Millions Against Monsanto:
The
Food Fight of Our Lives. Finally, public opinion around the biotech
industry's contamination of our food supply and destruction of our
environment has reached the tipping point. We're fighting back.
"If you put a label on genetically engineered food you might as well put a skull and crossbones on it." -- Norman Braksick, president of Asgrow Seed Co., a subsidiary of Monsanto, quoted in the Kansas City Star, March 7, 1994.
"Monsanto should not have to vouchsafe the safety of biotech food. Our
interest is in selling as much of it as possible. Assuring its safety is
the FDA's job." -- Phil Angell, Monsanto's director of corporate communications, quoted in the New York Times,
October 25, 1998. For nearly two decades, Monsanto and corporate
agribusiness have exercised near-dictatorial control over American
agriculture, aided and abetted by indentured politicians and regulatory
agencies, supermarket chains, giant food processors, and the so-called
“natural” products industry. Finally, public opinion around the biotech
industry’s contamination of our food supply and destruction of our
environment has reached the tipping point. We’re fighting back. This
November, in a food fight that will largely determine the future of what
we eat and what we grow, Monsanto will face its greatest challenge to
date: a statewide citizens’ ballot initiative that will give
Californians the opportunity to vote for their right to know whether the
food they buy is contaminated with GMOs. A growing corps of food,
health, and environmental activists - supported by the Millions against
Monsanto and Occupy Monsanto Movements, and consumers and farmers across
the nation - are boldly moving to implement mandatory labeling of
genetically engineered foods in California through a grassroots-powered
citizens ballot initiative process that will bypass the
agribusiness-dominated state legislature. If passed, the California
Right to Know Genetically Engineered Food Act will require mandatory
labeling of genetically engineered foods and food ingredients, and
outlaw the routine industry practice of labeling GMO-tainted foods as
“natural." Passage of this initiative on November 6 will radically alter
the balance of power in the marketplace, enabling millions of consumers
to identify - and boycott - genetically engineered foods for the first
time since 1994, when Monsanto’s first unlabeled, genetically-engineered
dairy drug, recombinant Bovine Growth Hormone (rBGH), was forced on the
market, As Alexis Baden-Mayer, Political Director for the Organic
Consumers Association, pointed out at an Occupy Wall Street teach-in in
Washington DC in early April: “The California Right to Know Genetically
Engineered Food Act ballot initiative is a perfect example of how the
grassroots 99% can mobilize to take back American democracy from the
corporate bullies, the 1%. By aggressively utilizing one of the last
remaining tools of direct democracy, the initiative process (available
to voters not only in California and 23 other states, but in thousands
of cities and counties across the nation), we can bypass corrupt
politicians, make our own laws, and force corporations like Monsanto to
bend to the will of the people, in this case granting us our fundamental
right to know what’s in our food.”
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