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Jim Hightower
Otherwords / Op-Ed
Published: Monday 4 June 2012
“We need non-chemical, sustainable systems that work with nature and without genetically altered crops.”

Mother Nature Doesn’t Quit

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Rather than find ways to cooperate with the natural world, America's agribusiness giants reach for the next quick fix in a futile effort to overpower nature. Their attitude is that if brute force isn't working, they're probably not using enough of it.

Monsanto, for example, has banked a fortune by selling a corn seed that it genetically manipulated to produce corn plants that won't die when sprayed with the Roundup toxic weedkiller. Not coincidentally, Monsanto also happens to manufacture Roundup. It profits from the seed and from the huge jump in Roundup sales that the seed generates. Slick.

But Mother Nature, darn it, has rebelled. So much of Monsanto's poison was spread in the past decade that weeds naturally began to resist it. As a Dow Chemical agronomist explained, "The real need here is to diversify our weed management systems."

Exactly right! We need non-chemical, sustainable systems that work with nature and without genetically altered crops.

But, no, the Dow man didn't mean that at all. He was calling for more brute force in the form of Dow's new genetically altered corn seed that can absorb Dow's super-potent 2,4-D weedkiller, which it markets under the "Enlist" brand name. Use this stuff, he says, and nature will be defeated.

Wrong. Nature doesn't quit. The weeds will keep evolving and will adapt to Dow's high-tech fix, too. By pushing the same old thing relentlessly, says an independent crop scientist, agribusiness interests "ratchet up [America's] dependence on the use of herbicides, which is very much a treadmill."

It's time to start listening to the weeds — and cooperating with Mother Nature. To advance this common sense approach, a national coalition is backing a California "Right to Know" initiative requiring the labeling of genetically altered foods. To help, go to the Organic Consumers Association at www.OrganicConsumers.org.



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ABOUT Jim Hightower
National radio commentator, writer, public speaker, and author of the book, Swim Against The Current: Even A Dead Fish Can Go With The Flow, Jim Hightower has spent three decades battling the Powers That Be on behalf of the Powers That Ought To Be - consumers, working families, environmentalists, small businesses, and just-plain-folks.

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5 comments on "Mother Nature Doesn’t Quit"

anono

June 04, 2012 5:52pm

Control the food supply and rule the world with god like powers. That's the name of game here. It's not about feeding people. It's about subjegating them. Enslaving them to the wall street beast.

to the tune of Let it Snow:

If your tomatos tastin' fishy
and your popcorn smells like a salamander
there just on thing you should know
It's GMO, GMO, GMO

Bernie Mooney

June 04, 2012 6:54pm

You're not very smart, are you? What are you ten years old? Stop being a a dope and look at the science of agriculture. All of it, conventional, organic and GMO. They all have a role to play.

Bernie Mooney

June 04, 2012 2:55pm

While I hate Monsanto, you guys really have to learn the real scientific facts about GMOs, especially you, Mr. Hightower. I've always respected you and hate that you have fallen into the anti-GMO nonsense. GMOs aren't the answer, but merely a tool to help feed the world. Monsanto didn't invent GMO, they use it. Instead of relying on misinformation about GMOs you should seek out the actual science. All the "evidence" anti-GMO people keep repeating is of discredited studies or outright lies. If organic consumers are so so worried about their food, they might want to support random field testing of organic crops. While Organic producers are buried under a mound of paperwork, they are on the honor system. There is no oversight that they are following accepted organic practices. The organic industry is against random field testing. Why? I get very disheartened that the left is subject to the same confirmation biases of the right. You believe the scientists when they talk climate change, but not when they talk about the safety of GMOs. While corporate dominance of our food supply is a legitimate concern, opposing a technology because corporations use it is wrong-headed.

Riconui

June 04, 2012 2:02pm

Outsmart nature?! DEFEAT nature??? Where did these yahoos go to school? Is it going to take a Constitutional amendment to bring an end to the attempts to privatize the seed supply or build more choke points into the system? Just more of conservatives agenda of controlling EVERYTHING.

Ronni85

June 04, 2012 1:58pm

Our government doesn't have the balls to stand up to Monsanto/Dow and their poisons.
Unfortunately, their poisons also work on humans.
How come nations much smaller, poorer, will outlaw Monsanto/Dow products, but we won't?
A few individual states will ban Monsanto/Dow, but "our" government won't.