Saturday, July 27, 2013

State Labeling Law


State Labeling Laws: The 'skull and crossbones' that terrify Monsanto

Monsanto's greatest fear isn't a federal government charged with protecting the health and safety of its citizens. Congress and the White House seem only too happy to oblige the biotech industry's unquenchable thirst for growth, power and dominance. No, it's the massive, unstoppable (so far) grassroots movement of Millions Against Monsanto that strikes fear in the heart of the Biotech Bully. U.S. citizens are waking up. They're demanding labels on genetically engineered foods, similar to those already required in the European Union. They're calling for serious independent safety-testing of GE crops and animals, both those already approved (especially Monsanto's Roundup-resistant crops) and those awaiting approval.

The anti-GMO movement has finally figured out, after 20 years of fruitlessly lobbying Congress, the FDA and the White House, that the federal government is not going to require labels on GE foods. Instead the movement has shifted the battleground on GMO labeling from Monsanto and Big Food's turf in Washington D.C. to the more favorable terrain of state ballot initiatives and state legislative action - publicizing the fact that a state GMO labeling law will have the same marketplace impact as a national labeling law.

State laws spell doom for Monsanto. Companies like Kellogg's, General Mills, Coca-Cola, Pepsi/Frito-Lay, Dean Foods, Unilever, Con-Agra, Safeway, Wal-Mart and Smuckers are not going to label in just one or two states. Monsanto knows that U.S. food companies will go GMO-free in the entire U.S., rather than admit to consumers that their products contain GMOs.

As Monsanto itself has pointed out, labels on genetically engineered foods are like putting a "skull and crossbones" on food packages. This is why Monsanto and their allies poured $46 million into defeating a California ballot initiative last year that would have required labels on GMO foods. This is why Monsanto has lobbied strenuously in 30 states this year to prevent, or at least delay, state mandatory labeling laws from being passed. This is why Monsanto has threatened to file federal lawsuits against Vermont, Connecticut, Maine and Washington if they dare grant citizens the right to know whether or not their food has been genetically engineered or not.

And this is why Monsanto's minions are trying to insert amendments or riders into the Farm Bill that will make it nearly impossible, even illegal, for states to pass GMO labeling laws. And there's nothing to stop them when Congress is filled with pro-biotech cheerleaders who could care less that 90 percent of U.S. consumers want mandatory labels and proper safety testing of genetically engineered crops and foods.

Learn more: http://www.naturalnews.com/040413_Monsanto_states_rights_GMO_labeling.html#ixzz2a7RtCe9Q

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