How about a thread about marketing. Article from The New Yorker about a large scale fraud in the US organic Grain market. It can best be summed up by the following statement from the article.
In 2016, when the entire organic-corn output of Missouri and Nebraska was about 2.4 million bushels, Constant sold 1.8 million bushels of supposedly organic corn. His corn output that year represented about seven per cent of the national organic crop. His soybean sales represented eight per cent.
So if one crook could single-handedly pass off that much grain as organic, for that many years, and the end users and regulators legal system almost turned a blind eye to it for many years, makes one wonder how much of the entire supply maybe suspect.
This is probably the closest to a victimless crime as there could be. The only actual victims would be the honest hard-working organic farmers who had to compete against these criminals. But as the article points out, other than the GMO, the organic products were indistinguishable from their conventional counterparts, so it is a stretch to consider them to be a victim. I'm sure that processors and end users we're just grateful to find gold mine of supply in an otherwise very tight market.
In 2016, when the entire organic-corn output of Missouri and Nebraska was about 2.4 million bushels, Constant sold 1.8 million bushels of supposedly organic corn. His corn output that year represented about seven per cent of the national organic crop. His soybean sales represented eight per cent.
So if one crook could single-handedly pass off that much grain as organic, for that many years, and the end users and regulators legal system almost turned a blind eye to it for many years, makes one wonder how much of the entire supply maybe suspect.
This is probably the closest to a victimless crime as there could be. The only actual victims would be the honest hard-working organic farmers who had to compete against these criminals. But as the article points out, other than the GMO, the organic products were indistinguishable from their conventional counterparts, so it is a stretch to consider them to be a victim. I'm sure that processors and end users we're just grateful to find gold mine of supply in an otherwise very tight market.
Comment