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August 2010 - GMO Whistleblower
March 2010 - Non-GMO iPhone Guide, etc.
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March 2008 - Unintended GMO Health Risks
Feb 2008 - Jeffrey Bland interview
Jan 2008 - GM Sugar Beets
Nov 2007 - Company Research is Rigged
Oct 2007 - An FDA-Created Health Crisis
Aug 2007 - Campaign for Healthier Eating
July 2007 - Toxins & Reproductive Failur
June 2007 - GM Corn May Cause Allergies
May 2007 - Genetically Engineered Foods
March 2007 - A Composite Review
Jan 2007 - Press Release Dec. 29, 2006
Oct 2006 - Rice Industry: Keep Geneti
Aug 2006 - Monsanto Whistleblower Says G
Jun 2006 - Disease Resistant GM crops
Apr/May 2006 - Genetically Engineered Cr
Mar 2006 - A Review of the GMO Trilo
Feb 2006 2005, A Scary Year for Genetic
Jan 2006 - Un-Spinning the Spin Masters
Nov/Dec 05, Dangerous Immune Responses
Oct 05, Rats Die When Mothers Eat GM Soy
Sept 05, Rammed down our throats
Aug 05, A Deadly Epidemic Linked to GE
July 05, Scrambling the Genome
June 05, GM Corn Health Danger Exposed
May 05, Video on GM Food Dangers to Kids
April 05, Public Deceived
Mar 05, GE Crops Damage Wildlife
Feb 05, Iowa Bills Fight GM Free Zones
Jan 05, US Proposal Puts Food at Risk
Dec 04, Got Hormones
Nov 04, Are You Critical of GE Foods?
Oct 04, Myth & Necessity of GM Free Zone
Sept 04, Ban GE Foods in Schools
Aug 04, GE Foods May Pose Health Risk

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Spilling the Beans | January 8, 2010

Dear Friends,

Thanks again for the generous outpouring of donations in the last days of 2009. The extra $17,000 (including the matching grant) was a wonderful way to end a year of great achievement. On top of that, a December article in Supermarket News was a terrific way to begin the new year. Take a look below at their timely prediction of the non-GMO trend fast approaching. And thanks for allowing us to make it happen!

Best regards,

Jeffrey


Supermarket News Forecasts Non-GMO Uprising

For a couple of years, the Institute for Responsible Technology has predicted that the US would soon experience a tipping point of consumer rejection against genetically modified foods; a change we're all helping to bring about. Now a December article in Supermarket News supports both our prediction and the role the Institute is playing.

"The coming year promises to bring about a greater, more pervasive awareness" of the genetically modified organisms (GMOs) in our food supply, wrote Group Editor Robert Vosburgh, in a trade publication that conventional food executives and retailers use as a primary source of news and trends in the industry. Vosburgh describes how previous food "culprits" like fat and carbs "can even define the decade in which they were topical," and suggests that GMOs may finally burst through into the public awareness and join their ranks.

Vosburgh credits two recent launches with "the potential to spark a new round of concern among shoppers who are today much more attuned to the ways their food is produced." One is our Institute's new non-GMO website, which, he says, "provides consumers with a directory of non-GMO brands . . . developed ‘for the 53% of Americans who say they would avoid GMOs if labeled.'"

The other launch is the Non-GMO Project, offering "the country's first consensus-based guidelines, which include third-party certification and a uniform seal for approved products. . . . The organization also requires documented traceability and segregation to ensure the tested ingredients are what go into the final product."

He alerts supermarket executives that, "the growth of the organic (which bans GMO ingredients), local and green product categories reflects a generation of consumers who could be less tolerant of genetic modification."

Please allow me to sit back with an I-told-you-so grin of satisfaction. Two years ago, I wrote a newsletter article describing three components that would move the market on GMOs:

1. The Non-GMO Project's new "widely accepted definition for non-GMO" would spark a GMO cleanout, starting with the brands in the natural food industry.

Our Institute endorses the Non-GMO Project and encourages food companies to enroll their products with this excellent nonprofit organization. Their official seal was introduced in October 2009 and has quickly become the national standard for meaningful non-GMO claims.

2. "Providing clear Non-GMO product choices" with our Non-GMO Shopping Guide would make it easier for consumers to select "non-GMO products by brand and category."

The same Guide is available as a website, a spread in magazines, a pocket guide, a two-sided download, and coming soon, a mobile phone application.

3. "Educating Health-Conscious Shoppers" about the health effects of GMOs is the key means by which GMOs will become a marketing liability—the next culprit.

Past culprits drove the market because of consumer beliefs that were unhealthy. In the same way, evidence demonstrating the health dangers of GMOs is already igniting an anti-GMO fever. In 2009, for example, the prestigious American Academy of Environmental Medicine urged doctors to prescribe non-GMO diets for all patients, based on evidence that GMOs fed to lab animals triggered diseases and disorders.

GMO Rejection Will Be Widespread

The prognosis in Supermarket News overlooks critical differences between GMOs and the other culprits. Fats, carbs, salt, and sugar each offer unmistakable consumer appeal. As a result, food companies offer options with them, without them, and at low levels.

Genetically modified (GM) foods, however, don't offer a single consumer benefit. The five major GMOs—soy, corn, cottonseed, canola, and sugar beets—are gene-spliced to either tolerate poisonous herbicides, or produce poisonous insecticides. Consumers never clamor for them.

Also unlike the other culprits, companies can usually eliminate GMOs without even changing recipes. Purchasers can simply instruct suppliers to provide the non-GMO soy and corn derivatives, the non-GMO sugar, etc., as Trader Joe's and Whole Foods have already done for their home brands.

Therefore, when major food companies notice even tiny losses in market share, their GMO cleanout will be widespread. Kraft Foods and others will recognize that the same consumer trend that forced them to remove all GM ingredients in Europe and Japan has reared its head in the States.

Consumer Opinion Already Poised Against Biotech

We're already seeing the momentum build against genetically engineered bovine growth hormone. Wal-Mart, Starbucks, Dannon, Yoplait, and most dairies have shunned the controversial drug that is now synonymous with "increased cancer risk" in the minds of many consumers. (The recent condemnation of the hormone by the American Public Health Association will help nail its coffin shut.)

In the case of GMOs, the proportion of US consumers needed to avoid brands that contain GM soy and corn, etc. is quite small—probably only 5%. That means that the purchasing power (and trend setting ability) of 15 million people or 5.6 million households can turn GMOs into a marketing liability. But when you look at the numbers, no matter how you slice it, they add up to a coming non-GMO tidal wave.

About 28 million health-conscious Americans regularly buy organic. About 87 million are strongly opposed to GM foods and believe they are unsafe. And 159 million say they would avoid GMOs if labeled. While most people do not conscientiously avoid brands with GM ingredients, its usually because they don't know how. That's where our Non-GMO Shopping Guide comes in—disseminated far and wide in 2010.

Vosburgh says that in the food industry, culprits "can even define the decade in which they were topical. In the '80s, it was fat; in the '90s, it was carbs." We won't need a full decade to send GMOs packing. Although I can't forecast the exact timing, I'll wager one prediction. By this time next year, Monsanto—the largest GMO producer—is not going to be happy.


International bestselling author and filmmaker Jeffrey M. Smith is the executive director of the Institute for Responsible Technology and the leading spokesperson on the health dangers of GMOs. His first book, Seeds of Deception, is the world's bestselling and #1 rated book on the subject. His second, Genetic Roulette, documents 65 health risks of the GM foods Americans eat everyday.

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