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Against the Grain: Biotechnology and the Corporate Takeover of Your Food
 
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Against the Grain: Biotechnology and the Corporate Takeover of Your Food [Paperback]

Marc Lappe , Britt Bailey
3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

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Bailey, Britt -- Bailey, Britt

Book Description

Current Events. Science. Do genetically engineered food crops really offer the "risk-free" breadbasket for the world promised by biotechnology companies like Monsanto? Or are there serious risks to human health and the ecosphere hidden in this silent revolution? AGAINST THE GRAIN slashes through biotechnology's propaganda, revealing the science and politics behind "transgenic" foods to show how biotech companies incresingly engineer what you eat to be compatible with their chemicals -- but not necessarily good for human health. Marc Lappe holds a doctorate in Experimental Pathology from the University of Pennsylvania and currently directs the Center for Ethics and Toxics in northern California. Britt Bailiey holds a Masters Degree in Environmental Policy and is a research associate at CETOS.

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3.6 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars debunks the GM myth, Oct 2 2000
This review is from: Against the Grain: Biotechnology and the Corporate Takeover of Your Food (Paperback)
In only 150 pages, "Against the Grain" debunks many of the myths surrounding biotechnology and the genetic engineering that is revolutionizing US (and world) agriculture.One of the myths which "Against the Grain" debunks is the claim that genetically engineered crops are aimed at feeding the hungry of the world. As "Against the Grain" quite lucidly points out, if genetically engineered crops were aimed at feeding the hungry of the world then companies like Monsanto would develop seeds with certain characteristics such as: the ability to grow in substandard soils; the ability for plants to produce more protein, with increased per-acre yield, without increasing the need for expensive machinery, chemicals, fertilizer or water; they would aim to favour small farms over large farms; seeds would be cheap and freely available without restrictive licensing; they would be for crops that feed people, not animals.

None of the genetically engineered crops now available have any of these characteristics. In fact new genetically engineered seeds require high-quality soils, huge investment in machinery and an increased use of chemicals.As "Against the Garin" so adeptly illustrates, the genetic engineering revolution has nothing to do with feeding the world's hungry but everything to do with enriching a priviledged few.

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3.0 out of 5 stars Right at the core, sloppy with the details., Sep 22 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Against the Grain: Biotechnology and the Corporate Takeover of Your Food (Paperback)
As a scientist working in the bio-industry, I felt compelled to read this book. Unfortunately, while it makes a number of good points and correctly identifies areas of uncertainity, it somewhat marres the pleasure of reading it by suboptimal craftmanship - incidentally one of the criticisms that are correctly made to our industry. I resented some factual mistakes and the impression that the book was not proofread before going to print, leaving it with some contradictions and loose ends. But, I repeat, the essence is right: "wait a minute!"
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4.0 out of 5 stars Food for (serious) thought, May 20 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Against the Grain: Biotechnology and the Corporate Takeover of Your Food (Paperback)
A readable introduction to the topic of agricultural biotechnology . . . The author rationally questions the benefits touted by the seed & chemical corporations leading this market. Lappe offers data to show that there's neither nutritional benefits nor yield increases as motivating factors in this enterprise. Seeds manufactured to be pest and/or insecticide resistant sound great, but the author discusses how there may be unforeseen complications. What should happen if crop pests mutate and develop a resistance to these "built-in" defense mechanisms? Will the neighboring farmer who doesn't use the altered seed lose his entire crop to pests instead of spreading out the damage? Will farmers douse our crops with more chemicals since the plant can withstand them? What about the farm downwind whose crops may not be resistant? Also at issue is the "homogenizing" of our seed supply. If problems arise, it might not be so easy to "de-alter" supplies.

And, of course, there's the issue of corporate greed. Lappe argues that companies like Monsanto force farmers into brand-loyalty by making seeds that are engineered to respond best to certain chemicals, usually those sold by the same company selling the seed. (Shocker!)

The theme of this book is simply that there are too many unstudied potential risks to the process.

Case in point: A Cornell University study announces (just this week!) that altered corn has been poisoning Monarch butterfly larvae.

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