Nathanael Johnson at Grist gets to the heart of the matter:
Here’s the point: The main problem with the anti-GMO crusade is that it picks one very limited issue out of the whole constellation of agricultural practices. And when clear-eyed people see the big picture, they often conclude that there are much more important issues to address....
@ GMO labeling laws keep failing. Here’s why we can expect more | Grist:
@ GMO labeling laws keep failing. Here’s why we can expect more | Grist:
Such as real world food safety issues:
‘Disease detectives’ trace last year’s hepatitis A outbreak to Turkish pomegranatesBY CYNTHIA H. CRAFT CCRAFT@SACBEE.COM
A mysterious outbreak last year of a foreign strain of
hepatitis A set in motion a federal government investigation that led
food-safety sleuths halfway around the world to Turkey.
There, in a pomegranate grove, the detective work paid off:
Investigators found the likely culprit of a widespread foodborne virus that
sickened at least 165 people in 10 states, including California.
Lab tests of specimens from the patients traced the virus to
a particular strain called genotype 1B, rarely seen in the Americas yet common
to North Africa and the Middle East.
Together, experts from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration
worked painstakingly and step-by-step with the federal Epidemic Intelligence
Service – also known as the “disease detectives” – to trace shipments of
pomegranate seeds from the Turkish Goknur Foodstuffs Import Export Trading Co.
Using techniques that combined epidemiology, data from
several sources, genetic analysis of patient samples and product-tracing, the
investigators quickly located the common denominator of the outbreak in the
U.S. to the frozen food section of Costco stores.
The tainted Turkish pomegranate seeds had somehow been
contaminated by microscopic amounts of fecal matter and were included in a
five-berry combination package sold under the name of Townsend Farms Organic
Antioxidant Blend, an Oregon agribusiness...
No comments:
Post a Comment