It’s All About the Truth About the Technology

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Il governo federale prevede di spendere $3 milioni nei prossimi mesi per educare il pubblico sui cibi che includono ingredienti geneticamente modificati.

Buried like a kernel of corn in a big grain silo, the new program is a part of the trillion-dollar budget bill Congress approved last week to keep the government running through September.

The idea behind this small endeavor is to close the gap between the scientific consensus on the benefits of GMOs and ongoing public skepticism. Due anni fa, a Pew Research Center survey found that although 88 percent of the members of the American Association for the Advancement of Science regarded GMO crops/food as “safe to eat,” only 37 percent of the general public agreed.

That’s a 51-point difference—a yawning chasm between truth and myth.

The budget deal now tasks the Food and Drug Administration with “consumer outreach and education regarding agricultural biotechnology” by touting “the environmental, nutritional, la sicurezza alimentare, economico, and humanitarian impacts” of GMO crops and the food they make, according to a report in The Washington Post.

That shouldn’t be too hard to do. The facts are clear and compelling: GMOs are an essential part of agricultural sustainability, allowing farmers to grow more food on less land in ways that are safe for people and the environment as well as economically sensible for farmers and consumers.

In Aprile, più di 50 farm and food groups sent a letter to Congress, urging the program’s adoption to fight “a tremendous amount of misinformation about agricultural biotechnology in the public domain.”

(AP Photo/Mark Collier)

They’re right about the propaganda: Professional protestors routinely spread lies about GMOs. Their agendas have nothing to do with science or safety and everything to do with an ideological hostility to capitalism and mainstream agriculture.

Negli ultimi due decenni, GMO technology have become wildly popular among farmers, from corn growers in Iowa to cotton growers in India. Nel 2016, farmers around the world chose to plant more than 185 million hectares of biotech crops, according to a report issued last week by the International Service for the Acquisition of Agri-biotech Applications (Ishaaa).

That’s more square mileage than there is in the entire state of Alaska—quite a bit more, infatti.

So GMOs are now a major part of ordinary agriculture. Senza di loro, we’d have less food on our plates and it would cost more.

The enemies of biotechnology used to argue the GMO food should be labeled. I always thought this was a little silly, given that the FDA already enforces an excellent set of food-labeling rules and that there’s no reason to warn consumers away from a safe option.

Oggi, tuttavia, the critics can’t even make this complaint: L'anno scorso, a bipartisan majority in Congress approved a law to create a tech-savvy disclosure system to inform consumers about GMO ingredients. Allo stesso tempo, more and more food companies voluntarily label their GMO products. You can find their statements on boxes of Cheerios cereal, Sara Lee brownie mixes, e molto altro ancora.

The makers of these products use these labels for a simple reason: The truth is nothing to fear. GMOs are not merely safe to eat but positively beneficial for the environment and the economy.

Critics of the FDA’s new GMO outreach program have tried to portray it as an unprecedented sellout to food companies. This is ridiculous. Gli Stati Uniti. Department of Agriculture already sponsors a public-education initiative called “Know Your Farmer, Know the Facts.” Around the country, public universities have launched their own campaigns to explain the science behind our agriculture. These are public services with widespread benefits.

I’m open to the argument that there might be better uses for $3 milione, such as investing it in seed research or reducing our federal budget deficit.

Comunque, the money will go to a worthy cause. It will address the very real problem that not enough Americans understand what GMOs are, why farmers choose them, and why they’re safe to eat.

In altre parole, it will seek to tell the truth about our technology.

Joanna Lidback
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Joanna Lidback

Joanna Lidback si offre volontaria come membro del consiglio di amministrazione del Global Farmer Network, ed è stato riconosciuto dal GFN come a 2021 Kleckner Award per il destinatario del premio Global Farm Leadership. Lei è un allevatore, un Chief Financial Officer, un consulente aziendale, una mamma, e una moglie. Joanna e suo marito possiedono e gestiscono la fattoria a Wheeler Mountain nel Regno nord-orientale del Vermont, Stati Uniti d'America. È una mandria di 80 vacche di Holstein e Jerseys, dove allevano anche i propri sostituti e hanno un piccolo allevamento di bovini da carne. Joanna è CFO presso ADK Farms, dove si prendono cura di tutto 7,500 vacche da latte e steward 8,000 Acri di terra. È anche la principale consulente di Adirondack Management Services, istruire 10 altri allevamenti verso il raggiungimento dei propri obiettivi.

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