Saturday, October 20, 2012

Why Does Organic Food Matter?

Elizabeth Renter
Activist Post

As if most consumers weren’t confused enough already about making the “right” food choices, the pseudo-scientific Stanford study released early last month had many of those on the fence thinking it was okay to once-again blindly trust what they found on their supermarket shelves. But, let’s lay this argument to rest (again) and talk about why organics really do matter.

What does organic really mean? Well, the USDA certifies foods that are organic when the growers, handlers, and producers use practices that adhere to their standards. These standards vary by food product and the USDA certifier must inspect the farm before a food can be labeled as organic.

Generally, however, organic produce in particular is that which is produced “without using most conventional pesticides; fertilizers made with synthetic ingredients or sewage sludge; bioengineering; or ionizing radiation.” This immediately excludes genetically modified foods (GMOs).

So, what’s wrong with a few pesticides, a few lab-created organisms in our foods? Plenty.

A recent analysis (and not the only one) demonstrated that U.S. children have lost a combined total of 16 million I.Q. points due to pesticides in their food. While “pesticides make you stupid,” sounds like a silly argument for organics—it’s a legitimate one. Pesticides truly do lower the intelligence of children. These pesticides are absorbed when the child is in utero, through the mother. So, whether you are pregnant or hope one day to have children, cutting out pesticides now could save your child’s mind down the road.

One of the most prominently used herbicides, Monsanto’s Roundup, has been tied to numerous health problems including infertility, genetic damage, cancer, and plenty of other diseases and illnesses.


Finally, as if that isn’t enough, without organic certification, we can’t be sure the foods on U.S. supermarket shelves are free of GMOs. This is because the feds don’t think it’s in our best interest to know what we are eating. However, the issues related to GMO-consumption are coming to light—whether they like it or not.

Most recently, a French study has found rats who consume a lifelong diet of Roundup-ready GMO corn develop grotesque tumors which ultimately killed them. The rats consumed corn and Roundup-laced water at levels approved by the U.S. government. Around 50% of the males and 70% of the females died prematurely.

So, why does organic matter? It matters because unlike the federal government, we care about our health. We want to be informed and conscientious consumers. We want to support the farmers who are using good practices, and we’d like to give our children a healthy future.

So, despite what the bought-and-paid-for Stanford scientists might say, we know differently. We know that organic products are better and we see through their shoddy attempt at convincing us otherwise.

This article first appeared at Natural Society, an excellent resource for health news and vaccine information.


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11 comments:

Anonymous said...

organic food is potentially a good thing but for one big problem. They use animal waste as fertilizer and that waste/excrement is loaded with toxic substances from heavy metals but most importantly with veterinary drug residues. Chicken dung is absolutely weighed down with cardio-toxic veterinary antibiotic residues. These residues have been proven to be taken up by growing plants and are present at levels known to be cardio-toxic. The ionophores are a case in point. There is an "epidemic" of Atrial Fibrillation in the UK and possibly the USA and ionophore residue is known to induce atrial fibrillation. See the soil association report to the the British government "Too hard to Crack" - pdf, google it. This problem has been swept under the carpet - veterinary vaccines while only a few pence more than the cost of antibiotic treatments were rejected by the then new Labour government on cost grounds of only a few pence per treatment. But at what cost to peoples lives/health and the health care service? It is unimaginable.

Anonymous said...

just pay your taxes you serf!!! and keep you mouth closed.

Anonymous said...

The GMO thing on the ballot is now being spun as "do you really wish for this?" after all it's hard to change a law.

If I could vote, I would vote to ban all GMO's.

But that's not on the ballot.

I leave you with a small thought.

Look at Lance Armstrong, prosecuted for steroids. For YEARS they haranged this man. It's insane frankly.


I don't want organic farmers in good faith being destroyed the same. There's more thought here but I can't wrap it up. Maybe Infowars could do it?




Anonymous said...

The fucking WORDS to the laws are being changed on the fly is my point here.

Anonymous said...

Think about the fucking thing to legalize marijuana in california, it failed cause it wasn't "right"


I do not want GMO's in my fucking food. PERIOD

So fix the ballots before the vote.

Anonymous said...

it's all fucking fake and bullshit fuck voting, world view governance.

Anonymous said...


Anonymous said...

just pay your taxes you serf!!! and keep you mouth closed.
October 21, 2012 7:35 AM


Say that to my face bitch

Anonymous said...

The Stanford study, refered to in the article, has come into question because the researcher used a strain of rats prone to developing spontaneous tumors.

Anonymous said...

We must take charge of our own and our children's health ourselves, by making positive changes in our lifestyles. Only then can Big Ag be forced to change, or die.

Antony said...

Quite right about animal waste - that's why in Japan, where I live, organic crop farmers here only use animal waste from organic livestock farmers. They won't go near conventionally farmed livestock waste. This has been happening for at least 20 years, as far as I know. Makes sense.Organic farming should, if possible, be a local inclusive lifestyle where everyone is in the network. There are places like that in NE Thailand (A. Gutchum, Yasothon Province) where the organic union has their own rice mills, clinics, schools and so on. Also note that Bhutan, Sikkim and the Indian State of Kerala are working hard now on going 100% organic withing the next five years or so. That's how to do it.

Antony said...

Quite right about animal waste - that's why in Japan, where I live, organic crop farmers here only use animal waste from organic livestock farmers. They won't go near conventionally farmed livestock waste. This has been happening for at least 20 years, as far as I know. Makes sense.Organic farming should, if possible, be a local inclusive lifestyle where everyone is in the network. There are places like that in NE Thailand (A. Gutchum, Yasothon Province) where the organic union has their own rice mills, clinics, schools and so on. Also note that Bhutan, Sikkim and the Indian State of Kerala are working hard now on going 100% organic withing the next five years or so. That's how to do it.

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