Maui v. Monsanto: Hawaii County Bans GMO Crops
Voters Defy Agri-Giant’s Spending to OK Landmark Ban
HAVANA TIMES – Ballot initiatives to require labeling of foods with genetically modified ingredients, or GMOs, failed to pass Tuesday in Colorado and Oregon, after agribusiness giants Monsanto, PepsiCo and Kraft spent millions to help defeat the measures. But in a victory for food safety advocates, Hawaii’s Maui County passed one of the strongest anti-GMO measures ever, despite the opposition outspending supporters by a ratio of 87 to 1.
The Maui GMO moratorium calls for a complete suspension of the cultivation of GMO crops until studies conclusively prove they are safe. Maui is often called “GMO Ground Zero” and the moratorium that passed Tuesday could have national implications because multinational seed producers, such as Monsanto and Dow AgroSciences, use the county to research and develop new seed varieties.
Under the new measure, farmers who knowingly cultivate GMOs could be penalized with a $50,000-per-day fine. On Wednesday, Monsanto released a statement saying it plans to ask the Maui court to declare the initiative “legally flawed” and not enforceable. We are joined in Maui by Dr. Lorrin Pang, a public health official who helped draft and submit Maui’s successful GMO moratorium initiative.
It is time to discuss the manipulation of plant genes and other methods of imcreasing food production in a calm logical fashion. The “green revolution” has enabled many of the hungry people of the planet to survive. The constant use of the name Monsanto to stir up emotions in the breasts of the anti-business lobby (usually of a left wing political persuasion) is a somewhat pitiful endeavour to avoid addressing the need to increase world food production for the ever increasing population. Let them produce some alternative methods and means.
It is easy to be “against” the endeavours of others and to sneer at the scientists – to whom the world owes modern civilization – but what about a positive approach? What are the alternative methods of increasing food production proposed by those who are against current methods? Speak up!
well done Hawaii