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scem0
Sep 20, 2005, 11:26 PM
The Organic Consumers Association (OCA) needs your immediate help to stop Congress and the Bush administration from seriously degrading organic standards. After 35 years of hard work, the U.S. organic community has built up a multi-billion dollar alternative to industrial agriculture, based upon strict organic standards and organic community control over modification to these standards.

Now, large corporations such as Kraft, Wal-Mart, & Dean Foods--aided and abetted by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) are moving to lower organic standards by allowing a Bush appointee to create a list of synthetic ingredients that would be allowed organic production. Even worse these proposed regulatory changes will reduce future public discussion and input and take away the National Organic Standards Board's (NOSB) traditional lead jurisdiction in setting standards. What this means, in blunt terms. is that USDA bureaucrats and industry lobbyists, not consumers, will now have more control over what can go into organic foods and products.

Tomorrow, Tuesday, Sept. 20, acting in haste and near-total secrecy, the U.S. Senate will vote on a "rider" to the 2006 Agriculture Appropriations Bill that will reduce control over organic standards from the National Standards Board and put this control in the hands of federal bureaucrats in the USDA (remember the USDA proposal in 1997-98 that said that genetic engineering, toxic sludge, and food irradiation would be OK on organic farms, or USDA suggestions in 2004 that heretofore banned pesticides, hormones, tainted feeds, and animal drugs would be OK?).

For the past week in Washington, OCA has been urging members of the Senate not to reopen and subvert the federal statute that governs U.S. Organic standards (the Organic Food Production Act - OFPA), but rather to let the organic community and the National Organic Standards resolve our differences over issues like synthetics and animal feed internally, and then proceed to a open public comment period. Unfortunately most Senators seem to be listening to industry lobbyists more closely than to us. We need to raise our voices.

In the past, grassroots mobilization and mass pressure by organic consumers have been able to stop the USDA and Congress from degrading organic standards. This time Washington insiders tell us that the "fix is is already in." So we must take decisive action now. We need you to call your U.S. Senators today. We need you to sign the following petition and send it to everyone you know. We also desperately need funds to head off this attack in the weeks and months to come. Thank you for your support. Together we will take back citizen control over organic standards and preserve organic integrity.

Take action here:
http://www.demaction.org/dia/organizations/oca/campaign.jsp?campaign_KEY=1242

Take action now at http://www.democracyinaction.org/oca/campaign.jsp?campaign_KEY=1242


We need to tell our Senators that we don't want major food corporations like Kraft and Wal-Mart determining what can go into organic products.

It doesn't take long to contact your senators, this is more important than one may think!

_Emerson



~loserman~
Sep 21, 2005, 12:02 AM
No offense intended here but I could care less.
If the food tastes good to me I'll eat. I don't care if the secret ingredient is dog sheet.

mactastic
Sep 21, 2005, 10:22 AM
I'm lucky to have plenty of organic stuff available around me. But, if the government guts these regulations (surprise surprise, favoring big business over the citizenry) there are still several organic standards that you can look for. It just won't show on all the big stuff, and stupid people will fall for the Kraft 'organic' velveeta, the same way they fall for the 'no-fat' (but 50 pounds of sugar) cookies.

Blue Velvet
Sep 21, 2005, 10:47 AM
No offense intended here but I could care less.
If the food tastes good to me I'll eat. I don't care if the secret ingredient is dog sheet.


And the exact point of your post is?

You're welcome to stuff your gob with whatever flavourings the chemical industry can concoct in their labs but don't be so dismissive towards organic food standards.

As part of a larger picture, this is pretty serious stuff as conglomerates slowly erode standards that are meant to protect consumers and suppliers, using lobbyists to push their agenda in the halls of power, watering down what should be iron-cast guarantees of food quality.

I occasionally buy certain organic foodstuffs... particularly bread, fruit and cereals.

Thanatoast
Sep 21, 2005, 04:17 PM
Hope you enjoy your dogsheet cookies ~loserman~, because that's what you'll be getting.

It's hard enough to find food that isn't actively bad for you. Now they gotta sell out the stuff specifically labeled to be good for you, too. Guess Kraft thought "organic" was too high-prestige a label to pass up.

Freakin' owned Senators.

pseudobrit
Sep 21, 2005, 07:32 PM
This is the agribiz giants' way of destroying an emerging market.

Small farmers are uniquely positioned to take advantage of the organics market.

By diluting the organic label, the ConAgras of the nation will either cash in on the market themselves or they'll destroy the market because people will know the label is worthless.

Monopoly 101

Lau
Sep 21, 2005, 07:57 PM
Thanks Emerson, I sent them an email.

It's quite right that these standards should be upheld. At the moment we still have the choice. Some make one choice, some make the other, but the point is, we have the choice and that should be protected.

Xtremehkr
Sep 21, 2005, 09:42 PM
This sucks. The whole I shop at Trader Joes is because they sell mostly organic food. Some of the fish is farm raised, but I avoid that stuff. And they have Weetbix, and Hemp Seed Granola.

Eh, this would be a mistake, it would be very difficult to sell American made organic products with such low standards.

highres
Sep 22, 2005, 02:13 AM
No offense intended here but I could care less.
If the food tastes good to me I'll eat. I don't care if the secret ingredient is dog sheet.

People that don't care about clean food, air and water are in serious denial and must like eating industrial pesticides, toxic waste (sold in fetilizer) and other goodies. Then they wonder why health insurance and health costs are so high in the US.

Along with GMF (genetically modified foods) this attack on Organics is the latest in a long line of attacks by companies like Monsanto, DuPont, etc. I am fortunate to live in a county that has the highest per capita of organic farmers in the US. We have been fighting big industry agri-business for decades.

Thanks for posting the email link.

scem0
Sep 22, 2005, 02:50 AM
phew... glad to see that I'm not the only one who cares :).

_Emerson

Abstract
Sep 22, 2005, 03:53 AM
People that don't care about clean food, air and water are in serious denial and must like eating industrial pesticides, toxic waste (sold in fetilizer) and other goodies. Then they wonder why health insurance and health costs are so high in the US.

That's not why I disagree with Loserman.

If I am paying for something that's labelled "Organic," I better be getting organic food. If I'm buying crap at McDicks, then that's what I'll get. However, at least I know what I'm getting.

Organic Foods have a very special definition, and that should be upheld. No artificial stuff. By making it easier for large corporations to call something organic will only result in higher prices for something that isn't organic at all. Pay more, but there's still crap in it.

I don't mind if people are happy with their food as long as it tastes good. I'm one of them. However, if the rest of the population pays more for organic food, that's what they should get in return. Otherwise it's just a big money-making sceme.

The UK is quite good with their organic foods. It was so easily accessible as well. The problem may be that money controls everything in the US, and so if a large corporation wants to sell non-organic foods with an "organic" label on it so that they can charge more money for it, then it's still okay. :rolleyes: