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December 2008, Week 3

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Subject:
Obama and others--comments on Ag Sec
From:
Thomas Mathews <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Iowa Discussion, Alerts and Announcements
Date:
Fri, 19 Dec 2008 08:20:53 EST
Content-Type:
multipart/alternative
Parts/Attachments:
text/plain (6 kB) , text/html (7 kB)
From GM Watch, a newsletter on Genetic Modification:

1.Obama on Vilsack
2.New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristoff on  Vilsack
3.Ronnie Cummins on Vilsack
4.Author, Michael Pollan on  Vilsack:

TAKE ACTION: Say NO to  Vilsack
http://www.stopvilsack.org/

NOTE: Item 1 should dispel any  illusions that Obama appointed Vilsack 
despite his being a Monsanto shill and an  ethanol booster. Obama says that's 
precisely why he appointed  him.
---
---
1.PRESIDENT-ELECT BARACK OBAMA ON VILSACK: 

To lead  a Department of Agriculture that helps unlock the potential of a 
twenty-first  century agricultural economy, I can think of no one better than Tom 
Vilsack.  

As governor of one of our most abundant farm states, he led with vision,  
promoting biotech to strengthen our farmers and fostering an agricultural  
economy of the future that not only grows the food we eat, but the energy that  we 
use. Tom understands that the solution to our energy crisis will be found not  
in oil fields abroad, but in our farm fields here at home. That's the kind of  
leader I want in my  cabinet.
http://my.barackobama.com/page/community/post/budrocket/gGx8Wn
---
---
2.New  York Times columnist Nicholas Kristoff on Vilsack:

Unfortunately, Mr.  Obama on Wednesday chose Tom Vilsack, the former governor 
of Iowa who has  longstanding ties to agribusiness interests, as agriculture 
secretary - his  weakest selection so  far.
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/18/opinion/18kristof.html?_r=2&ref=opinion
---
---
3.Ronnie  Cummins on Vilsack:

AMY GOODMAN: Ronnie Cummins, you are executive  director of Organic Consumers 
Association. Your response to Governor Vilsack...?  

RONNIE CUMMINS: Well, the organic community and sustainable ag community  are 
very disappointed in the appointment of Vilsack as Secretary of Agriculture.  
You know, Obama promised us change. What he’s given us here at best is small  
change. We’ve got a big problem; we need big change. 

This notion that  genetically engineered crops can feed the world or that, 
you know, corn-based  ethanol and soybean-based biofuels can solve the energy 
crisis are, of course,  completely discredited. If they're serious about solving 
the climate crisis,  they need to take note of the fact that American 
industrial agriculture uses  about 19 percent of all of our fossil fuels and cranks 
out about 37 percent of  our climate-destabilizing greenhouse gases. So if 
we're going to solve the  climate crisis with a 80 or 90 percent reduction in 
greenhouse pollution, not 70  percent, we're going to have to transform America's 
energy-intensive,  chemical-intensive genetically engineered agricultural 
system into an organic  [inaudible] in transition to organic system, which can 
sequester 40 percent of  all of our greenhouse gases in the soil, which uses 30 
to 50 percent less energy  and which can produce healthy food, as opposed to 
the, you know, current food  system, which is subsidized factory farms and 
junk
food. 

JUAN  GONZALEZ: And could you expand particularly on what have been Vilsack’s 
stands  when it comes to genetically modified foods? 

RONNIE CUMMINS: Yes.  Vilsack has been an ardent promoter, not only of 
genetically engineered foods  and crops, but also of the extremely controversial 
biopharmaceutical crops,  which involves [inaudible] [genetically engineering] 
pharmaceutical drugs or  industrial chemicals into food crops. Even, you know, 
quite a few people in the  biotech industry are alarmed by these 
biopharmaceuticals, since you could get  dangerous drugs throughout the food supply. But 
Vilsack supported biopharm crops  when he was governor. 

He went further than that. In the year 2005,  Vilsack championed a law in 
Iowa that’s been introduced all over the country,  backed by Monsanto and the 
Farm Bureau. This law, this preemption law, as  they’re called, basically takes 
away the right of municipalities or counties to  regulate genetically 
engineered crops. Vilsack rammed this through, even though  it's extremely unpopular 
with not only consumers, but small farmers. Vilsack has  repeated the myth of 
the biotech industry that genetically engineered crops can  help feed the world, 
when in fact genetically engineered crops do not produce a  higher yield. And 
he's spoken about their environmental benefits, when the sum  total of ten 
years of genetically engineered crops in the United States have  increased the 
use of pesticides, not decreased  them.
http://www.democracynow.org/2008/12/18/obama_picks_pro_ethanol_former_iowa  
---
---
4.Author, Michael Pollan on Vilsack:

"The food system  is responsible for about a third of greenhouse gases," 
Pollan told NPR's Renee  Montagne. "It is responsible for the catastrophic 
American diet that is leading  50 percent of us to suffer from chronic disease, and 
that drives up health care  costs." 

A secretary for food, Pollan said, could put the focus on  diversifying 
America's farms and using local food sources around the  nation.

But those topics weren't in the spotlight when Obama selected  Vilsack to be 
agriculture secretary, said Pollan, who also wrote The Omnivore's  Dilemma and 
The Botany of Desire. 

"I was very disappointed in that news  conference," he said, "not to hear 
Vilsack use the word 'food' — or 'eaters.'  And the interests of everybody except 
eaters was discussed: farmers, ranchers,  people concerned about the land."

And so, he said, it's difficult not to  see the choice of Vilsack as 
"agribusiness as usual."

As for the  possibility that a change in America's agriculture priorities 
could raise the  cost of food, Pollan said that other factors can also lead to 
higher  prices.

"It's the embrace of corn-based ethanol that has driven up all  food prices," 
Pollan said. "It's not making agriculture more  sustainable."
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=98417440


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