By John Stossel
Wednesday, May 28, 2014
It's easy to scare people about what's in their food, but
the danger is almost never real. And the fear itself kills.
Take the panic over genetically modified organisms, or
GMOs. Ninety percent of all corn grown in America is genetically modified now.
That means it grew from a seed that scientists altered by playing with its
genes. The new genes may make corn grow faster, or they may make it less
appetizing to bugs so farmers can use fewer pesticides.
This upsets some people. GMOs are "unnatural,"
they say. A scene from the movie "Seeds of Death" warns that eating
GMOs "causes holes in the GI tract" and "causes multiple organ
system failure."
The restaurant chain Chipotle, which prides itself on
using organic ingredients, produces videos suggesting that industrial
agriculture is evil, including a comedic Web series called "Farmed and
Dangerous" about an evil agricultural feed company that threatens to kill
its opponents and whose products cause cows to explode.
Michael Hansen of Consumer Reports sounds almost as
frightening when he talks about GMOs. On my show, he says, "It's called
insertional mutagenesis ... you can't control where you're inserting that
genetic information; it can have different effects depending on the
location."
Jon Entine of the Genetic Literacy Project responds:
"We've eaten about 7 trillion meals in the 18 years since GMOs first came
on the market. There's not one documented instance of someone getting so much
as a sniffle."
Given all the fear from media and activists, you might be
surprised to learn that most serious scientists agree with him. "There
have been about 2,000 studies," says Entine, and "there is no
evidence of human harm in a major peer-reviewed journal."
That might be enough to reassure people if they knew how
widespread and familiar GMOs really are -- but as long as they think of GMOs as
something strange and new, they think more tests are needed, more warnings,
more precaution.
Yet people don't panic over ruby red grapefruits, which
were first created in laboratories by bombarding strains of grapefruit with
radiation. People don't worry about corn and other crops bred in random
varieties for centuries without farmers having any idea exactly what genetic
changes occurred.
We didn't even know what genes were when we first created
new strains of plants and animals. There's no reason to believe modern methods
of altering genes are any more dangerous.
In fact, because they're far more precise, they're safer.
And since genetic modification can make crops more
abundant and easier to grow, it makes food cheaper. That's especially good for
the poor. Another life-changer is a new strain of vitamin A-enriched rice that
has the potential to decrease the frequency of blindness that now afflicts
about a half-million people a year, mostly children.
But activists -- who tend to be rich and well-fed -- are
pressuring countries in Asia and Africa into rejecting GMO rice.
Crusades against food are endless. First Lady Michelle
Obama urges students to eat organic, even though that term has no real meaning
in science besides "partly composed of carbon."
My nonprofit for schoolteachers, Stossel in the
Classroom, offers free videos that introduce students to economics. This year,
we ran an essay contest inviting students to write on the topic "Food
Nannies: Who Decides What You Eat?"
I was happy to see that many students understood that
this debate is about more than safety. It's really about freedom.
Sixteen-year-old Caroline Clausen won $1,000 for her essay, which contained
this sarcastic passage: "Congress shall have the power to regulate the
mixing, baking, serving, labeling, selling and consumption of food. Did James
Madison's secretary forget to copy this provision into the Constitution?"
Rising generations will have more food options than ever
before. They face less risk of starvation or disease than any humans who have
ever lived. Let's give them science instead of scare stories.
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