Dispatches from the Codex Commission #4
Natural Solutions Foundation, Public Observer
Dispatches from Codex Commission Meeting
Dispatch No. 4 – 30 June 2008
Geneva, Switzerland
Earlier today Dr. Rima E. Laibow and Maj. Gen. Bert Stubblebine, our intrepid Natural Solutions Foundation trustees and Public Observers at the annual Codex Alimentarius (World Food Code) attended the first session of the Commission and filed a video report from the conference room at the UN conference center hosting the meeting.
Speaking truth to power…
You can see the videos at:
Part One:
Part Two:
July 2, 2008 update: Part three:
Please support our efforts at Codex with your generous, tax deductible donations:
http://drrimatruthreports.com/index.php?page_id=189
And to join the Health Freedom eAlert list:
http://drrimatruthreports.com/index.php?page_id=187
Dr. Laibow’s written blogs from the Codex meeting:
http://drrimatruthreports.com/?p=717
http://drrimatruthreports.com/?p=718
http://drrimatruthreports.com/?p=719
http://drrimatruthreports.com/index.php?p=721
Thank you,
Ralph Fucetola JD, Trustee
PS – Don’t forget, “We are more than just words…” Natural Solutions Foundation identifies the threats to your health and freedom and then we propose meaningful steps to have your voice heard — see: http://drrimatruthreports.com/?p=693
And we demonstrate natural solutions. See: http://www.naturalsolutionsfoundation.org
Natural Solutions Foundation, Public Observer
Dispatches from Codex Commission Meeting
Dispatch No. 2 – 28 June 2008
Geneva, Switzerland
You probably are familiar with the expression “To crash and burn”. Today was an example of “Burn and Crash” for us! We have certainly been burning the candle at both ends for many, many nights so, when we got to Geneva, we decided to allow ourselves the unaccustomed luxury of sleeping late – to 9 AM.
General Bert has an infallible internal alarm clock upon which we depend since, no matter what the time zone, he can decide to wake up at a particular time and then do it. Until today. When we woke up to the knock of the chamber maid, we looked at each other in something very much like shock – it was 4 PM! So much for the infallible alarm (of course, body time-wise we only overslept an hour!) At any rate, we went out in search of something to eat and then an internet cafe to check email, Skype and write this blog.
Like the UK, Switzerland serves meals at fixed hours and we were between them. The lovely restaurant we remembered from last time was only serving drinks so we went to a local chain of chicken restaurants which serves roasted chicken. Knowing that 60% of the animal feed used in the EU is genetically modified (making the meat or eggs or other food derived from its use as dangerous as any other genetically modified food) I was very uneasy about this option but there was little else.
Imagine my delight and surprise, then, to see the following, in English, on the English translation of the menu:
“Chicken Information – Our Chickens are fed with forage free from genetically modified food, anti microbial agents, animal protein and animal meal. They come exclusively from Swiss poultry productions, with very strict hygiene norms. Thus, our chickens are perfectly healthy and clean. We bake them during 60 minutes at 250 degrees (482 degrees F).”
That means that the owners of Chez de ma Cousine (My Cousin`s House) understands better than the US Government and Codex that GM food is not good for people and that people want to know what they are eating and that it is NOT genetically modified!
Codex Alimentarius, the International Food Code created by the United Nations at the request of the German Pharmaceutical companies after the 2nd Word War (see our DVD, “Nutricide” at www.HealthFreedomUSA.org for more of this very important story) controls the international trade of everything that can legally go into your mouth – except drugs.
See: US Bullies Health Conscious Nations at Codex Committee on Food Labeling Meeting… for the run up to this Codex Commission meeting:
http://drrimatruthreports.com/?p=683
Standards and guidelines are set which degrade food and increase the market share of the illness industry (remember who urged its creation?). The driving force at the Codex meetings is, sadly, the United States which comes to these meetings accompanied by delegation members who work for Big Pharma, Big Agribiz, Big Biotech, Big Chema and Big Medica. Using its considerable heft, the US bullies everyone there who does not want to go along with its commercialization of the food supply.
See our recent eAlert: Connecting the Deadly Dots
http://drrimatruthreports.com/?p=692
Learn more at www.HealthFreedomUSA.org and become a part of the push-back by joining the Natural Solutions Foundation`s distribution list for its free Health Freedom eAlerts (Ralph, put link in, please).
More tomorrow when I get up earlier!
Yours in health and freedom,
Dr. Rima
Rima E. Laibow, MD
Medical Director
Natural Solutions Foundation
www.HealthFreedomUSA.org
www.GlobalHealthFreedom.org
www.NaturalSolutionsFoundation.org
PS – In the meantime, here are some actions YOU can take to support Health Freedom:
Riding the Health Freedom Train
http://drrimatruthreports.com/?p=693
Natural Solutions Foundation, Public Observer
Dispatches from Codex Commission Meeting
Dispatch No. 1 – 27 June 2008
Geneva, Switzerland
If any one doubts that the dollar is in a rapid downward spiral, approaching the speed of free fall (much like the collapsing WTC Towers), think again.
General Bert and I landed in Geneva, Switzerland, this morning after a British Air flight to London from New York which was very, very late in departing. That meant that we had to race through Healthrow Terminal 5, the largest covered structure in the UK, with our rolly-bags and carry ons jouncing and juttering as best they could manage until we reached a security checkpoint. After an absolutely absurd security check, we took off for another 20 minute sprint, screeching to a halt just as the connecting flight to Geneva was scheduled to pull away from the gate – only to encounter a crowd of travelers. The Geneva flight, too, was delayed. Bad for British Airway’s schedule, good for us!
We got to Geneva to find that one of our bags was not there. The one, incidentally, with all of my clothes, our supplements and our organic snacks. But it was, we discovered after an hour in the terminal, on the next flight a couple of hours later from London to Geneva. So we sat around on an empty luggage cart wishing that we were in some clean bed, somewhere until we could collect our bag.
Geneva offers a free bus ride to the city (and our hotel) so we were not hit with sticker shock until, after putting our clothes in the closet and brushing our teeth (LONG overnight flight), we went out for dinner.
We went to the rather gritty district near the railroad station and chose a Turkish cafe, a simple, working man’s sort of place. The food was fantastic. Turks make up the largest minority in Germany, spilling over into Switzerland, and there are lots of people who remember very clearly how to cook!
The price was fantastic, too. A simple meal with an entree, a small bottle of water and a cup of coffee cost us over $85 US plus tip.
Dollar? What dollar? I feel much like a Bulgarian felt visiting the US during the 1960s. We are, currency-wise, a third world country. Think about that! Then think about holding things of real value, like land, where you can grow your own food and medicinal plants. There are natural solutions to even the currency crisis!*
The ballywick of the Natural Solutions Foundation is health freedom. But I must remark, as a citizen and a patriot, that the private corporation which runs – and runs down – our economy is doing a very good job of getting us ready for the idea that we have sunk rapidly from the most powerful – and in many ways, the most irresponsible – economy in the world to a minor has-been, with just a little more effort on their parts.We’ll soon be ready to be “rescued ” by the Amero, the currency of the North American Union – all it takes is giving up our sovereignty, of course, and our Constitution.
I will make one more observation and then gratefully go to bed: the much vaunted food crisis is also clearly a manufactured event. Not only do food producers and suppliers have an obscene windfall and a perfect opportunity to push genetically modified Franken Foods and Franken Seeds upon the resisting world, the food crisis of today deepens and further implements the weaponization of food carried out by Codex, discussed in our Health Freedom eAlerts**. When food is adulterated through chemicals, nutrient reduction and prohibition, processing, irradiation, vaccines, antibiotics and genetic modification to become the leading vector of the major killer diseases – cancer, cardiovascular disease, stroke, diabetes and obesity – and farmers are thrown off their lands through the industrialization of the global food supply, to migrate to the cities of the world, becoming the abjectly poor – is that not a food crisis?
When your food is engineered to sicken and kill you, destroy food producing cultures and create total dependence on food sources and supplies which are truly “weapons of mass destruction,” is that not a food crisis? Seems like one to me.
And Food is on the agenda at Codex in several places. Prior to leaving the US, General Bert and I met with our Foundation co-trustee, Ralph Fucetola JD and reviewed the meeting agenda, finding where the main pressure points will likely be, so we can educate the Health Friendly Delegates about what to expect. We’ll be meeting with Delegates from the informal Coalition of Health Conscious Nations and reminding them about the events of the past few months, where the US agenda of forced harmonization, degradation of organic standards, permitting increased toxins, and hiding the presence of Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs) was pushed at various Codex working group and committee meetings. Now at the Commission level, we have one more chance to expose the agenda and educate decision makers.
Thanks, Codex!
We’ll be reporting daily, blow by blow, in these blogs. You can expect us to ferret out some exciting revelations, among the hours of boring bureaucratize through which we will endure.
Please share this information with people who need it. And please ask them to visit www.HealthFreedomUSA.org and watch Nutricide by clicking on the button on the home page. Ask them, too, to sign up for our safe, secure and very, very important Health Freedom eAlerts: http://drrimatruthreports.com/index.php?page_id=187
Oh, yes, one more thing: please support your health freedom team, the Natural Solutions Foundation by making a generous, tax deductible recurring donation here, now!
http://drrimatruthreports.com/index.php?page_id=189
Thanks. Stay tuned for more Codex Dispatches from the Field. And listen live to our updates on Internet radio:
1. Jeff Rense Show: Listen live to a special 2 hour report on the Jeff Rense show, 8-10 PM Pacific Time, July 2, http://www.Rense.com
2. Alex Jones Show: Listen live on the Alex Jones show, Thursday, July 3, 2 PM Central – special Video Report, http://www.infowars.com
3. Darryl Clark Show: Listen live on Progressive News Weekly between 10:05 AM and 10:45 AM EDT Thursday, July 3 at http://www.prncomm.net
And while you’re waiting for the next Dispatch, take a look at our eAlert of May 31st – Connecting the Deadly dots: http://drrimatruthreports.com/?p=692
With every expectation of our eventual triumph, I am
Yours in health and freedom,
Dr. Rima
Rima E. Laibow, MD
Medical Director
Natural Solutions Foundation
www.HealthFreedomUSA.org
www.GlobalHealthFreedom.org
www.Organics4U.org
www.NaturalSolutionsFoundation.org
* See: The Valley of the Moon: http://drrimatruthreports.com/?p=715
** See: eAlert: http://drrimatruthreports.com/?p=712
PS – Don’t forget our Social Networking Sites:
http://drrimatruthreports.com/index.php?p=713
Songhai, Porto Novo, Benin
Day 3, April 19, 2008
We landed today in Cotonou, the capital of Benin and the shoving began: African airports are like airports everywhere, but worse. Everyone apparently needs to be first, whether there is any point to being first or not.
I don’t need to be first and neither do General Stubblebine or Tyson, so we were pretty close to last – last off the airplane, last through customs, last to get a baggage cart, last to get our luggage.
Tyson, however, was nearly the first of our party to get vaccinated! I am strongly averse to vaccination and, to my mind, the more you study any one particular vaccine, the more you NEVER want to take that preparation. That is certainly the case with Yellow Fever Vaccine. Although many countries in Africa require proof of vaccination against this devastating disease (unnecessary, really, for people who have access to good health, Vitamin C and silver solutions) for entry. Bert, Tyson and I were able to produce exemption letters for our visas and secured our visas for Benin without any difficulty.
I had forgotten that, once you clear passport control and get your entry stamp in Benin, there are two guys in (what once were) white coats asking to see your Yellow Fever Vaccination card with a valid stamp on it. We speak English. They speak French. The possibility of communication was nill to none. Gen. Stubblebine and I tried the words for “Exemption letter†in as many ways as we could think of. We failed miserably. Finally, ready to go home, I suppose, since we were close to the last people on the plane, the two vaccine police men gave up in exasperation and waved their hands, shouting, “Go! Go!†and waving us through the door.
Tyson, however, was separated from us and was not so lucky. Before he knew what had happened, he was sitting in the Health Officer’s Office being asked in French for something (he does not speak French). He, too, kept saying that he had an exemption letter (from me, in fact!) but there seemed to be no uptake on that. He looked up from getting out the letter from his papers and saw that the Health Officer was bending over a refrigerator from which he took a vial and a syringe. “No! NO!” Tyson said and waved his letter of exemption around (probably a little wildly – I know that is the way I would have waved mine!). The man got out a yellow International Vaccination Card, stamped it and said, in perfect English, “Give me 10 Euros [ Approximately $16 US].
Tyson gave him the Euros and the man waved him out of the office WITH a vaccination card but WITHOUT the vaccination!
Once we got through the pushing and shoving at the luggage conveyor, we exited past a Beninese guard who checked every single one of our luggage tags to make sure they matched the numbers on our luggage. With all the people ahead of us, can you imagine how long that took?
Finally we exited the baggage area only to realize that the customs people were opening every suit case of every traveler. I stopped dead and looked around in utter dismay: It was already 9:45 PM and we were clearly going to be here for hours. For some reason (I have no idea what it might have been), the customs official nearest to me looked up, saw me and said, again, “Go! Go!” and we made our way out into the crowd waiting to greet their friends and relatives, associates and colleagues. There was a gentleman in a brilliant and distinctive African suit waving a very welcome “Songhai” sign. We clustered around him and he led us to the van he had brought to pick us up from Songhai.
Because our plane had not come in the night before, his two hour round trip to the airport (and the fuel which is so important in this very poor country) was wasted. He was, however, gracious and helpful nonetheless.
When we got to Songhai Center about an hour later, we were greeted in this oasis of plenty and prosperity in the middle of want and hardship by Father Godfrey Nzamjou, the man whose inspiration lives and breaths in Songhai. Although the restaurant closes at 10, he and his staff had kept it open for us (how different from Paris!) and we had an hour or so to converse and orient ourselves.
We were led to a modern building with suites and bedroom, each with a shower and private bath.
The next day, we toured the compound in the morning and saw the ingenuity, love and tenderness, yes, tenderness with which this land has been turned from a desert into a Garden, perhaps a Garden of Eden. Today, in a world where food riots are becoming more commonplace daily, the fertility which has been coaxed from the land is an urgent lesson for possibilities and a call to action. The Panama Santa Clara Project will follow the Songhai model for farming without waste or pollution. Imagine what we can do with land that is so abundantly fertile!
The heat was truly ferocious and about 11:00AM we retired indoors because anywhere outside was impossibly hot. We had more excellent food, all grown here, and waited for Fr. Godfrey to come back to us for more discussion.
Around 4 PM he arrived and said, “OK. Now you know what we have at Songhai. What are you looking for?” We spoke at depth and at length and videotaped the discussion. I think it is important that you see that and will mount it as soon as we have enough bandwidth to make that possible. It was a wonderful conversation in which we expounded on our dream and Fr. Godfrey said that this was what he had been waiting for.
We agreed that we must support each other’s work and he reaffirmed that he will, without a doubt, come to Panama to set up the design for the zero emissions farm complete with bio-digester and bio-gas for fuel independence as well as power independence. Fr. Godfrey is the proud “papa” of the largest bio-gas facility in Africa. Cheap, easy and clean, bio-gas can heat our water, run our generators, pump our liquids, grind our grains, etc. And we will learn from a master!
But Songhai is much more than just a fuel independent system. Please take a moment when the tape is mounted to watch it and capture the shared dream of this world leader whose Center is a recognized United National Center Excellence in Africa.
After more chat and dinner (outstanding, of course), Tyson, General Bert and I set to working through the immense number of details for our community in Panama, the Santa Clara ARC, with the clear understanding that what we are doing now is highly preliminary since the community will ultimately make these decisions for itself.
That took us late into the night and we fell asleep quite exhausted. Oh, by the way, there was still no internet connection.
Day 4, April 20, 2008
Today was our “BIG DAY” at Songhai Center. Father Godfrey is immensely busy and he agreed to give us most of a full day to discuss our plans and possible working together in considerable detail – that is a large part of why we came.
We began with breakfast at 8 AM in the restaurant which serves about 200 meals per day to visitors. All food served here is grown here or on other Songhai Centers so everything is not only fresh, but free of pesticides and all other types of synthetic, chemical additives. It is wonderful knowing that every bite was grown by the labor of people who love the land and understand how to nurture it so it can nurture them. We are very eager to replicate that loving relationship between our food and our selves as we come to create the farm and farm school which will be a core activity of the Santa Clara ARC.
We took a tour of the facility including the foundry, the kiln, the fields, the food processing areas, the store, the animal sheds, the fish pond, the composing area, the bio gas facility, etc., etc. All of this amazing integrated farming has been created here in the total absence of fertile soil. Fr. Godfrey told us that he had worked 15 years of the 20 that he has been here to create this astonishing fertility. We start in Panama with astonishingly fertile land!
Songhai’s rich productivity daily feeds 1500 people (300 workers and their families, which average 5 people), about 100 students who are in training, typically for 18 months, and the 200 guests who come to the African and Western restaurants. I think it is an easy leap to conclude that our fertile farm will be producing much more than we members of the community, guests and health center clients can consume so it is reasonable to expect that one center of profit for the Santa Clara ARC will be the distribution and sale of outstanding food!
Because of the intense heat, everything stops for several hours during the middle of the day. Everything, that is, except lunch. We wove our way from shade spot to shade spot to the restaurant for lunch and much talk about what we have seen. Tyson is a black smith/iron worker so he was particularly fascinated by learning what he needs to know to make the bio gas apparatus and by the machines which Songhai designs and makes on site.
Later, Fr. Godfrey came to where we are staying, where there is, mercifully, air conditioning and we started to talk together. I asked him how many other groups like ours had come to set up sister facilities as we are doing.
Tyson had the foresight to set up a video camera to film this discussion and it was a great decision. The video is not compatible with my computer so we have to download it to a disc and upload it that way. Clearly we do not have the opportunity here in Songhai, but we will do so shortly.
The upshot of the discussion was that we are what Fr. Godfrey has been waiting for as a partner community! We will bring our experience in order to work toward sister health centers in Parakou, Benin and Santa Clara, Panama. He will use his experience to make Santa Clara a full zero emissions facility farming center and school.
Meanwhile, we had missed our appointment with Col. Mikode, the Codex Contact Point for Benin because we arrived more than a full day late. This delay winds up having significant impact on Codex. Read on.
Dinner, then more intense discussion and off to bed.
Day 5, April 21, 2008
Today we started the day with meeting for about an hour during breakfast with Fr. Godfrey. By the way, Songhai makes its own delicious yogurt. After about an hour, he had other things to do before heading off to Nigeria to meet with government officials there to replicate the Songhai model there. There are also two people from separate projects doing similar things in Nigeria. One is, like Gen. Stubblebine, a General.
Sometime later, Col. Mikode and Pascal, the head of the Benin Horticultural Research Station came to see us. They had good news and bad news for us.
The good news was that they had prepared a budget and program for the agricultural project using magnets to treat the water used to grow plants. Preliminary results suggest significant increases in crop yield, nutrient density, plant vigor and significant decreases in water utilization. Given the rapidly worsening shortage of food in the word due to climate change and diversion of food crop acreage to biofuels (which cost at least 29% more energy than they produce so the bargain is a very, very bad one for the planet, its carbon balance and its people) the ability to increase yield and nutritional value, while eliminating all requirements for pesticides and other chemicals, is a very important asset. Equally important, perhaps, is the reduction in water usage to get stronger and more vigorous plants.
I had been perplexed by the fact that nothing was happening with the agricultural magnet project – nothing. I had designed a simple (and, I hope, elegant) design which would test the hypotheses of increased crop yield, increased nutrient density, increased plant vigor and decreased water usage but they require actually being carried out to show anything. I could not understand it when I got an email saying that the project was postponed until they got the money to carry it out.
When Pascal presented me with the document outlining the costs, I nearly fell off my chair. Instead of 6 test beds, there were 33. Instead of raised beds edged with scrap lumber of corrugated tin or sand bags, they were asking for 4.2 metric tons of concrete, thousands of bricks, etc.
It was clear that we needed to talk!
The next interesting meeting was a telephonic one with Dr. Koura, who was supposed to serve as the Beninese delegate to the Codex Committee On Food Labeling next week in Ottawa. She had informed the Codex Contact Point, Col. Mikode, that she would not be funded by the WHO Trust Fund at 11 PM on Saturday evening but that email was not read until 9 AM Monday morning (yesterday). That means that Benin will not have a voice at this important Codex meeting where the initiative begun by the African nations at the meeting in Ghana in February this year to demand labeling of Genetically Modified Organisms was pushed forward so impressively.
I asked our Natural Solutions Foundation Trustees if we should not host (i.e., pay for) the Beninese delegate to make sure that there was a strong voice from this country at the Codex meeting. We quickly agreed and the next thing we needed to do was convince Dr. Kora and the Beninese government that this was a good idea.
Col. Mikode had no problem with it and said that if Dr. Koura was willing, so was he.
Day 6, April 22, 2008
Early this morning Tyson, General Stubblebine and I set off with a translator to visit Pascal at the Horticultural Research Station to find out what had gone wrong with the Agricultural Magnet project and retrieve 20 pairs for use here at Songhai.
Because we had a translator with us this time, as opposed to the last time we talked with Pascal, we discovered what the problem was: Language difficulties led to Pascal believeing that since we had identified 11 potential crops for the experiment, he would need to conduct the experiment with 3 beds of each crop. The undertaking would be huge and he wanted to build structures to make it possible. I explained that we wanted to choose 2 crops from the 11 and Pascal heaved a huge sigh of relief. We walked out to the fields to see where the projects would take place and Pascal has already applied the magnets to a buried rigid water pipe in preparation for our visit. Once we got the miscommunication out of the way, it became clear that a real project using amaranth and tomatoes would be carried out and carried out well.
We are eager to get those results and the results from the Songhai application. It is our hope that the results are robust enough that we can begin to change agricultural practices in many places in the world. It is essential, the Natural Solutions Foundation believes, to reclaim food production, eliminating pesticides and other dangerous chemicals, and making ti clear that the best crop yield is produced by natural means, not by GM crops. Dr. Koura, on the other hand, when we finally did get together this afternoon, was not so sure it was a good idea. She had “turned off” the process by telling her bosses that she was not, after all, going and was adamantly reluctant to tell them that she could now go under our sponsorship.
We tried every which-a-way to Sunday to persuade her, but she was not movable. We got ready to write to the US and UN Ambassadors from Benin to see if they could provide a person to attend the meetings (it is much easier to get a Canadian visa from the US) when we got a piece of very bad news, indeed.
This information makes us think that we are seeing a pattern: The Ugandan Codex delegate had taken the ball into his own hands and arranged an African strategy session on GM labeling the day before the CCFL meeting was to begin. He is a credentialed delegate from a member nation. Canada denied him a visa twice.
The strategy of the power brokers is clear: fix it so the opposition cannot show up and then claim that the process is legitimate. That is pretty much the same as arresting the opposition and claiming that your election was democratic (or counting the votes on a programmable electronic voting machine with a predetermined outcome, for that matter!)The Codex process is far from legitimate. Our Trustees have just spent an extended period on the phone working out our next strategic moves to deal with this new tactic.
More to follow.
Yours in health and freedom,
Dr. Rima
Rima E. Laibow, MD
Medical Director
Natural Solutions Foundation
www.HealthFreedomUSA.org
www.GlobalHealthFreedom.org
www.Organics4U.org
The Natural Solutions Foundation, the leading Global Health Freedom organization, is proud to present this information to you. We protect your right to know about – and to use – natural ways to maintain and regain your health, no matter where in the world you live. Among your freedoms is the right to clean, unadulterated food free of genetic manipulation, pesticides, heavy metals or other contaminants and access to herbs, supplements, frequency devices and other means as therapies that may benefit or to protect your well-being without drugs and other dangerous interventions, if you choose.
For more information on our global programs, including the International Decade of Nutrition, and our US based ones, please visit us at www.HealthFreedomUSA.org and www.GlobalHealthFreedom.org and join the free email list for the Health Freedom eAlerts to keep you in the loop, informed and active defending your right to make your own decisions about your health and wellbeing!
Our activities are supported 100% by your tax deductible donations. Please give generously (http://drrimatruthreports.com/index.php?page_id=189) to the Natural Solutions Foundation. Thank you for your support.
Feel free to disseminate this information as widely as possible with full attribution.
Yours in health and freedom,
Dr. Rima
Rima E. Laibow, MD
Medical Director
Natural Solutions Foundation
www.HealthFreedomUSA.org
www.GlobalHealthFreedom.org
I have been telling people for decades that if no self respecting bug, bacterium or mold would eat something, it was not food. As a physician helping people to move from deadly diets to life-preserving ones, and adding supplements, herbs, etc. while helping people to detoxify, rather than die, this was a conversation I had over and over with people in both my consulting offices and in public fora like radio shows and lectures.
The “Bigs” — Big Pharma, Big Agra, Big Govt. — who currently control Codex Alimentarius (the World Food Code) want you to have no choice but to eat food that is so laden with preservatives, pesticides, herbicides and other chemical contaminants, to say nothing of hormones and antibiotics in your meats, vaccines in the animals you eat (and all of it irradiated) that it may never rot, but you will never be healthy. After all, Codex was the creation of the German pharmaceutical industry after World War II. That’s a fascinating story all by itself which you can watch in my lecture “Nutricide“, also available as a DVD(http://drrimatruthreports.com/index.php?page_id=156).
For the sake of profit (both the profits from the illnesses you WILL get from eating unhealthy foods and the profits from the industrialization of the food industry (including the genetic modification of what used to be food), your food is on the chopping block: the multinationals want to control every bite you eat for their best outcome. But what’s in that food? Mostly, if it’s prepared food, what’s in it is not food at all.
We have become so used to believing that if it is available for us to eat in a food context, it must be food, that we are literally blind and deaf to our own best instincts about what is, and what is not, food. Michael Pollan is the author of an exceptional book which I urge every food loving, freedom loving or food AND freedom loving person within the range of my computer to read. The Omnivore’s Dilemna, published in paperback by Penguin Books, is a book that will change your relationship to food and its meaning in your life and in your death… no matter how well informed you are.
I believe I know a good deal about food and food purity and preparation. It knocked my socks off.
Read it, but first, read this interview by Amy Goodman of “Democracy Now” and Mr. Pollan.
Don’t Eat Anything That Doesn’t Rot
—————————————————-
Michael Pollan with Amy Goodman, Democracy Now!
Posted March 8, 2008.
Consumers are getting duped by the food industry, paying the price with their health.
Acclaimed author and journalist Michael Pollan argues that what most Americans are consuming today is not food but “edible foodlike substances.” His previous book, The Omnivore’s Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals, was named one of 2006’s ten best books by the New York Times and the Washington Post. His latest book is called In Defense of Food: An Eater’s Manifesto.
Amy Goodman:†You are what to eat.” Or so the saying goes. In American culture, healthy food is a national preoccupation. But then, why are Americans becoming less healthy and more overweight?
Michael Pollan joined me for a wide-ranging conversation about nutrition, food science and the current American diet. I began by asking him why he feels he has to defend food.
Michael Pollan: Food’s under attack from two quarters. It’s under attack from the food industry, which is taking, you know, perfectly good whole foods and tricking them up into highly processed edible foodlike substances, and from nutritional science, which has over the years convinced us that we shouldn’t be paying attention to food, it’s really the nutrients that matter. And they’re trying to replace foods with antioxidants, you know, cholesterol, saturated fat, omega-3s, and that whole way of looking at food as a collection of nutrients, I think, is very destructive.
Goodman: Shouldn’t people be concerned, for example, about cholesterol?
Pollan: No. Cholesterol in the diet is actually only very mildly related to cholesterol in the blood. It was a — that was a scientific error, basically. We were sold a bill of goods that we should really worry about the cholesterol in our food, basically because cholesterol is one of the few things we could measure that was linked to heart disease, so there was this kind of obsessive focus on cholesterol. But, you know, the egg has been rehabilitated. You know, the egg is very high in cholesterol, and now we’re told it’s actually a perfectly good, healthy food. So there’s only a very tangential relationship between the cholesterol you eat and the cholesterol levels in your blood.
Goodman: How is it that the food we eat now, it takes time to read the ingredients?
Pollan: Yeah.
Goodman: You actually have to stop and spend time and perhaps put on glasses or figure out how to pronounce words you have never heard of.
Pollan: Yeah, it’s a literary scientific experience now going shopping in the supermarket, because basically the food has gotten more complex. It’s — for the food industry — see, to understand the economics of the food industry, you can’t really make money selling things like, oh, oatmeal, you know, plain rolled oats. And if you go to the store, you can buy a pound of oats, organic oats, for 79 cents. There’s no money in that, because it doesn’t have any brand identification. It’s a commodity, and the prices of commodity are constantly falling over time.
So you make money by processing it, adding value to it. So you take those oats, and you turn them into Cheerios, and then you can charge four bucks for that 79 cents — and actually even less than that, a few pennies of oats. And then after a few years, Cheerios become a commodity. You know, everyone’s ripping off your little circles. And so, you have to move to the next thing, which are like cereal bars. And now there’s cereal straws, you know, that your kids are supposed to suck milk through, and then they eat the straw. It’s made out of the cereal material. It’s extruded.
So, you see, every level of further complication gives you some intellectual property, a product no one else has, and the ability to charge a whole lot more for these very cheap raw ingredients. And as you make the food more complicated, you need all these chemicals to make it last, to make it taste good, to make — and because, you know, food really isn’t designed to last a year on the shelf in a supermarket. And so, it takes a lot of chemistry to make that happen.
Goodman: I was a whole grain baker in Maine, and I would consider the coup to be to get our whole grain organic breads in the schools of Maine for the kids, but we just couldn’t compete with Wonder Bread which could stay on the shelf — I don’t know if it was a year.
Pollan: That’s amazing.
Goodman: Ours, after a few days, of course, would get moldy, because it was alive.
Pollan: Right. And, in fact, one of my tips is, don’t eat any food that’s incapable of rotting. If the food can’t rot eventually, there’s something wrong.
Goodman: What is nutritionism?
Pollan: Nutritionism is the prevailing ideology in the whole world of food. And it’s not a science. It is an ideology. And like most ideologies, it is a set of assumptions about how the world works that we’re totally unaware of. And nutritionism, there’s a few fundamental tenets to it. One is that food is collections of nutrients, that basically the sum of — you know, food is the sum of the nutrients it contains. The other is that since the nutrient is the key unit and, as ordinary people, we can’t see or taste or feel nutrients, we need experts to help us design our foods and tell us how to eat.
Another assumption of nutritionism is that you can measure these nutrients and you know what they’re doing, that we know what cholesterol is and what it does in our body or what an antioxidant is. And that’s a dubious proposition.
And the last premise of nutritionism is that the whole point of eating is to advance your physical health and that that’s what we go to the store for, that’s what we’re buying. And that’s also a very dubious idea. If you go around the world, people eat for a great many reasons besides, you know, the medicinal reason. I mean, they eat for pleasure, they eat for community and family and identity and all these things. But we’ve put that aside with this obsession with nutrition.
And I basically think it’s a pernicious ideology. I mean, I don’t think it’s really helping us. If there was a trade-off, if looking at food this way made us so much healthier, great. But in fact, since we’ve been looking at food this way, our health has gotten worse and worse.
Goodman: Let’s talk about the diseases of Western civilization.
Pollan: The Western diseases, which — they were named that about a hundred years ago by a medical doctor named Denis Burkett, an Englishman, who noted that there — after the Western diet comes to these countries where he had spent a lot of time in Africa and Asia, a series of Western diseases followed, very predictably: obesity, diabetes, heart disease and a specific set of cancers. And he said, well, they must have this common origin, because we keep seeing this pattern.
And we’ve known this for a hundred years, that if you eat this Western diet, which is defined basically as — I mean, we all know what the Western diet is, but to reiterate it, it’s lots of processed food, lots of refined grain and pure sugar, lots of red meat and processed meats, very little whole grains, very little fresh fruits and vegetables. That’s the Western diet — it’s the fast-food diet — that we know it leads to those diseases. About 80 percent of heart disease, at least as much Type II diabetes, 33 to 40 percent cancers all come out of eating that way, and we know this. And the odd thing is that it doesn’t seem to discomfort us that much.
Goodman: Talk about coming from another culture and coming here. When you specifically talk about sugar, refined wheat, what actually happens in the body?
Pollan: Well, that’s where you see it most directly. When populations that have not been exposed to this kind of food for a long time — we’ve seen it with Pacific Islanders, if you go to Hawaii, we’ve seen it with Mexican immigrants coming to America — these are the people who have the most trouble with this diet, and they get fat very quickly and get diabetes very quickly. You know, we hear about this epidemic of diabetes, but it’s very much of a class and ethnically based phenomenon, and Hispanics have much more trouble with it. And the reason or the hypothesis is that, culturally and physically, they haven’t been dealing with a lot of refined grain, whereas in Europe, we’ve been dealing with refined grain for a couple hundred years.
Goodman: And what does refined wheat do?
Pollan: Well, what happens is, when you — there was a key invention around the 1860s, which is we developed these steel rollers and porcelain rollers that could grind wheat and corn and other grains really fine and eliminate the germ and the bran. And the reason we wanted to do that was we loved it as white as possible. It would last longer. The rats had less interest in it, because it had less nutrients in it. And also you get a kind of a real strong hit of glucose. I mean, basically it digests much quicker, as soon as it hits the tongue. I mean, everyone has — you know, if you’ve ever tasted Wonder Bread, you know how sweet it is. The reason it’s sweet is it’s so highly refined that as soon as your saliva hits it, it turns to sugar.
Whole grains have a whole lot of other nutrients. You know, it once was possible to live by bread alone, because a whole grain loaf of bread has all sorts of other nutrients. It has omega-3s, it has, you know, lots of B vitamins. And we remove those when we refine grain. And it’s kind of odd and maladaptive that refined grain should be so prestigious since it’s so unhealthy. But we’ve always liked it, and one of the reasons is it stores longer.
Goodman: “Eat food. Not too much. Mostly plants.” Talk about the funding of nutrition science.
Pollan: Well, nutrition science is very compromised by industry. Organizations like the American Dietetic Association take sponsorship from companies who are eager to find — you know, be able to make health claims. Not all nutrition science. And there are very large, important studies that are, you know, published — that are supported by the government and are as good as any other medical studies in terms of their cleanness. But there is a lot of corporate nutrition science that’s done for the express purpose of developing health claims. This science reliably finds health benefits for whatever is being studied. You take a pomegranate to one of these scientists, and they will tell you that it will cure cancer and erectile dysfunction. You take, you know, any kind of food that you want. And now, it’s not surprising, because food is good for you, and that all plants have antioxidants.
Goodman: Explain what an antioxidant is.
Pollan: Well, an antioxidant is a chemical compound that plants produce, really to protect themselves from free radicals of oxygen that are generated during photosynthesis. They absorb these kind of mischievous oxygen radicals, molecules, atoms, and disarm them. And as we age, we produce a lot of these oxygen radicals, and they’re implicated in aging and cancer. So antioxidants are a way to kind of quiet that response, and they have health benefits. They also help you detoxify your body.
So — but my point is kind of, you don’t need to know what an antioxidant is to have the benefit of an antioxidant. You know, we’ve been benefiting from them for thousands of years without really having to worry what they are. They’re in whole foods, and it’s one of the reasons whole foods are good for you. And there are not that much in processed foods.
Goodman: Isn’t it odd that the more you put into foods — so that’s processing fruits — the less expensive is? The simpler you keep it, getting whole foods in this day and age in this country, it’s extremely expensive.
Pollan: Yeah. Well, there are reasons of policy that that is the case. You’re absolutely right. Most processed foods are made from these very cheap raw ingredients. I mean, they’re basically corn, soy and wheat. And if you look at all those very-hard-to-pronounce ingredients on the back of that processed food, those are fractions of corn, and some petroleum, but a lot of corn, soy and wheat. And the industry’s preferred mode of doing business is to take the cheapest raw materials and create complicated foodstuffs from them.
The reason those raw ingredients are so cheap, though, is because these are precisely the ones that the government chooses to support, the subsidies — you know, the big $26 billion for corn and soy and wheat and rice. So it’s no accident that these should be the ones, you know, grown abundantly and cheap, and that’s one of the reasons the industry moved down this path. There was such a surfeit of cheap corn and soy that the food scientists got to work turning it into —
Goodman: In fact, getting away totally from sugar to corn syrup.
Pollan: Yeah, that’s right. And we don’t — yeah, there’s very little sugar in our processed food. It’s all high-fructose corn syrup, which, in effect, the government is subsidizing.
Goodman: Cottonseed oil, is it regulated by the FDA? Is it considered a food, even though it’s in so many of the processed foods we eat? I was wondering, because — to do with the pesticide that is in it that if it’s considered — if it’s done for cotton, it doesn’t matter how much pesticide there is. But if it’s for food, it does matter. And it’s in so much to keep it right, stable for so long on the shelf.
Pollan: That’s right. And it’s a food I would avoid. I mean, you know, humans have not been eating cotton for most of their history. They’ve been wearing it. And now we’re eating it. And you’re right, it receives an enormous amount of pesticide as a crop. How many residues are in the oil? I don’t really know the answer, but it has been approved by the FDA as a foodstuff. And — but it’s one of these novel oils that I’m inclined to stay away with. I mean, my basic philosophy of eating is, you know, if your great-grandmother wasn’t familiar with it, you probably want to stay away from it.
Goodman: Talk about — well, you started with a New York Times piece called “Unhappy Meals,” and in it — and you expand on this in In Defense of Food — you talk about the McGovern report, 1977, what, 20 years ago.
Pollan: Well, that’s really, I think, one of the red letter days in the rise of nutritionism as a way of thinking about food. It was a very interesting moment. McGovern convened this set of hearings to look at the American diet, and there was a great deal of concern about heart disease at the time. We had — we were having — you know, after a falloff during the war in heart disease, there was a big spike in the ’50s and ’60s, and scientists were busy trying to figure out what was going on and very worried about it. McGovern convened these hearings, took a lot of testimony, and then came out with a set of guidelines. And he said — he implicated red meat, basically, in this problem. And he said we’re getting — we’re eating too much red meat, and the advice of the government became — the official advice — eat less red meat. And he said as much. Now, that was a very controversial message. The meat industry, in fact the whole food industry, went crazy, and they came down on him like a ton of bricks. You can’t tell people to eat less of anything.
Goodman: As Oprah learned when she said she won’t eat hamburgers.
Pollan: Exactly. This is just a taboo topic in America. So McGovern had to beat this hasty retreat, and he rewrote the guidelines to say, choose meats that will lessen your saturated fat intake, something nobody understood at all and was much to the — and that was acceptable. But you see the transition. It’s very interesting. We’ve been talking about whole food — eat less red meat, which probably was good advice — to this very complicated construct — eat meats that have less of this nutrient. It’s still an affirmative message — eat more, which is fine with industry, just eat a little differently. And suddenly, the focus was on saturated fat, as if we knew that that was the nutrient in the red meat that was the problem. And in fact, it may not be. I mean, there are other things going on in red meat, we’re learning, that may be the problem.
Goodman: Like?
Pollan: Well, some people think it’s the protein in red meat. Some people think it’s the nitrosamines, these various compounds that are produced when you cook red meat. We see a correlation between high red meat consumption and higher rates of cancer and heart disease. But, again, we don’t know exactly what the cause is, but it may not be saturated fat.
Goodman: And then the political economy of, for example, eating meat?
Pollan: Well, that — because of that — I mean, that’s why McGovern lost in 1980. I mean, the beef lobby went after him, and they tossed him out. And so — but from then on, anyone who would pronounce on the American diet understood you had to speak in this very obscure language of nutrients. You could talk about saturated fat, you could talk about antioxidants, but you cannot talk about whole foods. So that is the kind of official language in which we discuss nutrition.
Conveniently, it’s very confusing to the average consumer. Conveniently to the industry, they love talk about nutrients, because they can always — with processed foods, unlike whole foods, you can redesign it. You can just reduce the saturated fat, you know, up the antioxidants. You can jigger it in a way you can’t change broccoli. You know, broccoli is going to be broccoli. But a processed food can always have more of the good stuff and less of the bad stuff. So the industry loves nutritionism for that reason.
Goodman: So, for people who don’t have much money, how do they eat? I mean, when you’re talking about whole foods, they have to be prepared, and if you don’t have much time, as well, processed foods are cheaper and they’re faster.
Pollan: Well, processed foods — you know, fast food seems cheap. I mean, if you have the time and the inclination to cook, you can eat more cheaply. But you do — as you say, you do need the time, and you do need the skills to cook. There is no way around the fact that given the way our food policies are set up, such that whole foods are expensive and getting more expensive and processed foods tend to be cheaper — I mean, if you go into the supermarket, the cheapest calories are added fat and added sugar from processed food, and the more expensive calories are over in the produce section. And we have to change policy in order to adjust that.
Goodman: How do you do that?
Pollan: You need a farm bill that basically evens the playing field and is not driving down the price of high-fructose corn syrup, so that, you know, real fruit juice can compete with it. You need a farm bill that makes carrots competitive with Wonder Bread. And we don’t have that, and we didn’t get it this time around.
Goodman: Do you feel like any candidates are addressing this issue?
Pollan: No, because they all pass through Iowa, and they all bow down before conventional agricultural policy. In office, I think that, you know, there have been — Hillary Clinton has had some very positive food policies, basically because she has this big farm constituency upstate, and she’s very interested in school lunch and farm-to-school programs and things like that. John Edwards has said some progressive things about feedlot agriculture and what’s wrong with that, while he was in Iowa.
Goodman: Explain feedlots.
Pollan: Feedlots are where we grow our meat, in these huge factory farms that have become really the scourge of landscapes in places like Iowa and Missouri, I mean these giant pig confinement operations that basically collect manure in huge lagoons that leak when it rains and smell for miles around. I mean, they’re just, you know, miserable places. And they’re becoming a political issue in the Midwest. And I think they will become a political issue nationally, because people are very concerned about the status of the animals in these places. My worry is, though, that when we start regulating these feedlots, they’ll move to Mexico.
Goodman: [What is the] “Omnivore’s Dilemma?”
Pollan: “The Omnivore’s Dilemma” is, if you’re a creature like us that can eat almost anything — I mean, unlike cows that only eat grass or koala bears that only eat eucalyptus leaves — we can eat a great many different things, and meat and vegetables, but it’s complicated. We don’t have instincts to tell us exactly what to eat, so we have — we need a lot of other cognitive equipment to navigate what is a very treacherous food landscape, because there — as there was in the jungle and in nature, there are poisons out there that could kill us. So we had to learn what was safe and what wasn’t, and we had this thing called culture that told us, like that mushroom there, somebody ate it last week and they died, so let’s call it the “death cap,” and that way we’ll remember that that’s one to stay away from. And, you know, so culture is how we navigate this.
We are once again in a treacherous food landscape, when there are many things in the supermarket that are not good for you. How do we learn now to navigate that landscape? And that’s what this book was an effort to do, was come up with some rules of thumb. And so, you know, I say eat food, which sounds really simple, but of course there’s a lot of edible food-like substances in the supermarket that aren’t really food. So how do you tell them apart?
Goodman: You talk about shopping the periphery of the supermarket?
Pollan: Yeah. Well, that was one rule that I found really helpful. And if you look at the layout of the average supermarket, the fresh whole foods are always on the edge. So you get produce and meat and fish and dairy products. And those are the foods that, you know, your grandmother would recognize as foods. They haven’t changed that much. All the processed foods, the really bad stuff that is going to get you in trouble with all the refined grain and the additives and the high-fructose corn syrup, those are all in the middle. And so, if you stay out of the middle and get most of your food on the edges, you’re going to do a lot better.
Goodman: What is the localvore movement?
Pollan: The localvore movement is a real new emphasis on eating locally, eating food from what’s called your foodshed. It’s a metaphor based on a watershed. You know, a certain — draw a circle of a hundred miles around your community and try to eat everything from there. It’s an interesting movement, and I’m very supportive of local food. I think that it’s verging on the ridiculous right now — I mean, you know, because, frankly, there’s no wheat produced in a hundred miles of New York. You know, do you want to give up bread? I’m not willing to give up bread. So people get a little extremist about it.
But the basic idea of when products are available locally, eating them and eating food in season, is a very powerful and important idea. It supports a great many values. The fact is that food that’s produced locally is going to be fresher. It’s going to be more nutritious because it’s fresher. You’re going to support the farmers in your community. You’re going to check sprawl. I mean, you’ll keep that farmland in business. You are going to keep basically, you know, some autonomy in our food system. I mean, make no mistake: The basic trend of food in this country is to globalize it, and there will come a day when America doesn’t produce its own food. In California, the Central Valley is losing, you know, hundreds of acres of farmland every day, and the projections there are that we will no longer produce produce in California by the end of the century. I don’t want to live in that world. I — you know, we lost control over our energy destiny, and we don’t want to lose control over our food destiny.
Goodman: What are the environmental effects of transporting food across the globe?
Pollan: Well, the biggest is energy. I mean, it’s a — people don’t really think about food in terms of climate change, but in fact the food system contributes about a fifth of greenhouse gases. It is as important as the transportation sector, in terms of contributing to greenhouse gas. It’s a very energy-intensive situation. What we did with the industrialization of food, essentially, is take food off of a solar system — it was basically based on photosynthesis and the sun — and put it on a fossil fuel system. We learned how to grow food with lots of synthetic fertilizers made from natural gas, pesticides made from petroleum, and then started moving it around the world. So now we take about ten calories of fossil fuel to produce one calorie of food energy. Very unsustainable system.
Goodman: And what about the argument of efficiency, and if you want to feed the planet? You have sugar growing in Cuba. You have grapes and meat in Argentina and Uruguay and Chile.
Pollan: Well, that’s the argument. There are a lot of problems with it. First, it does depend on cheap fossil fuel, and we are not going to have cheap
fossil fuel, so that if Uruguay loses its ability to produce anything else, they’re going to be hungry. It’s very important that you have local self-sufficiency in food — some self-sufficiency, not complete — before you start exporting. If you put all your eggs in the basket of, say, coffee, when the international market shifts, as it inevitably does, because it will always go to whatever country is willing to produce it a little more cheaply, you will decimate your industry.
Goodman: What if you only consume coffee and nothing else?
Pollan: Oh, you have all sorts of problems we don’t even want to get into. You cannot live on coffee alone. It’s not like bread.
So globalizing food has certain advantages of efficiency, but it also has very high risks. And, you know, efficiency is an important value, but resilience is even more important, and we know this from biology, that the resilience of natural systems and economic systems is something we have to focus more on. This globalized food system is very brittle. When you have a breakdown anywhere, when the prices of fuel escalates, people lose the ability to feed themselves.
What’s happening with Mexico and NAFTA and corn, you know, they opened their borders to our corn, and it put one-and-a-half million farmers there out of business. They all came to the cities, where you would think, OK, now the price of tortillas should go down, but it didn’t go down, even with the cheap corn, because there was an oligopoly controlling tortillas. Tortilla prices didn’t go down. And so, a lot of these former Mexican farmers became serfs on California farms, and this was the effect of dumping lots of cheap corn.
Goodman: And now they’re the target of main politicians all over the country to — “We send our food down, and you send immigrants back who are coming here.”
Pollan: Yeah, “And we don’t want your immigrants.” And, you know, we don’t understand that these things are connected, that we make a decision in Washington and that this is what leads to an immigration problem. And — but the dumping of our corn on Mexico is a big part of the immigration problem.
Goodman: Do you know anything about cloned livestock? The Wall Street Journal says cloned livestock are poised to receive FDA clearance.
Pollan: Yeah, well, the FDA has been looking at this. There are techniques now to clone livestock, usually for breeding purposes. If you have a really champion bull, the semen of that bull is very valuable. So, gee, if you could turn that bull into five bulls, wouldn’t that be great? Actually, it won’t be great. It’s the rareness that makes the semen so valuable.
Goodman: What do you mean?
Pollan: Well, if you — you know, if you multiply your champion bull, the supply will go up and the demand will go down. So — but, anyway, so the FDA needs approval so that once they’re done using these animals for breeding purposes, they can just drop them into the food system as hamburger. And there is some controversy over whether we should be eating cloned livestock. I’m not, you know, familiar with the risks. I’m a skeptic on genetically modifying food. But the specific risk of cloning livestock, I don’t know. I don’t want to be eating them.
Goodman: You have the French farmer, Jose Bove, who has just gone on a hunger strike to promote a ban on genetically modified crops in France.
Pollan: Yeah, I hadn’t known that. The Europeans have reacted much more strongly to genetically modified crops than we have.
Goodman: Why do you think it’s so different?
Pollan: A couple reasons. We have a misplaced faith in our FDA, that they’ve vetted everything and they’ve taken care of it and they know what’s in the food and that they know the genetically modified crops have been fully tested, which, in fact, they have not, whereas the Europeans, after mad cow disease, are very skeptical of their regulators. And when their regulators tell them, “Oh, this stuff is fine,” they’re like, “Oh, wait. You said that about the beef.” So they’re much more skeptical. They also perceive it as an American imposition, as part of a cultural imperialism. Even though a lot of the GMO companies are European, the perception is it’s Monsanto. And for some reason, the European countries have managed to get under the radar on this issue.
Goodman: Does it also have something to do with our media sponsored by food companies?
Pollan: Yeah, it does. And we — and the fact that our — we have not labeled it, so nobody knows whether you’re eating it or not. I mean, that’s been a huge fight. You know, Dennis Kucinich has tried to get labeling. Very simple. You know, he’s not saying ban the stuff; he’s saying just tell us if we’re eating it, which seems like a very reasonable position.
Goodman: And Monsanto fought this.
Pollan: Viciously.
Goodman: They said that if you say it does not have GMO genetically modified organisms in it that that suggests there’s something wrong with it, so when Ben & Jerry’s tried to do that they weren’t allowed.
Pollan: That’s right. There’s a lot of litigation over that still in Vermont and other states, in California, as well. Now, why is the industry so intent on not having this product regulated — labeled? Well, they think, rightly, that people wouldn’t buy it. And the reason they wouldn’t buy it is it offers the consumer nothing, no benefit. Now, if you could — Americans will eat all sorts of strange things, if there was a benefit. If you could say, well, this genetically modified soy oil will make you skinny, we would buy it, we would eat it. But so far, the traits that they’ve managed to get into these crops benefit farmers, arguably, and not consumers.
The other reason, I understand, that they resist labeling is that if there were labels, there would be ways to trace outbreaks of allergy. Any kind of health problems associated with GMOs you could tie to a particular food. Right now, if there are any allergies that are tied to a GMO food, you can’t prove it. And so, one of the reasons the industry has fought it is that they’re vulnerable to that.
When the GMO industry was starting transgenic crops, they made a decision not to seek any limits on liability from the Congress, as the nuclear industry did, and they decided that would not look good to ask for that, so they just took a chance. And this is, in the view of many activists, their great vulnerability, is product liability. And so, labeling is a way to help prevent that eventuality. So they fought it, you know, ferociously and successfully.
Goodman: What were you most surprised by in writing this book, In Defense of Food?
Pollan: I was most surprised by two things. One was that the science on nutrition that we all traffic in every day — we read these articles on the front page, we talk about antioxidants and cholesterol and all this kind of stuff — it’s really sketchy that nutritional science is still a very young science. And food is very complicated, as is the human digestive system. There’s a great mystery on both ends of the food chain, and science has not yet sorted it out. Nutrition science is where surgery was in about 1650, you know, really interesting and promising, but would you want to have them operate on you yet? I don’t think so. I don’t think we want to change our eating decisions based on nutritional science.
But what I also was surprised at is how many opportunities we now have. If we have — if we’re willing to put the money and the time into it to get off the Western diet and find another way of eating without actually having to leave civilization or, you know, grow all your own food or anything — although I do think we should grow whatever food we can — that it is such a hopeful time and that there’s some very simple things we can all do to eat well without being cowed by the scientists.
Goodman: The healthiest cuisines, what do you feel they are?
Pollan: Well, the interesting thing is that most traditional cuisines are very healthy, that people — that the human body has done very well on the Mediterranean diet, on the Japanese diet, on the peasant South American diet. It’s really interesting how many different foods we can do well on. The one diet we seem poorly adapted to happens to be the one we’re eating, the Western diet. So whatever traditional diet suits you — you like eating that way — you know, follow it. And that — you know, that’s a good rule of thumb.
There’s an enormous amount of wisdom contained in a cuisine. And, you know, we privilege scientific information and authority in this country, but, of course, there’s cultural authority and information, too. And whoever figured out that olive oil and tomatoes was a really great combination was actually, we’re now learning, onto something scientifically. If you want to use that nutrient vocabulary, the lycopene in the tomato, which we think is the good thing, is basically made available to your body through the olive oil. So there was a wisdom in those combinations. And you see it throughout.
Goodman: The whole push for hydrogenated oils? I grew up on margarine. “You should never eat butter! Only margarine!”
Pollan: Yeah, I know. I did, too. And that was a huge mistake. That was a mistake.
Goodman: Can we go back in time?
Pollan: Yeah, we can. Yeah, the butter, fortunately, is still here.
Goodman: Where did it come from?
Pollan: Well, margarine was cheaper. Again, take a cheap raw material, which was to say they had developed these technologies for getting oil out of cottonseed and soy and all this kind of stuff, and there then was this health concern about saturated fat, the great evil. I mean, one of the — another hallmark of nutritionism is that there’s always the evil nutrient and the blessed nutrient, but it’s always changing. So the evil nutrient for a long time has been saturated fat, and the good nutrient was polyunsaturated fat. So people thought, well, let’s take the polyunsaturated fats, and we’ll figure out a way to make them hard at room temperature, which involved the hydrogenation process. You basically fire hydrogen at it. And then you had something that looked like butter.
It was very controversial, though. People — actually, in the late 1900s, several states passed laws saying you had to dye your butter pink so people wouldn’t be confused and would know that that’s an imitation food. And then the Supreme Court — the industry got the Supreme Court to throw this out. So butter was elevated as the more modern, more healthy food. And it turned out that we replaced this possibly mildly unhealthy fat called saturated fat with now a demonstrably lethal one called hydrogenated oil.
Goodman: How is it demonstrably lethal?
Pollan: Well, they have since proven to, you know, pretty high standard that trans fats are implicated both in heart disease and cancer.
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Now you know how important your support of our work at Codex has become: it is a matter of life and death… for you and your family. That is why we have put so much time, effort… and, yes, your funds, into engaging Codex. That is why the Coalition of Health Conscious Nations is so important. Remember, freedom is anything but free and the health freedom campaign needs your support. Donations are tax deductible in the United States. Please give generously! Click here (http://drrimatruthreports.com/index.php?page_id=189) to make your tax deductible donation.
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Click here (http://drrimatruthreports.com/index.php?page_id=187) to sign up for the free, secure Health Freedom eAlerts and click here (http://drrimatruthreports.com/index.php?page_id=189) to support the full length documentary on Health Freedom and the Codex Alimentarius Agenda. Donors of $100 or more will be acknowledge in the final version of the documentary.
Please feel free to share this information as widely as possible with complete attribution and link to www.healthfreedomusa.org or www.globalhealthfreedom.org.
To find out about how your company can join the Natural Solutions Health Freedom Strategic Alliance, please contact Natural Solutions Foundation Trustee Ralph Fucetola at ralph.fucetola@usa.net. This Alliance, unlike our Foundation, will be allowed to lobby on behalf of health freedom… the right of your company to offer its products and services with meaningful claims… the right of the public to truthful and not misleading information about nutrients, natural remedies, therapeutic devices and advanced healthcare. Contributions to”501(c)(4)” lobby groups are not tax deductible for individuals, but, can be expensed by companies as a necessary business expense. If your company is not represented in DC, it will become a scapegoat… witness the recent attempts before Congress by Big Baseball to blame DSHEA (the Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act) for players shooting up steriods, as though taking vitamin pills leads to pharmaceutical drug abuse! If we do not engage with Congress, nutrients and natural rememdies will be scapegoated and you will lose your rights. We need regular financial support to engage in regular trips to DC to educate Congress (through the Foundation) and to lobby Congress (through the Alliance). Please contact Ralph as soon as possible. We need your help now.
Yours in health and freedom,
Rima E. Laibow, MD
Medical Director
Natural Solutions Foundation
www.HealthFreedomUSA.org
www.GlobalHealthFreedom.org