Source: organicconsumers.org 
 
 
For related articles and more information, please visit OCA's Genetic Engineering page, and our Millions Against Monsanto page. 
 
2014 is shaping up to be a decisive year for the future of food  and farming.  Grassroots activists are gearing up for new legislative  battles, including state GMO labeling laws and county bans on growing  genetically engineered crops. Meanwhile the multinational food  corporations last month raised the stakes in the ongoing David vs.  Goliath battle by petitioning the U.S. Food & Drug Administration (FDA) to allow companies to continue to label or market products that contain genetically modified organisms  (GMOs) as "natural." And all signs point to efforts by industry and the  FDA to float either voluntary, or watered-down mandatory GMO labeling  laws that would take away states’ rights to impose strict GMO labeling  laws, and also exempt a large percentage of GMO ingredients from  labeling. 
 
For more than two decades, Monsanto and Big Food have poisoned and profited with impunity, thanks to the FDA’s reckless 1992 dictate  that pesticide-drenched (Roundup-resistant) or insecticide-impregnated  (Bt-spliced) crops and foods are “safe and substantially equivalent” to  non-GE foods. Now, the Biotech Bullies and Junk Food  Giants are under siege by a well-informed and passionate grassroots  food movement that is determined to drastically reduce or eliminate the  market share of genetically engineered and chemically-intensive foods  and crops.  
 
Since natural health  and food activists discovered the “Achilles Heel” of the GMA and  processed junk food industries—mandatory labeling—there has been no  stopping this movement. Over the past several years, this movement has  painstakingly built a broad national coalition to demand laws requiring  mandatory labeling of foods containing genetically engineered  ingredients, the same types of laws that have been passed in the  European Union and scores of other nations. Food activists, bolstered by  a growing number of successful class action lawsuits, are also  demanding that food manufacturers and retailers put an end to the  routine industry practice of fraudulently labeling or marketing products  contaminated with GMOs and other chemicals as “natural” or “all  natural.” 
 
In the past two years, citizen activists in 30 states have pressured  legislators to pass mandatory GMO labeling laws, with partial success in  three states: Vermont, Connecticut and Maine. Anti-GMO campaigners  boldly challenged the mega-billion-dollar biotech and Big Food  establishment in 2012 in California (Proposition 37) and 2013 in  Washington State (I-522) by launching state GMO labeling initiatives.  Pro-organic and natural health activists raised a multi-million dollar  war chest and mobilized millions of voters in two hard-fought and highly  publicized campaigns that industry barely won (51%-49%).  Both  initiatives garnered national attention. Combined, they forced the  biotech and food elite to spend $70 million ($12 million of which was illegally laundered  in Washington state through their front group, the Grocery  Manufacturers Association) and wage a blatantly dishonest campaign that  ultimately divided the industry and damaged the reputations  and sales of a number of national brands, including Coca-Cola (Honest  Tea and Odwalla); Pepsico (Naked Juice); General Mills (Cascadian Farm  and Muir Glen); Unilever (Ben & Jerry’s); Dean Foods (Horizon, Silk,  White Wave); Heinz (Heinz Organic), Nestle’s, and Kellogg’s (Kashi,  Morningstar Farms, Gardenburger).  
 
Meanwhile, inspired in part by this anti-GMO grassroots upsurge, over 100 class action lawsuits  have been filed across the U.S., charging major food corporations with  labeling fraud for labeling or marketing GMO-tainted or chemically  processed foods and cooking oils as “natural” or “all natural.”  Rather  than admit that much of their product lines are junk foods filled with  synthetic chemicals and GMOs, and that nearly the entire $70-billion  “natural” products industry is based on fraud and deception (i.e.  misleading health minded consumers into believing that unregulated,  non-certified “natural” products are “nearly organic,”), large companies  such as Pepsi, General Mills, Kellogg’s and Con-Agra, and specialty  brands such as Chabani and Barbara’s will likely pay out millions of  dollars in out-of-court settlements this year while quietly removing  “natural” and “all natural” labels from their non-organic products. 
 
GMO labeling laws are the cornerstone of the anti-GMO movement. But  consumers are also expanding the fight by demanding outright bans on the  growing of GMO crops. A number of counties in California, Washington  and Hawaii have already passed bans, while a half dozen others,  including counties in Oregon and California, will vote to create  GMO-free zones in 2014. 
 
 
                                              
Beyond “Exemptions:” Comprehensive Labeling
 
In a bizarre but effective propaganda move, polls reveal that Monsanto  and the Grocery Manufacturers Association (GMA) bamboozled millions of  voters into voting “no” on mandatory GMO food labeling initiatives in  California and Washington by pretending to take the side of consumers.  How? By pointing out that these ballot initiatives failed to require GMO  labels on restaurant, cafeteria and take-out food, and on meat and  animal products. During the California and Washington campaigns,  industry hammered home its message that the proposed initiatives were  “incomplete,” “confusing,” “expensive” and riddled with “loopholes” that  somehow benefitted nefarious “special interests.” In fact, consumers  would have preferred a more comprehensive law, with no exemptions. But  state laws mandate single-subject or limited provision language, and  federal law preempts mandatory state labels on meat packages (though not  on grocery store shelves, or on meat and dairy cases).  
 
In the wake of Monsanto and the GMA successfully sowing confusion over  GMO labeling “exemptions,” a growing number of activists have decided to  call industry’s bluff by upping the ante. Future plans include pushing  not only for GMO food labeling laws, but for all-inclusive food labeling  legislation that will require restaurants, schools and grocery stores  to label not just foods that contain GMO ingredients, but also foods  from factory farms where animals are fed GMO-contaminated feed.  
 
As Alexis Baden-Meyer, Political Director of the Organic Consumers Association puts it:  
 
 
                          
“Tens of millions of Americans want to  know if the food they buy contains genetically engineered ingredients.  They want to know whether the meat, fish and animal products they  consume come from animals reared on factory farms or CAFO’s (Confined  Animal Feeding Operations), where the animals are inhumanely confined,  routinely fed genetically engineered grain, injected with synthetic  hormones, engorged with growth promoters and dosed with antibiotics.  Concerned consumers want and need this information whether they are  shopping in a grocery store, sitting down in a restaurant or worrying  about what their kids are eating in the school cafeteria. After we win  the upcoming strategic battles over GMO food labeling in Vermont and  Oregon, organic consumers and our allies will push for comprehensive  factory farm labels as well.” 
 
 
 
                
Industry’s Next Move: Co-Opting the Right-to-Know Movement
 
Industry sees the writing on the wall. As the head of the GMA admitted  last year “we can’t keep fighting these labeling battles in every  state.” Monsanto, Bayer and their allies such as General Mills,  Coca-Cola and Pepsi know that in 2014, several states including Vermont  and Oregon will likely pass mandatory GMO food labeling laws, while a  flood of successful class action  lawsuits will highlight the fact that major brands are fraudulently  labeling their GMO and chemically-tainted junk foods and beverages as  “natural” or all natural.  
 
Once a greater degree of labeling transparency is required by law, even if in just a handful of states, leading food manufacturers  will find themselves in a terrible bind. Will Kellogg’s or Coke admit  that their products contain GMOs in Vermont or Oregon, while refusing to  divulge this fact in the other 48 states, Canada and Mexico? Or will  they be forced to do what they’ve already done in the EU, take these  GMOs out of their products? Similarly if they can’t label their junk  foods as “natural” or “all natural,” how will they successfully compete  in the marketplace? 
 
Backed into a corner by the anti-GMO movement, industry has come out fighting. The GMA has called on  the Obama Administration and the FDA to bail out Big Food. If  grassroots-powered state laws and class action judges will no longer  permit the biotech and food industry to secretly tamper with non-organic  food and then fraudulently label these products as “natural,” then  industry wants the federal government to take away states’ power to  require GMO labeling, and at the same time, take away the judiciary’s  power to rule on fraudulently labeled “natural” products. 
 
Leaked documents obtained by the      New York Times reveal that the  GMA is lobbying the FDA to allow the use of “natural” on food labels  even if the products contain GMOs. As Times writer Stephanie Strom  reported on Dec. 19: 
 
 
                               
“Use of the term "natural" is now  generating battles similar to previous fights over terms like organic,  amid initiatives in several states that seek to label foods in a more  transparent way. Last summer, Connecticut passed legislation on labeling  that would make it illegal to use the word "natural" on the packaging  of any food product containing biotech ingredients, and the governor  signed it on Dec. 11.” 
 
 
At the same time former USDA officials Dan Glickman and Kathleen  Merrigan are floating the idea that certain members of the organic elite  might be persuaded to back off on the demand for strict GMO labeling if  certified organic products are allowed to state on their labels that  they are “GMO-free.” As Glickman and Merrigan told the      LA Times:  
 
 
                     
“Mandatory GMO labeling of all food will  continue to arouse passions on both sides of the issue. Though it may  not satisfy all GMO-labeling advocates nor be welcomed by all leaders in  the biotechnology industry, allowing a GMO-free organic label provides  more choice in the marketplace and responds to the demands of millions  of American consumers in a practical and common sense way.” 
 
 
Meanwhile informed sources in the organic industry are warning that the  FDA might be preparing to propose a watered-down federal GMO labeling  law designed to co-opt the organic and anti-GMO Movement and take away  states’ rights to pass stricter labeling laws covering all genetically  engineered ingredients basically nullifying laws now under consideration  in Vermont, Oregon and several dozen other states.  
 
This strategy would involve the FDA allowing foods made from highly  processed GE ingredients, such as cooking oils, high fructose corn syrup  and sugar beets, that contain no easily detectable GE proteins down to a  specified level to be labeled "natural”; and certified organic foods to  be labeled as “GMO-free.” Under this strategy, labels would be required  on only those foods that contain readily detectable GMO proteins, as  determined by standardized tests. In other words a large percentage of  GMO-tainted foods would still not have to be labeled. 
  
So as we near victory on the GMO labeling front in Vermont and Oregon,  and in class-action lawsuits this year, we must beware FDA treachery and  the willingness of some in the organic and so-called “natural” industry  to sell us out. If the FDA proposes a watered-down federal GMO labeling  bill, or a rubber-stamp for the fraudulent industry practice of  labeling GMO-tainted foods as “natural” or “all natural,” we must raise  holy hell, and mobilize as never before. 
 
Either way 2014 is shaping up to be a make or break year for citizen  activism on the food and farming front, part of a larger battle that  will determine whether we, the grassroots majority, take back our  democracy, or surrender to the corporatocracy and their indentured  media, scientists and politicians.  
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