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Organics not safer

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    Organics not safer

    http://www.producer.com/2012/01/organic-food-not-safer-than-conventional/

    The term organic has exploded in the last decade in our privileged and health-conscious first world state.

    In fact, the global organic industry is now a $50 billion a year industry.

    The Canadian arm of this industry, through a six-page “information feature” in the Oct. 14 issue of the Globe and Mail, leveraged that market power and made several assertions that are incorrect and misleading about modern agricultural practice.

    First, the assumption that organic production does not use toxic chemical pesticides or antibiotics is misleading.

    The organics industry endorses the use of copper and sulfur compounds in its applications. Deemed natural, both of these products are toxic to a broad range of organisms and are long-term soil and environmental contaminants. As well, they are applied at significantly higher rates than synthetic fungicides.

    Antibiotics, such as streptomycin and tetracycline, have been used in organic production of orchard crops such as apples for years in the United States.

    Antibiotic use is restricted in organic animal production in Canada but can be used when the animal’s life is in jeopardy. In fact, producers are required to do so. No animals with antibiotic residues above a low maximum tolerable level are allowed to be used as food animals, so antibiotics should not be present in the flesh and products of treated animals.

    In the case where hormones are used, they essentially cannot be present at levels above those which naturally occur.

    Second, a mainstay of organic food propaganda is the insinuation that conventionally grown food or production methods that employ genetically modified crops are unsafe.

    Findings in the 2010 A Decade of EU-Funded GMO Research report, which was commissioned by the European Commission, did not indicate any increased risk from growing GM crops nor any evidence of risk from consuming food containing GM ingredients.

    This does not mean there are no risks because no food is 100 percent safe. Earlier this year, 60 people died and more than 3,000 fell ill after eating organic bean sprouts in the European Union.

    It is important to note that organic production methods endorse the use of animal manure as fertilizer for food crops. This “natural” fecal matter is a huge breeding ground for nasty bacteria like salmonella, C. difficile and E.coli.

    This leads us to a third myth that organically grown food is the healthier option.

    There is no evidence to suggest that organic food is any healthier than conventionally grown food or food containing GM ingredients.

    Studies conducted in 2009 and 2010 did not find any consistent nutritional benefits in organic food when compared with conventionally grown food.

    No jurisdiction, whether it is the British Food Standards Agency, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, Food Standards-Australia New Zealand or Health Canada, permits superior health claims for organic food because there is no scientifically accepted evidence to support them.

    The organics industry used the Globe and Mail to launch a creative publicity campaign. It was, essentially, a paid news release meant to generate media attention, which may be readily interpreted by the average consumer as a legitimate journalistic piece.

    However, it was really a six-page cluster of misleading information supported by flawed research that disparaged conventional and other agricultural practices.

    We cannot continue to assume that organic is the more superior food choice or agricultural practice. The process of bringing food from the farm to the fork is more complex than that.

    Ryan is a research associate with the University of Saskatchewan’s College of Agriculture and Bioresources. Wager is a laboratory demonstrator at Vancouver Island University’s biology department.

    #2
    https://twitter.com/#!/DocCamiRyan

    Comment


      #3
      Organics began with a handful of buyers. Then a
      store full. Then a city full. We spread from state,
      to state, to province, and then from country to
      country, uniting willing consumers and willing
      farmers. And willing retailers. Why?

      My twin neighbours, both farmers, developed
      celiac disease, suffering frightful pain and
      discomfort.

      There Is a growing trend of food allergies. An
      epidemic of celiac disease. And developed
      countries are the hotspots. Did you know?

      So, as farmers, some of you won't care. Some of
      you will blame muskrats or clouds or viruses or
      whatever you can blame. Some of you will try to
      eliminate organic farmers entirelly to eliminate an
      alternate market.

      But you have to face the problem that is in your
      face. You are losing market share. Consumers
      increasingly buy alternate foods because some
      traditional grains like wheat are making them sick.
      Some consumers get violently ill from pesticides.
      some people are allergic to farm chemicals.

      If you are interested in being a food producer, you
      might want to ask why people in well off nations
      get so sick from wheat while Third world countries
      don't .

      No matter how some paidgun scientist/PR guru
      tries to spin it, increasingly modifying food will
      increase the number of sick-eaters. Increasing the
      quantity and frequency of chemical and pesticide
      application will increase the number of sick-
      eaters.
      I don't need to wait on a forty year scientific
      experiment to verify a reasonable deducation
      when the risk being contemplated is unnecessary.
      Parsley

      Comment


        #4
        You might want to read comments by a
        Saskatchewan farmer who was instrumental in
        putting legs on the the canola industry And when
        you do, make sure that you understand that
        everyday health as well as genetic heath is the
        most important issue you will ever influence. And
        as a food producer, you will affect each and every
        generation who eats.

        http://www.wheatbellyblog.com/2012/01/a-wheat-
        farmer-weighs-in-on-wheat-belly/#comments

        Comment


          #5
          My take on how your industry comes across.

          People become sick as conventional eaters. They then perish as organic eaters.

          Comment


            #6
            Not organics but got this link emailed to me by a
            beef customer today. I think it fits parsleys assertion
            that increasingly modifying food will increase the
            number of sick-eaters.

            http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2012/0
            1/the-very-real-danger-of-genetically-modified-
            foods/251051/#.TwxSmeAfNtM.mailto

            Comment


              #7
              Or try this link instead.

              http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2012/0
              1/the-very-real-danger-of-genetically-modified-
              foods/251051/

              Comment


                #8
                The good thing is you have no obligation to buy.
                As I said before, consumers and growers willingly
                do business. And thus far, we gradually attract
                more growers and more eaters. Symbioticsm.

                Organics will probably re-morph into the
                traditional farm run system, where it began. More
                direct selling than ever. Food will become very
                important; security-wise, local, taste, nutritionally,
                traditional and healthy.

                Specialty grains are in demand. Tastes have
                become more continental, and available.

                Cover your head with your pillow and snore
                loudly. That way you can at least immune yourself
                from voice media who discuss Wheat Belly. And
                organics. Parsley

                Comment


                  #9
                  Yes, grassy , it is reasonable to assume that
                  changing or modifying the basic building blocks in
                  a grain we have eaten for years, or process it in a
                  way that changes it greatly, or treats it with
                  chocolate spray, will cause a stomach ache in
                  some people.

                  Are beef farm sales growing for you? I found this
                  store in regina that sells home grown pork. smells
                  sweet. No lumps in the flesh. Consistent. Hard to
                  find that smell. Pars.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    I'll bite.

                    Does a celiac feel ok after eating organic wheat?

                    Comment


                      #11
                      sliverback: Organic or orgasmic wheat or regular wheat has gluten which can't be tolerated by celiacs so there is no difference as to how they feel after ingesting it. I can tolerate some gluten but not too much or I get diarrhea. Products using rice flour are okay.

                      I doubt that ANY organic farmer claims that his organically grown wheat can be tolerated by those suffering from celiac disease.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Parsely, canola isn't healthy, we just keep saying it is. Its healthier than butter yes, but it still is just fat that comes in a bottle instead of a stick. I think we forget that too easily.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          There is no way canola is healthier than butter,minus
                          possible biomagnification problems.

                          A price will have to be paid one way or another for
                          the chemicals we use.

                          One dumb question.

                          Every once in a while i hear about vegetable seeds
                          that we buy for our gardens being genetically
                          modified and that their next generation of seeds
                          won't grow well or they terminate all together.

                          Is this true?

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Technically everything we grow is organic.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              I'll poke the bruin.

                              Organics are not an industry, they are a religion. Governed by superstition and myth. The religion will fill you full of anecdotal stories about the horrors hidden in non-organic food, but when the myths are tested they always turn out to be just that, myths.

                              High priestess..err...I mean Parsey, where is the replicable evidence for these outlandish organic gospels?

                              Comment

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