Jeffrey has lived in FF for many years.

 

U.S. activist circles globe to fight biotech crops

Reuters
Mar 7, 2008
By Carey Gillam

KANSAS CITY, Missouri (Reuters) - Jeffrey Smith is a man on a mission.

Each day, ever day for the last 12 years, the 49-year-old Smith has made it
his personal calling to travel the world preaching against genetically
modified crops.

>From Poland to Brazil and California to Vermont, Smith has crisscrossed more
than two dozen countries to preach to physician groups, regulators,
political leaders, and consumer groups that gene-altered corn, soybeans,
canola and other crops, when included in human food, can cause a range of
serious health problems.

"GMOs have been linked to thousands of toxic and allergic-type reactions,
thousands of sick, sterile and dead livestock and damage to virtually every
organ and system studied in lab animals," said Smith, who has authored two
books on the topic.

The New York native, who worked as a marketing consultant before turning
activist, sees what he calls small victories all around him, including
recent moves by major dairy companies and retailers to shun products derived
from cows given biotech supplements, efforts by various U.S. states and
local governments to restrict biotech crops, and wholesale bans on biotech
crops in several foreign countries.

This summer, Smith and a consortium of U.S. organic food company players who
see him as a champion for their interests are rolling out a U.S. marketing
strategy aimed at convincing consumers in this generally GMO-friendly
country to shun foods containing genetically altered ingredients.

"Jeffrey is respected as a public educator on GMOs and a person who is
interested in aggressively spreading the word," said Organic Consumers
Association national director Ronnie Cummins.

Smith, who has replanted himself in Iowa, the largest U.S. corn-growing
state, is discounted as misinformed and misleading by supporters of
biotechnology who say the safety of genetically engineered crops and food is
well established. Even some fellow biotech crop opponents question his
strategies.

"The whole message that Jeffrey Smith has - that these crops are unsafe -
there is no validity to that at all," said Mary Boote, executive director
for pro-biotech Truth About Trade and Technology. "Jeffrey Smith is
articulate and strong in his personal beliefs. But he has no science
background at all."

But funded by speaking fees, book sales and donations to his institute,
Smith plans to keep circling the globe. Data that shows increased plantings
of biotech crops around the world won't deter him, he says.

"If we can get millions of people choosing non-GMO products then the food
companies will see GM as a liability and remove them from their products,"
said Smith. "We're going for an industry-wide clean out of GMOs."

 


No virus found in this outgoing message.
Checked by AVG. 
Version: 7.5.518 / Virus Database: 269.21.7/1324 - Release Date: 3/10/2008
7:27 PM
 

Reply via email to