Laurel Hopwood and I collaborated on writing this open letter to  Bill 
Gates, on behalf of the Sierra Club national Genetic Engineering  Action Team 
(GEAT).--Tom
 
In a message dated 11/15/2009 1:08:01 P.M. Central Standard Time,  
[log in to unmask] writes:

Date: Sun, 15 Nov 2009 09:40:21 -0800
From: "GMWatch" <[log in to unmask] 
(mailto:[log in to unmask]) >
Subject: GMW: Now Sierra Club tells Gates he's wrong


OTHER RESPONSES
Arican NGOs slam Gates' neo-colonial strategy
_http://allafrica.com/stories/200911050463.html_ 
(http://allafrica.com/stories/200911050463.html) 
Bill Gates reveals love of GMOs
_http://www.gmwatch.org/latest-listing/1-news-items/11614-bill-gates-reveals
-love-of-gmos_ 
(http://www.gmwatch.org/latest-listing/1-news-items/11614-bill-gates-reveals-love-of-gmos) 
Africa: Profits Before People - the Great African Liquidation Sale
_http://allafrica.com/stories/200911051028.html_ 
(http://allafrica.com/stories/200911051028.html)  
GMWatch's suggested reading for Bill Gates
_http://www.gmwatch.org/latest-listing/1-news-items/11591-food-fight-with-gl
obal-implications_ 
(http://www.gmwatch.org/latest-listing/1-news-items/11591-food-fight-with-global-implications) 
---
Bill Gates
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
PO Box 23350
Seattle, WA 98102


Dear Mr. Gates


Sierra Club, the world's largest grassroots conservation organization,  has 
concerns about your statement at the World Food Prize forum last month.  
You claimed that environmentalists opposed to genetic engineering of farm  
crops are against anything that increases yields.


Nothing could be farther from the truth.


Genetic engineering - the artificial splicing of genes into a completely  
different species - does not increase crop yields, according to a recent 
study  by the Union of Concerned Scientists. One means to increase crop yields 
which  does not pose risks to the environment is marker-assisted selection 
(MAS), a  high-tech method of speeding up the process of conventional plant  
breeding.


A major study released from the United Nations reveals that organic  
farming offers Africa the best chance of breaking the cycle of poverty and  
malnutrition it has been locked in for decades. New evidence suggests that  
organic practices are delivering sharp increases in yields, improvements in  the 
soil and a boost in the income of Africa's small farmers, who remain among  
the poorest people on earth.
See:  
_http://www.unep-unctad.org/cbtf/publications/UNCTAD_DITC_TED_2007_15.pdf_ 
(http://www.unep-unctad.org/cbtf/publications/UNCTAD_DITC_TED_2007_15.pdf) 


In addition, Indian writer Vandana Shiva wrote, "Millions of farmers in  
third world countries want to breed and grow the crop varieties that adapt to  
their diverse ecosystems. Plant biodiversity is essential for a balanced 
diet.  Yet numerous crops are pushed to extinction with the introduction of GE 
 crops."


Who benefits from the manipulation of the genetic code, which has evolved  
over the past billion years? Huge agribusiness corporations, which are 
solely  responsible to provide financial benefit to their shareholders. How?  By  
artificially remaking life by crashing through the natural barrier between  
species to make genetically manipulated organisms and by patenting those  
traits.


There is massive opposition amongst indigenous people to the release of  
GMOs into the environment and for good reason.


* The safety of genetically manipulated crops has not been independently  
tested. The U.S. regulatory agencies merely rely on test data provided by the 
 corporations which manufacture the genetically engineered plants.


* Some genes spliced into plants code for the production of insecticides  
in every cell of the plant. There is no requirement for long-term testing, so 
 the long-term effects of consuming a plant that has been made into an  
insecticide are unknown.


* Genes from genetically manipulated crops can spread to neighboring  crops 
or to wild species, which can be a major disaster for the welfare of the  
planet and its inhabitants. It is impossible to recall engineered genes once  
they are released. Think of spliced-in genes, also called transgenes, as  
malicious code in the genome of a plant--code that is self-replicating.  
Genetic engineering is forever.


Mr. Gates, we urge you to reconsider your belief that genetic engineering  
can feed a hungry world.


Rather, the implications of a hacked genetic code slipping into our food  
and multiplying is worse than a computer virus.
 
Sincerely
Laurel Hopwood, Chair
Sierra Club Genetic Engineering Action Team


November 9 2009











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