International Protests Mount Against Genetically Engineered Crops

by San Francisco Bay Guardian Friday, Jun. 29, 2001 at 9:03 PM

Without labels, people in the United States can't tell if they are eating gene-finagled foodstuffs, which have been foisted on consumers without their knowledge or consent. Current FDA guidelines "deny Americans the right to know what is in our food, while protecting the economic interests of biotech corporations," says Food First, an Oakland-based organization, which has called for an immediate moratorium on the commercial use of GE seeds and foods.

Published on Wednesday, June 27, 2001 in the San Francisco Bay Guardian

Food Fight

International Protests Mount Against Genetically Engineered Crops

by Martin A. Lee



When Bill Clinton was president, it was hardly a secret that his administration favored agricultural biotechnology as potential cash cow for U.S. corporations. But the clout that the genetically engineered (GE) food lobby wields in George W. Bush's cabinet tops anything that came before.

Several current cabinet members have ties to Monsanto, the dominant firm in the burgeoning biotechnology industry. Monsanto contributed money to the Senate election campaigns of Attorney General John Ashcroft and Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson, while Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and Agriculture Secretary Ann Veneman were officers or directors of companies that are now owned by Monsanto, which controls 80 percent of the global market for transgenic seeds.

Bush's choice for deputy administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, Linda Fisher, was a chief lobbyist and political fundraising coordinator for Monsanto. And the revolving door keeps spinning between Monsanto and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), which functions more as an arm of the biotech industry than a regulatory agency. Oversight of the biotech business has been so lax that a federal judge recently ruled that GE food is legally "unregulated."

Manipulating genes

Original: International Protests Mount Against Genetically Engineered Crops