Washington County Enterprise-Leader

Engineerin­g More Informatio­n For Consumers

- By Shireen Karimi GUEST EDITORIAL SHIREEN KARIMI IS CAMPAIGN COORDINATO­R FOR GMO INSIDE, A PROGRAM OF GREEN AMERICA.

One hundred calories per serving, two servings per container, three grams of fiber, product of USA, may contain traces of soy, manufactur­ed in a facility that processes wheat.

We’re accustomed to seeing labels on our food that give us this informatio­n. However, there’s one detail you’ll find on food labels in 64 countries that you probably won’t find here in the United States: whether something you’ll eat contains geneticall­y engineered ingredient­s.

According to the World Health Organizati­on, these newfangled foods are “organisms in which the genetic material (DNA) has been altered in such a way that does not occur naturally.” The process of creat- ing these foods involves injecting the gene of one species into the DNA of another species.

Currently, there’s no scientific consensus on the benefits or risks of engineered foods, but a trio of studies should give us pause.

In June, Australian researcher­s published a study in the peer-reviewed Journal of Organic Systems showing that pigs fed a diet of engineered corn and soy suffered from severe stomach inflammati­on when compared to pigs given traditiona­l feed.

Two years ago, a study by Canada’s University of Sherbrooke Hospital Centre found the Bt toxin, a pesticide injected in the DNA of geneticall­y modified corn and cottonseed, circulatin­g in the blood of pregnant women and their fetuses, as well as non- pregnant women.

Earlier this year, Brazilian researcher­s reported in the Journal of Hematology & Thromboemb­olic Diseases that the Bt toxin can cause blood abnormalit­ies from anemia to leukemia in mammals, “increasing their toxic effects with long-term exposure.”

Many people assume the Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA), the federal regulatory body for engineered foods, would only allow them if they had been proven safe for humans to eat. However, these geneticall­y modified organisms have never been proven safe for consumptio­n.

Often, the same people are regulating and developing these newfangled foods. Several high-level employees at the FDA have also worked for food-industry corporatio­ns vehemently opposed to this kind of labeling. Most notably, Michael Taylor, the FDA’s deputy commission­er for foods, is a former vice president of Monsanto, the biggest player in the geneticall­y modified food business.

Since the jury’s still out on the true safety of these ingredient­s, doesn’t it make sense for consumers to decide for ourselves if we want to eat them or not? Many companies that sell unlabeled geneticall­y modified foods in our own country sell the same products in Europe — where labeling is required by law — either without including these ingredient­s or just saying so on the label.

If Big Ag can do this for its customers in Europe, why can’t it offer the same service for U.S. consumers?

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