From 2009 UNLABELLED GM sugars will be in candy, cereal, granola bars, baby food, breads, in fact all common foods that contain sugar in America. Just think of how many processed foods contain sugar;
‘Bob Evans vegetable stirfry contains 31 grams of sugar and 505 calories.
Kentucky fried chicken’s teriyaki wings contains 30 grams of sugar and 480 calories.
Quaker natural granola contains 30 grams of sugar and 420 calories’
‘This year, farmers are planting Monsanto’s Roundup-Ready GM sugar beets for sale to food producers for the first time. This beet is genetically engineered to survive multiple, direct applications of the weed killer, Roundup, and its active ingredient, glyphosate. What’s particularly appalling about the approval of this GM sugar beet is that at the time of its approval, Monsanto convinced the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to increase the glyphosate residues allowed on sugar beetroots by an astounding 5,000 percent. This opens up the possibility for excessive pesticide spraying on GM sugar beets’
Despite widespread consumer demand for labeling, the biotech industry has stubbornly refused to label its GM products. Why? Because if consumers could make informed choices about foods that contain GM ingredients, chances are they would not buy them. Poll after poll has confirmed consumer distaste for GM foods, particularly given the absence of human health studies that prove GM foods are safe for human consumption. Yet, the biotech industry remains arrogant in its refusal to give consumers the labels that they demand and deserve.
Food producers, like consumers, have also been held hostage by the biotech industry, which has steadfastly denied them the right to know if the food they purchase has been grown from GM seeds. GM beet sugar, which could be released into the food supply as early as 2009, will be combined with non-GM sugar and sold as “sugar,” with no indication that some of it has come from GM beets. Manufacturers of candy, cereal, granola bars, baby food, breads — anything that contains sugar — would be hard-pressed to avoid using sugar derived from GM beet sugar once it’s introduced into the market. This “no label” policy eliminates food producers’ right to know, choose, or refuse to use non-GM sugar in its products. It also keeps consumers in the dark’
So, does it bother you?
Sources - direct quotes
http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2008/10/29/152739/07
http://www.motherearthnews.com/Health-People-Healthy-Planet/GM-Sugar-In-Food.aspx?blogid=1506&utm_source=iPost&utm_medium=email
http://www.organicconsumers.org/kelloggs.cfm
http://www.wellsphere.com/weight-loss-article/20-highest-sugar-content-foods-in-america/24286
The label won’t tell you anything, it will just say sugar. You as an American consumer, have no right to know, no way of knowing if it is GM sugar, but then, neither will the food manufacturers!
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