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‘Negative Campaigning’ for
the New U.S. Organic Food Standards
Dennis T. Avery and Alex A. Avery
"Organic food is certainly safer and better than the chemical-doused,
genetically contaminated, or irradiated food typically found on grocery
store shelves."
--- Organic Consumers Association press release, Oct. 1, 2002
"When you eat food that is organically grown, you are taking a pledge to
your health, while helping our environment, one bite at a time. ."
--- Organic Trade Association, Oct. 1, 2002 As the U.S.
Department of Agriculture launches its new official organic food standards,
the organic industry is ratcheting up its ‘negative campaigning’ against
conventional foods.
In Britain, the UK’s Advertising Standards Authority recently forbid the
organic food industry to make any claims that its products are safer or more
nutritious. It says the industry has offered no evidence to justify such
claims. (The industry told a 1999 House of Lords hearing it hadn’t had time
or funding to do the tests!)
But the American government didn’t even ask for such evidence. Bill
Clinton’s Secretary of Agriculture, Dan Glickman, first proposed the U.S.
organic standards, but he said the standards and organic certification
expressed only a “philosophy of production.” He said, “Just because
something is labeled as organic does not mean it is superior, safer or more
healthy than conventional food. All foods in this country must meet the same
high standards.”
That was then. Now, in the inimitable Clinton style, Mr. Glickman has joined
the board of directors of Green Circle Organics. Green Circle promotes
expensive organic beef that it says will ensure a “healthier lifestyle” for
its customers.
Indeed, the organic industry is aggressively promoting its products by
denigrating the food that has made Americans taller, stronger, and
longer-lived than any people in history.
Claim: Organic foods have lower pesticide residues.
Reality: Nobody knows.
Consumers Union reported that 25 percent of organic fruits and vegetables
carry detectable residues of synthetic pesticides, and one-third of the 25
percent had residue levels higher than the average of the conventional
produce. But all were within allowable federal limits.
The Food and Drug Administration’s widespread annual testing finds that U.S.
foods carry less than one percent of the synthetic pesticide residues
allowable, which are 1/100th or 1/1000th of the “no-effect” level in animal
tests. (The dose makes the poison is the first rule of toxicology, since
everything -- including sunlight and water -- is toxic in massive doses.)
Neither the government nor industry, however, tests for organic pesticides,
which organic farmers tend to use frequently and heavily. Rotenone, for
example, is a natural nerve toxin that causes symptoms like those of
Parkinson’s disease when injected into rats. Copper sulfate is banned in
Europe and toxic to virtually everything from people to earthworms.
Pyrethrum is classified by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency as a
“likely human carcinogen.” But the “independent certifiers” who will affix
the USDA Certified Organic Seal do no testing for pesticide residues of any
sort.
Does claiming lower pesticide residues mislead consumers by suggesting that
conventional foods have high, even unsafe, levels of pesticide residue?
Claim: Organic farming is better for the environment.
Reality: Cornell University concluded that organic farming is moderately
worse for the environment, mostly because the copper and sulfur organic
farmers use as fungicides are permanent soil contaminants. The Scottish Crop
Research Institute says: “The balance of environmental advantages and
disadvantages in the organic system is not clear”
A high-level Danish government committee concluded in 1999 that organic
farming would slash human food production by 47 percent. Most of Denmark’s
farmland would be forced into cattle forage so cattle manure could produce
enough organic nitrogen to maintain the fertility of the crop fields.
Conventional farmers take their nitrogen from the air, which is 78 percent
N, through an industrial process.
Farmers are already using half the land on the planet that isn’t covered by
desert or glacier. Would it help the environment if we cleared all of the
world’s remaining forests for cattle forage?
Claim: Organic farming will save more small farms.
Reality: As organic food becomes big business, the farms that supply it also
become big businesses. In California, five huge farms supply half of that
state’s $400 million per year worth of organic produce. Horizon Dairy, a
multinational corporation, supplies 70 percent of America’s organic milk,
mostly from two huge feedlot dairies with thousands of cows apiece.
Does America want more negative campaigning for more expensive food and more
ill-founded food scares? You’re being forced to decide.
Source:
http://www.cgfi.org/materials/articles/2002/oct_18_02.htm |
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