StateAttorney General Bill Lockyer, the National Association of StateDepartments of Agriculture, the Association of Food and DrugOfficials, the National Conference of State Legislators and theWisconsin Department of Agriculture.If this bill passes, not only will hundreds of current statefood safety laws face being overturned, future state food safetyand labeling initiatives could be impossible to put in place.There are currently 226 co-sponsors in the House ofRepresentatives to pass the bill in the House, so every letteris needed to ensure that these Representatives understand what abad bill this is.
2/27/2006 6:17:27 PM
2/27/2006 6:22:31 PM
is this a continued resurrection of the month-old cheese theme?
2/27/2006 6:23:09 PM
^i think we should say it isthat way an innocent thread gets locked
2/27/2006 6:24:58 PM
^^i was gone when the cheese thing happened. ^^^so you dont think that a consumer has a right to know where their food came from? im sure plenty of people of there would like to know. why hide it?[Edited on February 27, 2006 at 6:26 PM. Reason : .]
2/27/2006 6:25:26 PM
this is fine. i support this law.however, i vehemently oppose FDA regulations banning the free labeling of food by manufacturers, such as, "this beef was tested for mad cow"
2/27/2006 8:17:41 PM
if a state wishes to test for additional things, why should they not be allowed to? even if you think consumer rights are stupid (and i dont know why you wouldnt want said rights, you are a consumer), this is still an unprecedented stripping of the rights of the states to handle affairs that have been delegated to them so far.[Edited on February 27, 2006 at 8:54 PM. Reason : .]
2/27/2006 8:51:28 PM
Why is this bill neeeded? What's the REAL motive? Who's lobbying for it?
2/27/2006 8:58:10 PM
To help agribusiness keep pushing crap onto our tables. Same. Monsanto, Cargill, et. al
2/27/2006 9:01:52 PM
So about the lawmakers supporting the bill...Do you think they really believe this is about uniform labeling?How many of them know exactly what's up but support it anyway?When does an issue become too evil for a lawmaker to take money to support it?How can we expose this nonense more effectively?[Edited on February 27, 2006 at 9:11 PM. Reason : sss]
2/27/2006 9:10:39 PM
nothing evil about this bill.don't take such a biased source at it's word.
2/27/2006 9:20:56 PM
You see, DirtyGreek and Waluigi aren't getting paid to deceive me.But perhaps you will answer my question differently than DirtyGreek....PrawnStar, why is this bill neeeded?In your own words, please. And explain this as well:
2/27/2006 9:28:52 PM
an independent food safety groupvs.an association of companies who make and sell said foodand youre calling my source biased?there are holes in the current federal regulations which states are allowed to fill on their own discretion. why is there such a problem with this? why does this need reforming?its serving lobbyists, not an actual pressing need.i hope you arent dismissing it b/c you think its just some liberal activist garbage.[Edited on February 27, 2006 at 9:40 PM. Reason : .]
2/27/2006 9:36:15 PM
2/27/2006 9:51:40 PM
because I don't have the energy to argue this right now, let me just make some points:1.) our food security is under attack. a small handful of companies now control most of the food sold in the US. As they consolidate more, small farmers AND consumers will suffer.2.) Cargill and Monsanto, which own almost all seed, pesticides, fertilizers, farmland, food processing, labelling, packaging and sales in the united states, are currently researching seeds that will only germinate when combined with their chemicals. In other words, they would control almost all food in teh united states, and the only way to grow almost anything would be to pay them.3.) These same companies are taking species of plants that were produced by generations upon generations of people, patenting them, and enforcing those patents. All they need to be able to patent a species is to prove that nobody else owns said patent. They have been able to enforce these patents almost everywhere in the world.If that doesn't tell you the motivation of these people, I don't see any point of going any further in the discussion.[Edited on February 27, 2006 at 10:26 PM. Reason : .]
2/27/2006 10:24:44 PM
2/27/2006 10:35:19 PM
2/27/2006 10:58:27 PM
2/28/2006 12:03:19 AM
from the International Dairy Foods Association:
2/28/2006 12:04:40 AM
LoneSnark, you're wrong about DG's first point, and you fucking know it.
2/28/2006 1:24:31 AM
"Capitalism is the astounding belief that the most wickedest of men will do the most wickedest of things for the greatest good of everyone." - John Maynard Keynes
2/28/2006 1:45:00 AM
2/28/2006 1:51:56 AM
2/28/2006 2:00:53 AM
2/28/2006 8:44:28 AM
this is why I will always have my own veggie garden
2/28/2006 9:05:41 AM
no kidding, I just started seeds for the first time, and I'm glad I'm doing it. If you do care about this folks, you're probably not going to stop it. Best thing to do is just buy as much local food as possible, use fresh, organic ingredients from local farmers, and grow your own food. You'll be healthier that way anyway.
2/28/2006 9:14:02 AM
yeah but that shits expensive DG. next thing you know you'll be telling us not to shop at walmart.
2/28/2006 9:34:45 AM
2/28/2006 9:41:45 AM
2/28/2006 10:09:12 AM
2/28/2006 10:21:43 AM
the only reason to hide a genetically modified label is because of the huge ammount of bullshit propaganda spewed from the environmental fascists. Their religious crusades against GM foods does nothing but add to world hunger.these guys are worse than rapists and serial killers.
2/28/2006 10:30:37 AM
http://carbon.org/
2/28/2006 10:37:14 AM
^^ quoth Penn and Teller
2/28/2006 10:47:38 AM
2/28/2006 10:55:31 AM
^are your reasons for being against genetically modifed crops b/c of the use/abuse of patents by the corporations or b/c of the fact that they are genetically modified?would you be against crops that are genetically modified by only reproducing portions of the genome already present in that plant (such as duplicating genes or inserting multiple promotors)?what about transgenic or genetically modified animals? bacteria?i'm not trying to be a douchebag--i realize that we disagree on this issue and have no desire to change your mind but i am genuinely interested in the motivations behind your feelings. it seems like a lot of people base their opinions on this issue on ignorance, which you obviously aren't. i will admit a lot of my opinions on this issue are based on pure self-interest. i'm starting an MD/phD program next year in stem cells/developmental genetics and i sometimes feel a need to defend this type of stuff: if the general population becomes accoustomed to eating/dealing with GM foods all the time, i can't help but think it will make them more accepting of other advances in biotech that could be viewed as more morally ambiguous.
2/28/2006 11:40:23 AM
No, it's certainly not ignorance. My reasons for disliking GMOs are manyfold, but the primary reason is that there is no way of knowing what will happen when seeds and pollen drift. There are already cases of "superweeds," and the thought of a dangerous plant that hybridizes with a roundup-ready crop or something to that effect is quite frightening. I'm also against GMOs that are genetically bred to already contain pesticides. There were the newleaf potatoes, for instance, that weren't even registered as food by the FDA. they were registered as pesticides. and we ate them every time we ate mcdonalds fries, without even knowing it. then, of course, there are the companies and the terrible things they've done to people. for instance, the farmers who have been sued because patented seed from a tractor bed or a neighboring farm blew into their farms, even without their knowledge. people have lost their livelihoods over that or quit farming.finally, there's the issue of sustainability. say that monsanto does start selling seeds that only they can germinate. say that seed becomes dominant in the world. then what happens if, all of a sudden, something causes them to be unable to produce those pesticides? Not only that, but you wouldn't be able to grow organic foods anymore, because all seeds would need monsanto's pesticides.the problems with gmos are ENDLESS. It's not a fear of the technology itself or even a problem necessarily with eating GMOs, though i do have a few. It's a problem with the lack of research and regulation and the power these companies have over our food.
2/28/2006 12:12:01 PM
2/28/2006 12:26:58 PM
2/28/2006 12:29:35 PM
For the environmental fascists:On the subject of altering plants from an historical standpoint, broccolli was originally a leavey vegetable and over time has been grown into its current form over thousands of years by experiments of farmers in ancient China. It's the same thing as chickens and pigs, they weren't originally domesticated and the first unable to fly and the second hailess and prone to sunburn. We've been mutating and altering organisms to our benifit for a long time albeit we haven't been doing it on the genetic level till recently. The only difference now is that we can alter plants to be safer and with less defects (like disease immunity), and also have more nutrition and better yield. When it comes to controlling the spreading of seed dispersal and diverting a possible overtaking of the land and natural species scenario, thats easy. Genetically altered plants can be made to grow in certain soils that have certain additives. All it takes is experimentation.
2/28/2006 12:34:19 PM
ugh. not THAT argument again. It's not a problem with human modification of plants, man, and again, I'm in a graduate level anthropology of food class right now. It's my third class on similar topics. I know all about the history of plant domestication.what we're talking about here is a COMPLETELY different animal from selectively breeding. We're talking about removing one gene from one plant and putting it into another, not having any real sort of testing (especially long term) to realize whether or not such modifications are safe, then just putting them out in stores without even telling anyone that they're GM.
2/28/2006 12:37:01 PM
^ Sorry, you missed my edit:"It has been stated on this board that doctors are not substantially hindred by lawsuits, but I bet a greater percentage of doctors have been sued for malpractice than farmers have been sued for GM contamination."
2/28/2006 12:38:39 PM
2/28/2006 12:42:26 PM
corporations would never do anything badsincerly,EnronGlobal CrossingMCI/WorldcomArthur Anderson
2/28/2006 12:47:50 PM
In a free society, people are free to hinder others. By choosing to drive to work this morning I have increased the traffic you experience going to work. By buying the last donut, you don't get one. By building an ugly house, I have increased the traffic around your home and lowered the resale value of your home. By closing down my import business, you can no longer easily acquire Italian Wine. You do not have a right to non-GM foods, just like I do not have a right to GM foods, italian wine, high property values, the last donut, light traffic, etc. etc.
2/28/2006 12:49:25 PM
a company selling non-GM foods should have the right to label their food as suchand the state should have the right to require GM Foods to be labeled.^and in your reasoning there, you have given the government the right to hinder people. Way to disprove your libertarian ideology.[Edited on February 28, 2006 at 12:56 PM. Reason : .]
2/28/2006 12:51:00 PM
Dirty Greek, I came at the tail end of the argument not really knowing what was going on. I just wanted to input some of my stuff. It seems I incited some more post though
2/28/2006 12:59:21 PM
^^ The purpose of government is to secure our rights by hindering others, as most people understand it. Our right to Social Security payments, our right to labor laws, etc. If I am right and you have no right to products that people do not want to produce, then there is nothing the government can do. Because we live in a democracy you might have a right to non-GM foods. If my side wins then it is not a right and you must fend for yourself in the marketplace.
2/28/2006 1:09:24 PM
2/28/2006 1:11:30 PM
exactly. not all privileges are rights. the "right" to get to work on time is not a right, it's a privilege. just like driving, eating candy, etc. "rights" are those things that a person is inalienably given "by his creator," should you believe in one, as stated in the founding documentslife, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. If you fuck up my farm by cross-pollinating and creating a superweed, you're stepped on my rights.lonesnark is a troll. I'm sure of that now.
2/28/2006 1:17:16 PM
2/28/2006 1:17:22 PM