Originally posted by russ_watters
Quantum you loaded the question by adding those first two paragraphs. They are opinions, not facts. They should not have been included for the poll.
Labeling implies risk. In this case the risk has not been shown to even exist. So all you end up doing is scaring and confusing people. To be balanced, underneath the label there should another stating the known risks. It would say something like "There has been no link ever established between genetically modified foods and any health problem." But of course this would confuse people even more. If there is no known risk, why even put it there?
IMO, genetically modified foods should not be labeled because they just end up confusing the general public. Most people simply don't understand the risk (or lack thereof) well enough to make an informed judgement on it. Lurch, how can you expect someone to make an informed decision if they are not informed? Putting a label on something does *NOT* inform them as to the risk.
It is a fact that genetically modified foods have been around for decades (unless you count simpe hybriding...) and there are more of them than most people realize. They are impossible to avoid. There hasn't been a single proven negative health effect due to the modification of foods.
Ironically enough, the big health food, soy is probably the most genetically modified of all crops - you're hard pressed to find a soy product that is NOT genetically modified.
***GM Products: Benefits and Controversies***
**Benefits**
*Crops*
~Enhanced taste and quality
~Reduced maturation time
~Increased nutrients, yields, and stress tolerance
~Improved resistance to disease, pests, and herbicides
~New products and growing techniques
*Animals*
~Increased resistance, productivity, hardiness, and feed efficiency
~Better yields of meat, eggs, and milk
~Improved animal health and diagnostic methods
*Environment*
"Friendly" bioherbicides and bioinsecticides
~Conservation of soil, water, and energy
~Bioprocessing for forestry products
~Better natural waste management
~More efficient processing
*Society*
~Increased food security for growing populations
**Controversies**
*Safety*
~Potential human health impact:
~allergens, transfer of antibiotic resistance markers,
~unknown effects
~Potential environmental impact: unintended transfer of transgenes through cross-pollination, unknown effects on other organisms (e.g., soil microbes), and loss of flora and fauna biodiversity
*Access and Intellectual Property*
~Domination of world food production by a few companies
~Increasing dependence on Industralized nations by developing countries
~Biopiracy—foreign exploitation of natural resources
*Ethics*
~Violation of natural organisms' intrinsic values
~Tampering with nature by mixing genes among species
~Objections to consuming animal genes in plants and vice versa
~Stress for animal
*Labeling*
~Not mandatory in some countries (e.g., United States)
~Mixing GM crops with non-GM confounds labeling attempts
*Society*
~New advances may be skewed to interests of rich countries
I think these points would fit on a Wheaties box... in any language.