Perhaps nothing symbolizes the decline of the New Yorker magazine more 
than the hatchet job on Vandana Shiva that appears in the latest issue. 
Written by Michael Specter, the author of “Denialism: How Irrational 
Thinking Hinders Scientific Progress”, the article is a meretricious 
defense of genetically modified organisms (GMO) relying on one dodgy 
source after another. This is the same magazine whose reputation was at 
its apex when Rachel Carson’s groundbreaking articles on DDT appeared in 
1962. If DDT was once a symbol of the destructive power of chemicals on 
the environment, GMO amounts to one of the biggest threats to food 
production today. It threatens to enrich powerful multinational 
corporations while turning farmers into indentured servants through the 
use of patented seeds. Furthermore, it threatens to unleash potentially 
calamitous results in farmlands through unintended mutations.

Specter represents himself as a defender of science against irrational 
thinking. Since many activists regard Vandana Shiva as grounded in 
science, it is essential that he discredit her. For example, he mentions 
a book jacket that refers to her as “one of India’s leading physicists”. 
But when he asked her if she ever worked as a physicist, she invited him 
to “search for the answer on Google”. He asserts that he found nothing 
and furthermore that no such position was listed in her biography. Not 
that I would ever take an inflated publicity blurb that seriously to 
begin with (having read one too many of those for Slavoj Žižek), I 
wondered what being a physicist would have to do with GMO in the first 
place. Is a degree in particle physics necessary for understanding the 
transformation of vast portions of the Gulf of Mexico into a dead zone 
because of fertilizer-enriched algae?

full: http://www.counterpunch.org/2014/08/22/gunning-for-vandana-shiva/
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