How
the Government is Causing the Global Food Crisis Dr.
Mercola's Comments: According
to The World Bank’s estimates, food
prices, overall, have increased 83 percent in the last three years.
Since January of this year, the price of rice has risen more than 140
percent. Although
we haven’t experienced any violent outbursts in the United States
yet, countries in the Caribbean, Africa and South Asia have
already seen deadly riots due to rapidly rising food prices. Although
the increased use of corn for biofuel is the most popular scapegoat,
there may be many other factors that impact our current situation,
including:
Some
nonconventional media outlets even point the finger directly at the
similarities between our current situation and previous man-made
famines for the end purpose of mass genocide and calculated population
control. Whatever
the true root of the problem is (and it’s likely to be a combination
of many), it is rapidly becoming clear that massive changes in our
food supply system are desperately needed. The
Role of Genetically Engineered Crop Farming In
addition to the measures prescribed above; curtailing biofuel mandates
and nonsensical farm subsidies – topics I already discussed in my
previous article, Food
Prices are a Global Crisis, where I explained some of
the disastrous politics of the farm bill and the practice of “direct
payment” subsidies to people living on farm land that is not being
farmed -- one commonly proposed solution to the food crisis is to
increase use of genetically modified crops. That
is, in fact, precisely the opposite
of what is needed. While
the declared motive behind GM food is an altruistic one -- to
alleviate hunger, poverty and malnutrition worldwide -- the
reality is that GM crops are intended to create previously
unimaginable profits more than anything else. And we’re
already beginning to see the real price of all that tinkering with
Mother Nature: Frankenstein-like crop combinations that can
harm
your health. Not
only that, but GM crops are FAILING MISERABLY all across the world.
After 30 years of GMO experimentation, we have the data
to show:
Be
Part of the Solution In
spite of what you have likely heard, a large shift to organic
agriculture -- which by definition is non-GM -- could not only protect
and improve the environment, but help end world hunger too. A
Danish
study presented to the U.N. in 2007 cited recent models of an
organically grown, global food supply to show that a more
environmentally friendly approach to agriculture is capable of
producing enough food for the world's current population. What
prevents many farmers from making the move to organic is that crop
yields could initially drop as much as 50 percent in the very
beginning, before evening out over time. However, that problem may be
mitigated somewhat, because farmers wouldn't need to dole out precious
money for toxic
pesticides, the price of which are also skyrocketing as we speak,
having risen as much as 75 percent already. In
June, the Taipei
Times reported that the price hikes in pesticides
should serve as a call to review farming practices and consider going
back to old established and sustainable practices such as crop
rotation. While
you’re waiting for the leaders of the world to catch up, take
advantage of local
sources of organic foods as often as you can. You can also avoid
GM foods by:
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