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The Food Companies Spending the Most to Hide the Facts

Are your favorite food companies trying to hide what's in your food?

By Emily Main
Topics: genetically modified organisms (gmo)


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Which food companies are trying to keep you in the dark about what's in your food?
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Surveys repeatedly show that more than 90 percent of Americans want genetically modified (GM) foods labeled. That overwhelming majority of the public wants to know if it's eating ingredients derived from lab-created plants that have been genetically modified to resist (and sometime even create their own) toxic pesticides, withstand drought, or produce higher yields.
Considering that GM ingredients have infiltrated more than 75 percent of processed foods, however, food manufacturers have successfully defeated (or threatened to defeat) law after law that would have required these ingredients to be labeled. Once people know that a product contains GM ingredients, the thinking goes, they won't buy it.
One Million Americans Demand Labeling for GMOs

This November, the tug-of-war between food companies and food eaters is coming to a head in California. For the first time, voters—not senators, representatives, or corporate lobbyists—get to decide whether labels like "This product contains GMOs" or "Contains GMO Corn" will appear on food packages. Labeling advocates successfully garnered more than 1 million signatures on a petition to get the California Right to Know Genetically Engineered Food Act (also known as Prop 37) on the November ballot.
Needless to say, food companies have been out in full force, funding ads against the measure. The "No on 37: Coalition Against the Deceptive Food Labeling Scheme" has been collecting money from the obvious (biotech companies like Monsanto) and the surprising, including a number of food companies that market and sell organic foods (by definition, organic foods are prohibited from containing GM ingredients).
The California Right to Know Campaign just issued the dollar amounts spent by major food-industry groups and companies to defeat the ballot initiative. The numbers are collected by California's Department of Campaign Finance and reflect donations made between April and July 2012.
The 20th Anniversary of the FDA's Biggest Mistake

Not surprisingly, the biggest donors represent packaged-food manufacturers and the companies that manufacture GM seeds:
• Grocery Manufacturers Association: $375,000
This is a trade group representing packaged-food manufacturers. In a recent speech to the American Soybean Association, the group's president stated that defeating this ballot initiative was "the single highest priority for GMA this year." This same group actively lobbied to defeat an amendment in the Food Safety and Modernization Act of 2011 that would have banned the hormone-disrupting chemical bisphenol A from canned foods.
• DuPont Pioneer: $310,000
DuPont rakes in about $19 million every year from sales related to its genetically modified seeds, pesticides, and food-processing chemicals.
• Biotechnology Industry Organization: $250,000
Another trade group, the BIO represents DuPont, Monsanto, Dow, and other companies that manufacture pesticides and the genetically modified seeds designed to withstand them.
• BASF: $126,600
The world's largest chemical company, BASF recently abandoned its attempts at marketing GMO crops in Europe, where consumer rejection of GMOs has kept them largely out of the food system, and relocated its plant-science division from Germany to Raleigh, North Carolina. There, the company is working with Monsanto to develop a drought-resistant corn and a strain of genetically modified wheat.
• Syngenta: $63,000
Syngenta's big push is GMO corn, but the company is also notorious for fudging science on the safety of its best-selling corn pesticide atrazine.
Now for the food companies (ironically, many of these same companies have purchased organic brands in the past few decades, so in essence they're supporting organic food and keeping customers in the dark about their conventional products):
• Pepsico: $90,220
• Nestlé: $61,471

Owns Tribe Mediterranean Foods, which has a line of certified-organic hummus
• Coca Cola: $61,208
Owns Odwalla, which manufacturers a line of certified-organic smoothies and juices
• ConAgra Foods: $56,598
• Kellogg's: $33,248

Owns Morningstar Farms veggie burgers and Kashi, its cereal and granola brand that recently caught flack from customers for using GMO ingredients in products advertised as "natural"; Kashi does make some certified-organic cereals and Kellogg's is even working to certify all Kashi products under the Non-GMO Project Verified label—even as it tries to defeat GM labeling.
• J.M. Smucker: $20,396
Sells two types of certified-organic peanut butter
• Dean Foods: $5,424.94
Even though it didn't spend as much as other companies to defeat the bill, Dean Foods owns the nation's two largest certified-organic dairy operations, Horizon Organic and Alta Dena.
With the exception of Dean Foods, this list reflects only donors who've spent more than $20,000. A number of other big food companies have spent smaller amounts, including Hormel Foods, Hershey, General Mills (which owns the Cascadian Farms and Muir Glen organic brands), and Sara Lee.
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Great Post. I wish GMO would just go away.
 
Can y'all recommend any awesome feed stores or other poultry supplies places in the South Sound? We are in Rochester, which is about a sneeze south of Olympia. So anywhere from about Vancouver-ish up to Tacoma/Fife would be great. Aside from Dells, for example, somewhere with a lot of nifty stuff and options available.

Thanks much in advance!

~Tracy, poultry n008 but a fast learner
Try "The Farm Store" in Chehalis. Formerly Darigold. Or Premium Quality Hay & Feed on hwy 12 in Ethel.
 
OK so as it turns out course my nephew has wireless that I a can tap from the trailer. So here are a couple pics from the first day I was here to help with set up.They are expecting 300++. They have had a portable dance floor brought in for the live band.
In these first 2 all a long the deck is an 8' tall glass wall. It is awesome as it really keeps the wind off the deck.








 
I've got a question for those of you who are within city limits about building regulations. I've been reading through my city's ordinances, and while they are written to keep coops out of the front yard, I should be able to build one next to my front porch, since the front of the porch is the front wall of the house (it's integrated under the roof, and we went through this when we had our garage built). Although it's closer to the house than I wanted, I've got a decent sized spot to build a 4X4 coop. But what exactly do pens fall under in ordinances? Are they accessory structures? I was going to have the coop and pen under one shingled roof (as an all-in-one), but I wonder if I should put less construction into the pen. I'd like the pen to come forward past the imaginary front wall line. My city's ordinances don't say anything about poultry pens other than including them in the rule of 25 feet from property lines. But they don't give a decent definition of an accessory structure.

I've only had time late in the day to call my permitting office, and their hours are pretty darn short. I'll try again tomorrow, but I thought maybe someone here had dealt with this before.

Jennifer
So Im thinking if your in Seattle you need to call Tilth and see what they say http://seattletilth.org/. When I use to work for WSU as a Livestock Advisor and work with the conservation dist we would help people with this kind of stuff and also Seattle Tilth... Im sure they would love to help you and the Conservation Dist is here http://www.kingcd.org/index.php
I sure hope this will help you.
 
Hi all - I get the friends award and then vanish for most of the month! Great Timing!. Just checking in to say hello. I have been studying like crazy for an exam, but I really need to set up a schedule and get some structure back in my life because my practice exams have gone from scores in the 90's down to the low 70's! I was studying a couple hours a day but increased it to 8 and stopped doing everything else. My scores dropped as my hours studying increased! I'm taking a break from studying today because it is my B-Day. I decided I'm 4 years younger today. I'd shave off more than that, but I don't think I'd pass

I gave a lot of chicken coop tours over the weekend. I wasn't planning on it, but we had a month-late birthday party for my DD over the weekend (back-yard camping slumber party). We only decided to do the party the afternoon before, and I did not have her friends numbers to call, so I posted it on FB. 10 of her friends showed up and all the parents wanted to see the chicken coop!

My chickens are doing great - turns out I did not lose the 2 I had thought I had earlier; they just moved themselves into an old tree stump deep in the woods where they were sitting broody!

This weather has been beautiful! I spread seeds over the sawmp-land when I returned from Hawaii, and now I have a lawn there again! I'm not sure it will last. Maybe in the fall I will be turnng it into the pond it wished to be.

I hope you are all doing well - that coop build looks great! I'm going back to look at more pages.
Sure have missed you on here. When I study I can over do it and Im sure thats what your doing right now. Hope hear from you more, every one needs a break.
 
OK so as it turns out course my nephew has wireless that I a can tap from the trailer. So here are a couple pics from the first day I was here to help with set up.They are expecting 300++. They have had a portable dance floor brought in for the live band.
In these first 2 all a long the deck is an 8' tall glass wall. It is awesome as it really keeps the wind off the deck.








Nice looking place. So let me get this straight, you went to help put up stuff and they dont talk to you. Your a better man than I am. Oh thats right Im female..
 
OK so as it turns out course my nephew has wireless that I a can tap from the trailer. So here are a couple pics from the first day I was here to help with set up.They are expecting 300++. They have had a portable dance floor brought in for the live band.
In these first 2 all a long the deck is an 8' tall glass wall. It is awesome as it really keeps the wind off the deck.








That is the pergola I want for my deck!
 
Quote: You are hopefully on your way to Yellowstone already, but I wanted to reply.

I don't know what organizations the guy gave you, but I found this page: http://www.paws.org/other-feral-cat-resources.html. I will also ask around to see if I can find more info. I know you probably don't want to spend extra money on renting a trap, but there was a poster here that offered to take the cat away if you could catch it.
 
I'm supposed to be packing. But I can't stop crying. A little boy in my Webelos Den got hit by a car. So, I'm here trying to think happy chicken thoughts. Suddenly chickens don't matter, either. I'm just sick. I'm hoping we'll hear good news before we leave for vacation.
Oh no! Here's hoping he recovers and you can leave for your trip with a relieved mind.
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